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Elizabeth Searle Lamb

American poet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Elizabeth Searle Lamb (January 22, 1917 – February 16, 2005) was an American poet. She is known for writing English-language haiku. Raymond Roseliep called her the "First Lady of American haiku".[1] Her work has been translated into other languages.

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Biography

She was born in Topeka, Kansas.[2] She attended the University of Kansas and studied music and, in particular, she played the harp. She married F. Bruce Lamb in Trinidad in 1941.[3] They lived in several places in South America due to her husband's job as a forester. They moved to New York in 1961.[4]

She served as president of the Haiku Society of America in 1971.[5]

She died in 2015 in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

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Honors and awards

She was the honorary curator for the American Haiku Archives in the California State Library in Sacramento from 1996 to 1998.[2]

Bibliography

  • The pelican tree, and other Panama adventures, 1953
  • Today and every day, 1970
  • 39 Blossoms, 1982
  • Across the windharp: collected and new haiku, 1999

References

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