Haiku Journal Poets

Penha, James
Penn, Vincent
A New York resident, I've been writing haikus/senryus since about 2015. I post them primarily to wordpress and deviantart. From there, I've also gotten into syllabic verse. Another hobby of mine is music production.
Pereyra, Daniel
Daniel Pereyra is a Phoenix, AZ based writer. He is currently finishing a Bachelors of Arts program in Creative Writing at SUNY Empire State College and has had work featured in the online magazines The Artists Catalogue and Red Fez as well as the journal Westward Quarterly. His first chapbook, Sund
Perry, Autumn
Perry, Christina
A northern writer, Christina spends her time between First Nations communities in Northern Manitoba in her role as a speech-language pathologist. Her poetry has been published in Tanka Journal, Page & Spine, and The Northern Writers Anthology. She was one of ten winners in the 2015 Rhyme-Zone poetry
Peters, Iris
My first haiku I wrote in Namibia, 2013, inspired by the unearthly quiet nights (except for the sounds of the wild beasts) and the twinkling stars walking the dark velvety skies. Since then I've been under the haiku charm. Mostly I write senryu weaving my own experience and feelings into them.
Petreman, David
Petruschke, Jon
Pettit, Jonathan
Congratulations to anyone who's bothered to look this far into the bio section, to find my name! I, like the rest, am another haiku lover. Carry on! Enjoy! if you'd like to contact me, feel free, although why in the world... desktodawn@gmail.com
Petty, Randy
Pfingston, Roger
Roger Pfingston's poems have appeared recently in Innisfree Poetry Journal and Valparaiso Poetry Review. A new chapbook, A Day Marked for Telling, will be published in the fall by Finishing Line Press.
PHAM, Minh-Triet
40 y/o, living in Paris and working as manager at AIR FRANCE. For more, please visit his personal website: http://mtpham75.free.fr
Phelps, Judy
Philbin, Grant
My goal is to chronicle the sexual misadventures of humanity in space. I enjoy science fiction and dark comedy.
Phillips, Carol
Carol Phillips was captured by Haiku when she discovered Basho, Isaa, and others in the early 60"s, loving the simplicity of the form and the complexity of its undertones. She works to bring these qualities to her fiction and creative non-fiction writing also.