F*ck You Haiku: Little Breakup Poems to Help You Vent, Heal, and Move On

Hardback

Main Details

Title F*ck You Haiku: Little Breakup Poems to Help You Vent, Heal, and Move On
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Kristina Grish
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:192
Dimensions(mm): Height 178,Width 127
Category/GenrePoetry
Separation and divorce
Humour
ISBN/Barcode 9781982157975
ClassificationsDewey:811.6
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Simon & Schuster
Imprint Simon & Schuster
Publication Date 1 April 2021
Publication Country United States

Description

Get through any relationship split with this collection of relatable, impassioned, and irreverent breakup haikus. When her marriage came to a sudden and infuriating end, noted relationship columnist Kristina Grish turned to writing impassioned breakup haikus as a creative way of processing all the messy and intense feelings she was experiencing. Now, in F*ck You Haiku, Kristina has compiled more than 100 breakup haikus-inspired by her past breakups as well as universal experiences-to help anyone going through a split deal with their heartbreak via poetry. Representing a range of emotions and clever ways to vent about your ex, these haikus are entertaining and enraging, as well as enlightening and empowering. So if you're currently going through a breakup-whether you did the deed or are on the receiving end of it-let this collection of inventive poems help you say "f*ck you" to that special someone and eventually "love you" to yourself.

Author Biography

Kristina Grish covers women's lifestyle topics, including health, relationship, celebrity, fashion, fitness, and pop-culture trends for various national magazines. She's contributed features, essays, and profiles to Cosmopolitan, Marie Claire, Real Simple, Martha Stewart Living, Martha Stewart Weddings, Women's Health, Self, Shape, Health, Fitness, Men's Health, Vibe, and Teen Vogue.

Reviews

"Her new book, "F*ck You Haiku: Little Breakup Poems to Help You Vent, Heal, and Move On" (Tiller Press), is a collection inspired by past breakups and more universal experiences many will relate to ("Your stuff's in a box/On the front lawn of my house/Covered in bird s-t.")."-Mackenzie Dawson, The New York Post