It's partly that, and the fact you haven't flooded/swamped the haiku with detail.
As you know, there's a fine balance between putting too much in and leaving too much out, including the natural flow of language! ;-)
In my opinion, this is a haiku worth considering for your collection, or an anthology.
It's very succinct, and although minimalist, it doesn't come across as that because it has a 'normal' language feel to it, and will be an excellent haiku for readings too! ;-)
Thank you again, Alan. Your original comment set me off googling about "negative space," where I read some interesting stuff about it in visual art.
I completely agree about that delicate balance between too little or too much, both in the words chosen and the content. That's why I ultimately gave up calling my haiku on dreams, haiku. I'm now calling them "dreamku: a new haiku inspired form." The way I want and need to work with dreams most of the time demands a "muchness" that is not fully in the haiku spirit. Not to mention that my on-going struggle with writing regular haiku is a tendency to "stuff" them. LOL!
If you'd like to join us in celebrating summer 2007 in haiku please let me - alison.williams@virgin.net - know.
(That means send me an email. Some people have asked to join in comments on other blogs, but that doesn't give me your email address to send an invitation to!)
5 comments:
I like this!
Very distilled, making good use of negative space.
Thanks, Alan. Do I understand your use of the term "negative space" correctly? In that it's effective because of what's not stated?
Hi Roswila,
It's partly that, and the fact you haven't flooded/swamped the haiku with detail.
As you know, there's a fine balance between putting too much in and leaving too much out, including the natural flow of language! ;-)
In my opinion, this is a haiku worth considering for your collection, or an anthology.
It's very succinct, and although minimalist, it doesn't come across as that because it has a 'normal' language feel to it, and will be an excellent haiku for readings too! ;-)
Thank you again, Alan. Your original comment set me off googling about "negative space," where I read some interesting stuff about it in visual art.
I completely agree about that delicate balance between too little or too much, both in the words chosen and the content. That's why I ultimately gave up calling my haiku on dreams, haiku. I'm now calling them "dreamku: a new haiku inspired form." The way I want and need to work with dreams most of the time demands a "muchness" that is not fully in the haiku spirit. Not to mention that my on-going struggle with writing regular haiku is a tendency to "stuff" them. LOL!
I had on of those days recently....
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