new galaxy
a pomegranate
splits its skin

Published by

Lorin Ford

Growing up first in the Seaford Beach/Kananook Creek area and then in Cann River, Croajingolong country, East Gippsland, formed Lorin?s sense of belonging to the natural world. Lorin began writing haiku in 2004. She served on the judging panel for the Haiku Dreaming Awards (2009), on the The Haiku Foundation's Touchstone Books Awards Panel (2010, 2011 and 2012) and was co-judge with Lee Gurga for the H.S.A.?s 2018 Henderson Haiku Awards. Lorin was haiku editor for the first nine (quarterly) issues of Notes From the Gean (2009 ? 2011) and subsequently publisher of A Hundred Gourds (2011 ? 2016) where she served as haiku editor, features editor, managing editor and in other editorial roles. In 2014 she founded the 'Red Kelpie Haiku Group' (Melbourne, Australia), convening four meetings each year until the group broke up subsequent to its twentieth meeting in June 2019. Over the years, Lorin's haiku have received awards and been included in excellent anthologies. Books Published: 'a wattle seedpod' (Post Pressed, Teneriffe, Qld, Australia, 2008); e-chapbooks: 'what light there is' (3Lights Gallery, 2009) and 'A Few Quick Brushstrokes', a winner of the Snapshot Press e-chapbook competition, 2011. All three publications are available online, free of charge.

9 thoughts on “”

  1. Please take me off your mailing list. I've asked before. I would greatly appreciate it.
    No offense. Just too busy.
    Thanks

    1. Dear Freda,

      You can unsubscribe by going to the top left of the screen where it says:

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      warmest regards,
      Alan

  2. Me too, tinywords. I'm just too busy not to read your stuff. (kidding!!)

    The pomegranate has always seemed weirdly like a womb to me, but this is really working that metaphor. To great effect, needless to add.

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