These books of short form work conclude the list of books I read last month.
the sky is all there is by Cathy Drinkwater Better
This was a book of the week from The Haiku Foundation. I enjoyed it!
Here is one I particularly liked:
descending
through barren branches
moonface
Winter Deepens by Margaret Chula
This haiga/tanku chapbook is on the Snapfish site, where they have many chapbooks available to read online (link will open in a new window). This chapbook contains poetry written as the poet’s mother was dealing with issues related to old age.
Warm Under the Cat: A Book of Haiku and Senryu by Caroline Giles Banks
This was one of the books of the week received in the Haiku Foundation email. I really enjoyed this collection. Here’s an example I really liked:
His turn to cook
again he can’t find
the thyme
The Quiet Quarter: Ten Years of Great Irish Writing edited by Máire Nic Gearailt
I have had this book for 6 or 7 years, I think. I picked it up in a charity shop not long after we arrived in Ireland and I’ve been hauling it around since. I decided it was time to read it and pass it on, so that’s what I did. It’s a collection of short pieces (between 1 1/2 and 2 1/2 pages each) that were originally broadcast on a morning show on RTE Lyric FM radio (the show is no longer on). According to the introduction, the station would put out a call for writing on a topic (some examples are travel, Christmas, language) and people would send in their work. Those chosen would read the work and then a piece of music aligned with the theme would be played directly afterwards. I quite liked this book. Some of the pieces were funny, some thought provoking, some profound. Many were life stories of one sort or another.
Happy reading!
10 comments:
There's a lot there :-)
You do read a lot! I´m still at your book! Darn internet and TV and cold temps... I love to read on the balcony but ... too cold. For me.
I've always been bookish :-) Someone once joked that I probably walked out of the womb while reading a book--LOL
Nice idea, LOL!
As kid I was a total book worm, too.
Dear Shari,
I'm blown away at how many books you read (or heard) in June alone! The mystery stories in particular sounded interesting to me - and somehow also funny from the main protagonists: a lesbian Sikh detective in one book, a village constable in the other, who seems a bit lazy (or comfortable). I also found the thyme haiku funny ;-DD
All the best from Austria,
Traude
https://rostrose.blogspot.com/2021/07/das-beste-vom-juni-2021.html
I do have a thing about books :-)
I know--lesbian Sikh detectives are not a dime a dozen in mysteries, that's for sure! :-) It's not quite the same, but I have been amazed at the niche settings authors come up with for some cozy mystery series. I used to read several knitting, crochet, embroidery, book shop, tea shop mystery series. Now there are some that revolve around such places as Hungarian tea shops, kite shops, and more. Very creative!
Nice to meet you Shari. I linked over from Iris' blog. Glad I stopped by. I enjoyed all your book posts.
Thanks, Erika! Welcome!
@ I do have a thing about books - yes, I thought so ;-))
That's true, it all sounds very creative. Are there already mystery series in ordinary and seemingly boring offices or at cucumber sandwich sellers?
I haven't come across any yet, but it would not surprise me to stumble across such series in future! :-)
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