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The
Heron's Nest
Christopher Herold, Editor
816 Taft Street
Port Townsend, WA 98368
http://www.theheronsnest.com/
Managing
Editor:
Christopher
Herold
theheronsnest@cablespeed.com
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Millikin
University students have researched various magazines publishing
haiku and haiku related poetry.
This
is a profile of Heron's Nest magazine, gathered by Maureen Yates
from the Fall 2002 Haiku Writing Roundtable class.
You
can email your haiku to one of the following editors:
Associate
Editor: Ferris Gilli
treefrog.house@comcast.net
Associate
Editor: Robert Gilliland
theheronsnest@austin.rr.com
Associate
Editor: Peggy Willis Lyles
turtlerock@worldnet.att.net
Associate
Editor: Paul MacNeil
theheronsnest@yahoo.com
Submissions
can also be sent via regular mail (please include SASE) to:
Peggy
Willis Lyles
The Heron's Nest
2408 Wood Creek Court
Tucker, GA 30084
Paul
MacNeil
The Heron's Nest
5231 SE 17th St.
Ocala, FL 34471
Ferris
Gilli, Assoc. Editor
The Herons Nest
2686 Bennington Dr. NE
Marietta, GA 30062
Robert Gilliland, Assoc. Editor
The Herons Nest
3204 Lipscomb Street
Austin, TX 78705
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Submission
Guidelines:
Please
submit your haiku for The Heron's Nest. We recommend that
you send 5 to 15 poems at a time. Sending less than 5 is okay but
more than 15 is burdensome to the editors.
We
accept both traditional (approximately 5-7-5 with a seasonal reference)
and three-line modern haiku.
Poems
should be unpublished and not currently under consideration elsewhere.
Please include your city, state, and country for our author index.
A
new edition of The Heron's Nest will be posted at the beginning
of each month. Included will be five pages of haiku and one page
presenting three "Editors' Choice" haiku. One of these
three will receive The Heron's Nest Award and be posted on the home
page as well as the Editors' Choice page. This haiku will receive
special commentary and the poet will be sent a certificate. In mid-February
a special Valentine Awards issue is published. It features favorite
poems and poets of the previous year as voted for by our readers,
and three favorite poems selected by the editors.
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Philosophy:
It
is our intention to present haiku in which the outward form of each
poem has been determined by two important elements. (1) The
primary element is the poetic experience, faithfully and uniquely
evoked in words. (2) The second element helps to shape the
first; it is the poet's knowledge and respect for traditional haiku
values. When well balanced these elements result in work that is
distinctively and unmistakably haiku.
"Poetic
experiences" are those which inspire us to express ourselves
creatively. "Haiku values" are the traditional underpinnings,
both Japanese and Western, by which haiku sensibility has evolved
into what it is today, and which will continue to shape haiku traditions
in the future. There are many ideals equated with each of the various
haiku forms. No one poem can embody all, or even a majority of these
ideals. Each of us must decide for ourselves what is important in
the writing and appreciating of haiku. To help you decide whether
or not to submit your work, we'd like you to know the qualities
we regard as important to haiku.
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Here
are some qualities we find essential to haiku:
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Present
moment magnified (immediacy of emotion)
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Interpenetrating
the source of inspiration (no space between observer and observed)
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Simple,
uncomplicated images
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Common
language
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Finding
the extraordinary in "ordinary" things
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Implication
through objective presentation, not explanation: appeal to intuition,
not intellect
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Human
presence is fine if presented as an archetypical, harmonious
part of nature (human nature should blend in with the rest of
nature rather than dominate the forefront)
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Humor
is fine, if in keeping with "karumi" (lightness) -
nothing overly clever, cynical, comic, or raucous
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Musical
sensitivity to language (effective use of rhythm and lyricism)
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Feeling
of a particular place within the cycle of seasons
Cost:
one year subscrption (USA) $19, single copies (USA) $1.50 checks
and money orders make payable in US funds to Christopher Herold.
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