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I love it that the posts that have got the most comments on here are the ones about haiku. You are all excellent.

Next:
I must respectfully disagree with Phester. Japanese haiku do not actually have a 5-7-5 syllable structure. Japanese isn't broken up into syllables in the same way that English is...it's more (and here I stumble a little, not knowing Japanese) "sound pieces".

I think that the 5-7-5 provides a good structure, but I don't think it's necessary for good haiku. Brevity is necessary, yes, but if you can come up with a haiku that you really like that happens to be 4-6-5 or something, you needn't muck around with it too much.

Also, I do like the division of haiku into two phrases/fragments, which tiny monster mentioned. It's something that I've been trying to do in my haikus...having two parts to offset each other seems to help give the poem more meaning.

Next:
I don't suppose some or all of you want to sit somewhere sometime and drink wine (or sake, I suppose) and play around with Japanese linked poetry? Hmm. Just an idea.

Next:
Lately I've read getting rid of it by lindsey collen, above the water by margaret bearman, and when I was five I killed myself by howard buten. Buten's book is something of a cult classic, and I can see why. It's written from the perspective of an eight year old boy, and has been compared to catcher in the rye. It's a comparison I can see, but I enjoyed it far more than Salinger's book - probably because the narrator doesn't come across as quite so...self-centred? perhaps. Above the water i didn't enjoy at first - that bleak and awkward australian-ness. But in the end i was quite won over. Getting rid of it i loved - an air of voodoo to it, politics and related unpleasantness but all so personal and optimistic without being at all saccharine.

That is all for now!

on 2005-09-18 07:01 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] phester.livejournal.com
Yeah, it seems to work differently in those Japanese versions. Like, the way words sound in relation to the words they're adjacent to.

-why not? Only I've got to find a job.

on 2005-09-18 09:19 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] tiny-monster.livejournal.com
I don't suppose some or all of you want to sit somewhere sometime and drink wine (or sake, I suppose) and play around with Japanese linked poetry?

That sounds like the intimidating game 'Anagrams' that Lisa's friend and her dad play.
"We take the name of a famous person, then rearrange the letters to form a description of that person! Here's one: Jeremy Irons!"
"Um... Jeremy's... Iron?"
"That's... very good, for a beginner."

That said, I do like wine.

on 2005-09-18 09:40 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] alexmoon.livejournal.com
*laughs* sounds like about the level I could perform at.

On the whole, I am not at all good at word games.

I envisage being absolutely bloody awful at playing around with linked poetry.

But, wine. And hopefully all concerned will be equally crap. (Anyone who shows natural skill will be sent to the corner.)

Yes

on 2005-09-18 10:31 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] barakketh.livejournal.com
I think that I might be able to manage some distubing natural talent. I wonder disturbingly good or just disturbing?

Like to find out?

Re: Yes

on 2005-09-18 11:35 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] alexmoon.livejournal.com
Oh dear.

I will have to leave that up to the other readers. Maybe you will have to be quarantined?

Re: Yes

on 2005-09-19 07:23 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] barakketh.livejournal.com
Arrogant cat
Shards of sun
Now sleep

I try I think I shold get points for that.

on 2005-09-19 09:17 am (UTC)

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