Poetry
- 441
- Haiku in Low Places
- Haiku and other personal poetry pages by Paul David Mena. Some good stuff here. Includes link to his haiku-a-day blog.
- 442
- Haiku poetry
- Pain. Nature. Freedom. Contemporary haiku poetry by Ulf Mohager. Originally a wap site, but now accessible through an emulator also. Updated with 1-3 poems/week.
- 443
- Haikus from the Soul
- Haikus from the soul is a site devoted to 5-7-5s (i.e., mostly not haiku), mostly by site-owners Lukas and Alison.
- 446
- Larry Kimmel & Winfred Press
- Personal haiku pages by Larry Kimmel, featuring haiku, tanka, cherita, gembun and short poems. Links to his Winfred Press pages: haiku bumper stickers; printed books.
- 447
- Naia's Haiku Haven
- Haiku, tanka, and other poetry written by Naia, related haiku links, and a collection of uplifting and thought-provoking quotes and ponderables.
- 448
- Short Summers
- Haikus from Cindy Zackowitz about the seasons, written in English and French and illustrated with photographs.
- 450
- The Haiku & Zen World of James W Hackett
- Site of James W. Hackett, American haiku pioneer and correspondent of R. H. Blyth.
- 452
- Tobacco Road Poet - Curtis Dunlap
- This site features both Curtis's own writings, in several genres including haiku and linked forms, and also has a fresh poem by another poet featured daily, with a readily accessible archive of these poems.
- 454
- marlene mountain
- Marlene Mountain's writing/painting journey from late 50s to present, including especially one-line haiku and visual "eye-ku".
- 455
- Airless Suburban Haiku
- "A cynical celebration of conspicuous consumption in haiku form." --What they said of themselves. It's accurate.
- 456
- Arpeggiating through the Feeblesquare
- A surreal, unconventional, and somewhat postmodern exploration of the modern abyss through haiku.
- 457
- Bad Haiku - Horrible poetry for the digital age
- A very old (10 years plus online) repository of pseudo haiku, moderated by Janis.
- 458
- Bar Haiku
- Scanned images of haiku written in bars (usually on napkins). Fun and funny, with some X-rated, as you might expect from the "Bar Haiku Crowd".