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Peyton Place: A Haiku Soap Opera
Barnes and Noble
Peyton Place: A Haiku Soap Opera
Current price: $15.95
Barnes and Noble
Peyton Place: A Haiku Soap Opera
Current price: $15.95
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"David Trinidad turns the paste jewels of pop art into the real thing."James Schuyler
"In David Trinidad's
Peyton Place: A Haiku Soap Opera
, the moment-by-moment particulars of traditional haiku collide with the time-stretching serial narratives of contemporary soap operas. As Trinidad's haiku chart the changing seasons, don't be surprised if the snow falling under moonlight is artificial, dumped by overworked stagehands off-camera. Seventeen syllables mediated by televisionthe continuing story of
Peyton Place
making a high-def splash in Basho's pond."Tony Trigilio
"The world of art can appear anywhere, so it's no wonder to me that Trinidad finds something worthwhile in producing a haiku for each of the episodes of
and that, embedded in the strange curl of Dorothy Malone's hairdo, is yet one more space still untouched and undefined by a poet."Manuel Muñoz
This is the continuing story of
. One irreverent haiku for each of the over five hundred prime time 1960s era "adult" soap opera episodes. Fraught relationships, courtroom cliffhangers, and sensational storylines are condensed into seventeen-syllable episodes, as stereotypic characters weather the passing TV seasons. This haiku soap epic is ingenious, funny, and totally addictive. Excerpts from
have been selected by Denise Duhamel for inclusion in
Best American Poetry, 2013
.
"In David Trinidad's
Peyton Place: A Haiku Soap Opera
, the moment-by-moment particulars of traditional haiku collide with the time-stretching serial narratives of contemporary soap operas. As Trinidad's haiku chart the changing seasons, don't be surprised if the snow falling under moonlight is artificial, dumped by overworked stagehands off-camera. Seventeen syllables mediated by televisionthe continuing story of
Peyton Place
making a high-def splash in Basho's pond."Tony Trigilio
"The world of art can appear anywhere, so it's no wonder to me that Trinidad finds something worthwhile in producing a haiku for each of the episodes of
and that, embedded in the strange curl of Dorothy Malone's hairdo, is yet one more space still untouched and undefined by a poet."Manuel Muñoz
This is the continuing story of
. One irreverent haiku for each of the over five hundred prime time 1960s era "adult" soap opera episodes. Fraught relationships, courtroom cliffhangers, and sensational storylines are condensed into seventeen-syllable episodes, as stereotypic characters weather the passing TV seasons. This haiku soap epic is ingenious, funny, and totally addictive. Excerpts from
have been selected by Denise Duhamel for inclusion in
Best American Poetry, 2013
.