Outback’s End

fall haibun
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Haibun

 

A plastic box filled with a white-russian colored film. Corrosion in the slots where cylinders fit. A technician’s solemn expression:

“In twenty years, it’s always a cracked engine block.”

After 9 years and 155,514 miles, my first new car dies.

Autumn wind
hanging on a lift over
its grease-stained parts

 

more by FRANK J. TASSONE

photograph by Javier Calvo

 

Image Curve’s Manifesto

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Frank J. Tassone

Frank J. Tassone lives in New York City's "back yard" with his wife and son. He fell in love with writing after he wrote his first short story at age 12 and his first poem in high school. He began writing haiku and haibun seriously in the 2000s. His haikai poetry has appeared in Failed Haiku, Cattails, Haibun Today, Contemporary Haibun Online, Contemporary Haibun, The Haiku Foundation and Haiku Society of America member anthologies. He is a contributing poet for the online literary journal Image Curve, and a performance poet with Rockland Poets. When he's not writing, Frank works as a special education high school teacher in the Bronx. When he's not working or writing, he enjoys time with his family, meditation, hiking, practicing tai chi and geeking out to Star Wars, Marvel Cinema and any other Sci-Fi/Fantasy film and TV worth seeing.

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