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Baseball Haiku | 
enlarge | Creators: Cor Van Den Heuvel, Nanae Tamura Publisher: W. W. Norton Category: Book
List Price: $19.95 Buy New: $7.11 You Save: $12.84 (64%)
New (31) Used (16) from $7.11
Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 387887
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 240 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 4.8 x 1.1
ISBN: 0393062198 Dewey Decimal Number: 811.04108357 EAN: 9780393062199 ASIN: 0393062198
Publication Date: April 1, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Good Condition, delivery time 10 to 12 Working days, via Priority airmail from UK
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Product Description Presenting more than two hundred of the greatest haiku ever written about the game.
One of the most unusual baseball books of the 2007 season, this remarkable new collection, which includes poems from both America and Japan, captures perfectly the thrill of baseballa double play, a game of catch, or the hushed pause as a pitcher looks in before hurling his pitch. Like haiku, the game is concerned with the nature of the seasons: joyous in the spring, thrilling in summer's heat, ripening with the descent of fall, and remembered fondly in winter. Featuring the work of Jack Kerouac, the king of the Beat writers, who penned the first American baseball haiku, and Alan Pizzarelli, a major American haiku poet, the collection also includes Masaoka Shiki, one of the four great pillars of Japanese haiku, who fell in love with baseball when he was a student in Tokyo. Baseball Haiku, a literary and baseball treasure, will make a marvelous gift for the baseball fan in your family.
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| Customer Reviews:
Not an Oxymoron June 30, 2008 Baseball haiku is indeed a genre of which I was unaware. This is a wonderful book for fans of the lore of baseball, history, and the art of Haiku.
Those Moments Which Make Us Catch Our Breath June 3, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
The flyleaf of Baseball Haiku begins "there are moments in every baseball game that make fans catch their breath...Haiku captures these moments like no other poetic form..." and there you have it. If I had to choose the quintessential kigo (season word) for "summer", it would have to be "baseball". Although played in spring and autumn, nothing for me says "summer" like a baseball game (and at the beach, listening to a game on the radio). Jim Kacian slyly elevates the game to a religion:
October revival all hands lift to the foul ball
while Brenda Gannon has some wonderful plays (!) on sex:
handsome pitcher my eyes drift down to the mound
Many of Van Den Heuvel's own haiku deal with the anticipation of the game:
baseball cards spread out on the bed April rain
a spring breeze flutters the notice for baseball tryouts
as well as my favourite:
lingering snow the game of catch continues into evening
The Japanese haiku have a definite and different expression but the feel and impressions are similar. My only wish is that there could be more!
Haiku Hits a Stand-up Double May 28, 2007 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
For a book of haiku --about baseball no less-- to break out into wider readership the way this book has is reminiscent of Dave Brubeck and Stan Getz bringing jazz into the popular music charts in the 1960's. My sister gave me this book for my birthday and, as Thomas Merton wrote, as long as it talks, I'm going to listen.
Cor van den Heuvel and Nanae Tamura have assembled a tour de force of baseball haiku. America brought baseball to Japan and Japan gifted this country with haiku. There is a most enjoyable introduction about the history of baseball haiku in both countries. The book has a long section of haiku by well-known, and less well-known, haiku poets in the United States, followed by a rich collection of translated Japanese haiku featuring the game. Van den Heuvel concludes with an appreciative essay on baseball in the United States and Japan.
Here are some samples which reflect moments which come in the world of baseball:
walking home with his glove on his head shrieking cicadas Imai Sei
summer afternoon the long fly ball to center field takes its time Cor van den Heuvel
dog days of summer twenty-three games out of first Michael Ketchek
This last poem sounds the tone of melancholy, called wabi in the classic Japanese haiku tradition, which many of the haiku in this book capture beautifully and hauntingly, and which is certainly is eventually present for any young or aging participant (or observer) in the game. Here are a few more evocations:
while playing ball it becomes time to go home to supper Kawahigashi Hekigoto
calm evening the ballgame play-by-play across the water Jim Kacian
Baseball haiku, because of their brevity, will not provide the same kind of reading as Jimmy Breslin's writing about the 1962 Mets in his chapter "They're Afraid to Come Out," nor Ed Linn's reporting on Ted Williams' last game in 1960.
But they make their own special offering. Speaking of melancholy, in my case I grew up in the 1950's in Kansas City, which gives a certain meaning to the term Kansas City Blues. By the way, Cor van den Heuvel loves jazz too. Get the book.
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