Horror and Thriller Poetry posted March 5, 2020 | Chapters: | ...3 4 -5- 6... |
Horror Haiku Chapter 5
A chapter in the book Horror Haiku
Withering Winter
by Gypsy Blue Rose
withering winter weaves through the frigid castle— cold-blooded queen |
Contemporary Haiku
The most common literary adaptation in English of haiku looks something like this: one to four lines, no strict syllable count but brief, and often with a long/short or short/long asymmetry. These poems utilize a caesura (a noun that describes a break between words within a metrical foot; any interruption or break). source: the haiku foundation
******Dedicated to Dean Kuch******
Dean and I co-authored two books of horror haiku available on Amazon or free on FanStory. I added the links below.
to read Hora Haiku: A Gothic Tale of Terror Book One-click here
to read Hora Haiku: A Gothic Tale of Terror Book Two-click here
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and 2 member cents. The most common literary adaptation in English of haiku looks something like this: one to four lines, no strict syllable count but brief, and often with a long/short or short/long asymmetry. These poems utilize a caesura (a noun that describes a break between words within a metrical foot; any interruption or break). source: the haiku foundation
******Dedicated to Dean Kuch******
Dean and I co-authored two books of horror haiku available on Amazon or free on FanStory. I added the links below.
to read Hora Haiku: A Gothic Tale of Terror Book One-click here
to read Hora Haiku: A Gothic Tale of Terror Book Two-click here
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