Beltway Poetry Quarterly

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Resources
    • Artist Residency Programs
      • AIR
      • Colony
      • Retreat
      • Literary
      • Media
      • Performing
      • Visual
      • Appalachian South
      • Asia, Africa, Australia, The Middle East
      • British Isles
      • Deep South
      • France
      • Germany
      • Great Lakes
      • Mid-Atlantic
      • New England
      • Pacific
      • Plains
      • Rocky Mountains
      • Scandinavia
      • Southwest
      • The Rest of Europe
      • The Rest of North and South America
    • Community Outreach
    • Conferences & Festivals
    • Grants
    • Journals
    • Libraries
    • Member Organizations
    • Miscellaneous
    • Museums
    • New Books
    • Reading Series
    • Small Presses
  • Poetry News
  • About Us
    • Mission
    • Submission Guidelines
    • Staff, Partners, & Volunteers
    • Awards & Press
  • Poetry Archive
  • Current Issue

Haiku Reading

Loading Map....
Japan-America Society
1819 L St. NW, B2 level - Washington
Details
39.7461676 -94.80437059999997

Date/Time
Date(s) - 04/30//2015
6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

Location
Japan-America Society

Category(ies)

  • Area Readings and Performances


Toberta Beary and Ellen Compton, followed by haiku open mic. Sponsored by the DC Chapter of the National Book Assn. Free admission, but advance registration required.

Share this:

  • Share
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

logoBeltway Poetry Quarterly is an award-winning online literary journal and resource bank that originated in Washington, DC and the surrounding Mid-Atlantic region. We are now a global beltway, encircling the epicenters of major metropolises everywhere.

Random Quote

It is a city of temporaries, a city of just-arriveds and only-passing-through. They do go home, but it is only for visits–they hurry back to their lodestone and their star, their self-hypnotized, self-mesmerized, self-enamored, self-propelling, wonderful city they cannot live away from or, once it has claimed them, live without. Washington takes them like a lover and they are lost.

— Allen Drury, 1959, Advise and Consent

see more…

Follow us on:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter