Tanka from the Edge by Miriam Sagan has been published in trade paperback by Modern English Tanka Press. Miriam Sagan takes the reader on a journey of the mind through her deft approach to the ancient Japanese poetic form, tanka. Sagan, a prolific author, has given us her newest collection and a wonderful read. All who love tanka will want to read this compelling work.
Tanka from the Edge is a collection of over a hundred tanka that represent a decade's worth of poetic journeys. Some come from literal travels to places ranging from the Sonoran and Mohave deserts to Alaska's inner passage.Miriam Sagan has been a writer in residence at two national parks—Everglades and Petrified Forest. These very different eco-systems have both given rise to tanka. So has a year's intermittent residency at THE LAND/An Art Site, which is dedicated to low impact sculpture in Mountainair, New Mexico.
a woman of fifty-five sunning myself— late afternoon the lizard's golden eye
And sometimes these tanka just stay home, observing Sagan's unfashionable westside neighborhood in Santa Fe, where small changes can be vivid. The poems also reflect a renewed interest in Buddhism after many years absence.
even after all these years sitting zazen— the monk still casts a shadow on the paper screen
The title was suggested by Teresa Neptune, whose photograph is on the cover. Neptune, who has a photography gallery on Canyon Road, and Sagan are step-cousins. Their collaboration of visual art and poetry is ongoing.
Miriam Sagan is the author of twenty books, including the recent poetry collection Map of the Lost from UNM Press. She founded and directs the creative writing program at Santa Fe Community College. Her website is "Santa Fe Poetry Broadside" (sfpoetry.org) which publishes numerous poets, including tanka poets.
Her close friend and neighbor Elizabeth Searle Lamb was her mentor in haiku and tanka. Sagan edited Lamb's collected poetry Across the Windharp. Lamb's influence remains here.
Miriam Sagan founded the creative writing program at Santa Fe Community College. She is author of twenty-five books, including her first novel, Coastal Lives, and her memoir Searching for a Mustard Seed: A Young Widow's Unconventional Story, which won Best Memoir of the Year from Independent Publishers Association.
She won the New Mexico Literary Arts Gratitude Award in Poetry, and has received the Santa Fe Mayor's Award for Excellence in the Arts.