It's no secret that NPR has a soft spot for haiku. Springtime, social media, the Super Bowl, even, um, grindcore? If it's a story worth covering, it's entirely possible we've squeezed it into 17 syllables.
It turns out we're not the only ones who are sweet on the ol' 5-7-5.
, a weekly newspaper based in Indianola, Miss., has been turning some of its police reports into haiku. And this week, the paper started publishing the curious little jewels on Twitter.
"In an effort to reach the new era of digital-savvy, poetry-loving millennials, we have begun publishing a 'Crime Haiku of the Week,' " the newspaper tweeted Wednesday.
And so began the stream of syllable-sensitive tweets.
Three shotguns stolen
— Enterprise-Tocsin (@IndianolaMSnews) January 25, 2017
Owner not smiling one bit
But ducks can relax
Kids across the street
— Enterprise-Tocsin (@IndianolaMSnews) January 25, 2017
wave a BB gun at you.
Uh-oh, window out.
Charlie Smith, the 31-year-old publisher and editor of The Enterprise-Tocsin, tells NPR he started the haiku last month, as a way to liven up the newspaper's most popular section. "Cops and Robbers," a long-running summary of crime reports in the area, is often the part of the paper readers flip to first — but it usually ends up being just a big gray block of text.
Smith figured a haiku would be an amusing way to break it up. So every Wednesday, on deadline, Smith decided to take one of those reports and sum it up in haiku.
Five Greenville women
— Enterprise-Tocsin (@IndianolaMSnews) January 25, 2017
travel to our Walmart store
with larcenous plans
Then ... silence.
Smith says he received no feedback from the paper's readers at first. He was thinking about giving it up, but he got support from one important fan.
"My mom told me she loved it," Smith says. "I couldn't let her down."
A novel approach/to reporting on crime news/do it in haikus. https://t.co/Yft4JmEJ5o
— Micheline Maynard (@MickiMaynard) January 25, 2017
He says it was only when he put the haiku on Twitter this week, rounding up all the poems he's written so far, that the audience at large took notice. Some faithful readershave even submitted haiku of their own.
"I think it's finally found the right medium," he says.
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