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Haiku Moment: too much

garden explosion

overzealous fruiting plants

can one say too much?

too much by Angie Quantrell

Yakima Valley tomato harvest


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Author Interview: How Do You Haiku? A Step-by-Step Guide with Templates by Danna Smith

How Do You Haiku? A Step-by-Step Guide with Templates

by Danna Smith

Plumbago Press, 2023

I’m jiggling in my seat with joy! How Do You Haiku? A Step-by-Step Guide with Templates by Danna Smith is out in the world! I love snapping photos and writing haiku poems to go with them, so imagine my excitement when Danna invited me to contribute to her haiku project! What an honor!

Danna is swinging by the blog today to tell us a little more about her newest book. She has graciously shared some of the pages in her book. Let’s get to it.

Welcome, Danna! I’m so glad you are stopping by today to visit. Tell us about yourself.

Thank you, Angie, I’m happy to be here. I grew up in Salt Lake City, Utah but have lived in northern California for the past 22 years. My children are grown, and my husband and I are expecting our first grandchild soon! Writing for children is more than my career—it’s my passion. I am so fortunate to wake up and able to work at my dream job every day. In my spare time I love walking nature trails, reading, gardening, and doing yoga.

A first grandchild, how exciting! Congratulations for the new baby-on-the-way AND your newest book! I’d love to live close enough to walk those nature trails with you and share grandbaby stories.

How long have you been writing poetry? When did you become interested in haiku?

I’ve loved words and wordplay for as long as I can remember. I wrote my first poem when I was eight years old and haven’t stopped since. I was introduced to Haiku in elementary school. The idea of observing nature through poetry appealed to me. And counting syllables felt like a word game! Today, I fill my haiku journal with haibun (haiku with story) and hagia (haiku with art) too!

I love this! Nature is amazing! And you are right, syllable counting is like a game. I LOVE wordplay.

Congratulations on the release of your new book How Do You Haiku? A Step-by-Step Guide with Templates! What inspired you to write this book?

Thank you! I’m very excited for its release! I wanted to write a book that I would have loved to read when I was a child. One that explained how to write haiku in simple steps and gave me ways to celebrate my work. The book is loaded with fun activities like how to write haiku comics, a poetry-on-the-go travel game, and templates to use when sharing poems with others.

This is a great resource for writers! I imagine teachers will be able to use it as well when they are teaching students about writing haiku.

The reading age for How Do You Haiku? A Step-by-Step Guide with Templates is listed at 8-12 years, but as a 60-ish writer, I cannot wait to read and apply the information in this guide. How did you decide on this age range?

I agree! It’s really a book for readers ages 8 & up. Poets of all levels will enjoy it whether they are just starting to write haiku or want to refresh their knowledge. The age range listed for the book is simply a technicality on the publishing side of things.

That’s good to know. Not that a listed age range has ever stopped me from using the books I want to use! LOL.

As the sole creator of your new book, what were some of the tasks you needed to complete?

This book was such a pleasure to write. There were a few must haves for me:

  1. Haiku is one of the oldest poetry forms and the rules can get quite complicated. With that in mind, my main goal was to teach haiku to my readers in its simplest form so it wouldn’t feel overwhelming.
  2. It had to be fun! I wanted to pack this little handbook full of lots of activities and templates that would appeal to a wide range of readers to get them excited about reading and writing poetry.
  3. I wanted to encourage my readers to share their work with others, which can be scary for some.
  4. I also wanted to share a bit of haiku history by including quotes and short biographies of four of the great haiku masters.

It was my goal to make this book part instruction, part pep-talk, and a whole lot of wordplay.

Your book covers all of the haiku bases. I just received my copy and I look forward to reading your haiku poems, reading from the haiku masters, reading haiku by a variety of writers, and then practicing by writing new haiku. What a great resource! It’s the perfect introduction to haiku.

I was honored to contribute two haiku poems and one photo to your book. Why did you decide to include the work of other contributors? How did that choice change how you wrote and compiled the book?

First, I want to thank you and the other poets and children’s book authors for contributing your amazing poetry and photos to the making of this book! I could not have done it without you all!

I chose to include the work of other poets to make the book more interesting and fulfilling. There are many books with the master’s poetry and there are a few books with my poetry, but I imagined combining the three would give my readers a variety of  poetry and an experience that they couldn’t get anywhere else.

Since the book included contributing poet’s work, the pressure was on!  I wanted contributors to love the book as much as I do. I wanted them to be proud to have their names on the cover and their poetry tucked inside.

Well done! Your plan worked very well. I am thrilled with the book!

Peek-A-Boo Haiku: A Lift-the-Flap Book (Simon & Schuster), came out in February, and you have several other titles available, such as One Blue Gnu, The Thank You Book, and The Complete Book of Aspen. You write for different age levels and genres. Tell us a little more about that.

I wrote my first picture book in a high school creative writing class and loved the process. It was then that I vowed to work hard at becoming a published picture book author one day. I published my first picture book in 2004 with Disney-Hyperion and have gone on to author many more. Then the board book bug hit me 😊. I wrote my first board book, Wake Up, Freight Train! and it was such fun! I love that I get to be a part of introducing the littlest readers to books for the first time! My fourth and fifth board book will be published in 2025.

