Poets to share, explore haiku at reading in Port Townsend this week

PORT TOWNSEND — The Northwind Reading Series will present an evening devoted to haiku poetry this Thursday at the Northwind Arts Center, 701 Water St.

Christopher Herold, Margaret McGee, Norman Schaefer, Carmi Soifer and Karma Tenzing Wangchuk — local writers who use the haiku form to explore personal landscapes — will partake in the reading at 7 p.m.

The suggested donation is $3 to $5 with proceeds to support the nonprofit Northwind center.

The writers are a diverse bunch.

Herold, a Zen practitioner and lay monk, has served as president of the Haiku Poets of Northern California, guided numerous workshops and co-organized the Haiku North America Conference at Fort Worden State Park in 2005.

McGee, a technical writer at 1Energy Systems, is author of books including Stumbling Toward God, Sacred Attention and Haiku — The Sacred Art: A Spiritual Practice in Three Lines.

Schaefer is also an author, with two poetry collections, The Sunny Top of California and Fool’s Gold.

Soifer is a poet with haikus published in Modern Haiku, The Heron’s Nest and the anthologies Dreams Wander On, The Temple Bell Stops and The Sacred in Contemporary Haiku. While artist-in-residence at Colorado’s Rocky Mountain National Park, she wrote the book Stories Only Stones Can Tell.

Wangchuk has published several collections of haiku and other short poetic forms, most recently 2014’s Open Door: Love Poems (2014). His chapbook Shelter | Street: Haiku & Senryu (Minotaur Press) won the Haiku Society of America’s Merit Book Award for 2011.

For more about the Northwind Reading Series and other activities at the center, see www.northwindarts.org or phone series organizer Bill Mawhinney at 360-302-1159.

More in News

Clallam County beaches closed to shellfish harvesting

Clallam County beaches have been closed for recreational shellfish… Continue reading

Ed Mead, the official caretaker at Kai Tai Lagoon Nature Park in Port Townsend, takes a moment out of his rounds of cleaning up litter on the pathways on Monday to watch a flock of ducks that had landed in the lagoon to his left. Mead moved to Port Townsend from California to be closer to his grandkids. The city of Port Townsend owns the nearly 76-acre park. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Litter patrol

Ed Mead, the official caretaker at Kai Tai Lagoon Nature Park in… Continue reading

Nominations open for Community Service awards

Forms due on March 27; event scheduled for May 6

Candace Brower.
Neuroscience lecture set for Port Angeles library

Candace Brower will present “Your Brain and You: What… Continue reading

Port Townsend Food Co-op awards nearly $84K in grant funding

The Port Townsend Food Co-op has announced $83,844 in… Continue reading

Sheriffs oppose Senate proposal

Bill would give powers to unelected commission

Public hearing set for options on how to honor Justice Owens

Courthouse or courtroom may be renamed for longtime county, state judge

Port Hadlock housing awarded grants

Funds to help keep project on schedule

Welcome Back Coho event set Thursday

Attendees encouraged to wear red-and-white tops to celebration

The Port Angeles Parks, Recreation and Facilities Commission will discuss design options for the Laurel Street stairs on Thursday.
Design options for Laurel Street stairs to be discussed

The Port Angeles Parks, Recreation and Facilities Commission will… Continue reading

No flight operations scheduled this week

No field carrier landing practice operations will be conducted for… Continue reading

Two people sustain burns after sailboat explosion, fire

Two people sustained burns over 20 percent of their… Continue reading