red moon press gets a website
Long on the cutting edge of English-language haiku, Red Moon Press has — let’s be honest — been a bit behind when it comes to having an internet presence. For years, it has been borrowing a few modest webpages from HaikuWorld.org. Last night, however, RMP’s publisher Jim Kacian [f/k/a's very first Honored Guest Poet] announced the launching of the new Red Moon Press website (giving much credit to web designer Dave Russo). Here’s what Jim had to say about Red Moon’s new internet home:
“the site will incorporate more features as time goes along, but for the
moment it is a site where all current red moon press products are
available, and which offers some information about us and our mission.”
The website offers a frequently-updated listing of Red Moon’s Best Sellers and also lets visitors/readers leave reviews of RMP books. The About page gives a brief history of RMP, which has published over 60 volumes, many of which have been featured here at f/k/a.
big sky: rma 2006
If you haven’t checked out the Red Moon Press catalog lately, give it a close look. For example, for an introduction to the best haiku written in English, consider the annual Red Moon Anthology series, which has been winning major awards for a decade. [If the website had a Wish List feature, I'd be letting Mama G., know she can order me a copy of big sky: the red moon anthology 2006 now, for delivery in February, 2007. Like former rma volumes, big sky will have "200 works of haiku, haibun, renku, criticism and analysis."]
I’m pleased to see that RMP has reissued Presents of Mind, Jim Kacian’s own full-length book of haiku. This new edition has ”Japanese translations by the Kon Nichi Haiku Circle, the first time such serious, scholarly treatment has been afforded a book of English-language haiku.”
Here are some of my favorite haiku from Presents of Mind: 
the cold night
comes out of the stones
all morning
noiseless wind
icicles pend
from the bell clappers
drowned moth
the wax hardens
around it
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birds appear
and disppear
tilting axis
afternoon moon
the blue of the sky
right through it
weed stalks
holding up
snow flowers
. . . by Jim Kacian, Presents of Mind (1996) ![]()