You could say I became a novelist by accident. One day I took a DNA test and learned that the man who raised me was not my biological father. The foundation I built my life around had crumbled. As I always do, I started writing poetry for therapy. After I wrote about 12 poems, I showed them to my agent with the idea of writing a novel in verse based on my DNA discovery.  She was on board and two years later the book was published. The Complete Book of Aspen is a novel in verse (ages 14 & up), that delves into the emotional journey of a 15-year-old girl named Aspen as she discovers a long-kept family secret that challenges her identity.

Wonderful! I love hearing about your different books.

What are you working on now (if you can tell us)? Any surprises coming up?

I have five new books releasing in 2024-2026 including a couple more Little Golden Books. In the meantime, I am working on a big picture book project that I’m very excited about. It hasn’t been officially announced yet so mums the word for now. I’m also working on a few new board books that I hope my publisher will love.

Congratulations! It’s going to be a couple of exciting years for you!

Thank you so much for stopping by today, Danna. Best wishes to you as you continue to dream up new projects!

Thank you again for having me! It’s been a pleasure.

Here are some ways you can connect with Danna.

Website: https://dannasmithbooks.com/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dannasmithbooks/

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1719048.Danna_Smith

YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UChU0YjFV6VcB7Xn8HG3a-YA

Poetry Blog: https://poetrypop.com/


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Haiku Moment: cat eye stare

look into my soul

human prey, should i pounce, run?

beware cat eye stare

cat eye stare by Angie Quantrell

featuring Lily, the kitten


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Sunday Joy!

The brilliant colors of these anemones make me happy! Sadly, I forgot what the “greens” looked like in early spring and pulled up many new shoots. Oops! I will remember for next year though. Despite ME, they grew brilliantly. So joyful!

Photo by Angie Quantrell

Yakima Valley


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Haiku Moment: beauty reigns

where did you come from?

you pretty pinks and purples,

garden beauty reigns

beauty reigns by Angie Quantrell

photo by Angie Quantrell

Yakima Valley

I have no memory of planting these gorgeous garden queens. In fact, the colors are so brilliant the flowers seem artificial. But they are real, bugs and all. And apparently, prolific seeds and all, because these returned from last summer, and the summer before that. My best guess is there must have been some seeds in the packets of wildflowers I once spread hither and yon. They grow crazy all summer, and then by late summer, bam, crowds of beauty.


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Sunday Joy

Joy. My word of the year. I’ve been finding joy, conversations about joy, unexpected joy, memes and verses about joy, joyful thoughts, actual joy, songs about joy, poems, faces that express joy! What a joy!

I took this photo at night with my phone camera. The stars were so brilliant, but it was quite breezy and the sunflowers danced to the rhythm of the wind gusts. Still. The stars were gorgeous pinpricks of light, and the movement of the sunflowers so graceful. I love this photo.

Photo by Angie Quantrell, Yakima Valley, summer night


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Happy Book Birthday to How Do You Haiku?: A Step-by-Step Guide with Templates by Danna Smith

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How Do You Haiku?: A Step-by-Step Guide with Templates

Written by Danna Smith

Plumbago Press

September 1, 2023

Happy book birthday to How Do You Haiku?: A Step-by-Step Guide with Templates! Congratulations, Danna! I’m so excited to read this book.

Not only because I was one of the contributors (I am truly honored to included) . . .

(the following list is taken from Danna’s book page on Amazon)

Contributing Poets

Includes haiku by contributing poets Kate Coombs, Nancy Etchemendy, Matt Forrest Esenwine, Raven Howell, Linda Hoffman Kimball, Amy Losak, Bobi Martin, Angie Quantrell, Sydell Rosenberg, Lee Wardlaw, and Linda Whalen.

but because I LOVE haiku. I love writing haiku, being outside in nature, finding amazing natural wonders, taking photos, and coming back home to pen haiku about my discoveries.

PLUS. This is a how-to book. With templates. Whoohoo! What a great resource!

Amazon Blurb:

An excellent resource for at home or in the classroom

From the author of Peek-A-Boo Haiku (Simon & Schuster) comes a haiku how-to handbook. Haiku is a Japanese poetry form, but it’s more than just a short, three-line poem. It’s an opportunity to slow down, go outside, and experience the world in a new way. Haiku is a “snapshot” of a moment in nature (if you blink, you might miss it!), and it’s a powerful way to show compassion for all living things.

This book will help you understand haiku so you can create poems with powerful words and images. Each chapter contains examples from Japanese haiku masters and current poets. The included activities and templates will guide you through fun ways to “haiku,” including painting poem stones for your garden (Kuhi), creating haiku comic strips, and writing group poems with your friends (Renga). How Do You Haiku? This handbook will show you how— step-by-step.

Congratulations, Danna!

Danna Smith

Danna Smith is a poet and award-winning author of over twenty-five books for children.

When she was young, a pencil was her favorite toy. She grew up weaving words into silly poems or stories that sparked emotion. She wrote her first poem when she was eight, her first short story when she was ten, and her first picture book draft when she was seventeen.

Born and raised in Salt Lake City, Utah, she currently lives and creates in beautiful northern California wine country.

Read more about and get your copy of How Do You Haiku?: A Step-by-Step Guide with Templates.

Find Danna:

Danna’s website

Instagram