Citations:mathemaku


 * 1988, Bob Grumman, Mathemaku (Runaway Spoon Press), issue 2, main title
 * 1996, Joyce Nakamura, Contemporary Authors: Autobiographical Series, volume 25 (Gale; ISBN 0787601152, 9780787601157), page 175
 * And each mathemaku’s math was central to it, not just an ad hoc ingredient in a some section of it. I was quite pleased with what I’d accomplished, but for some reason was only able to add a single unfinished mathemaku to my mathe-poetic oeuvre over the next twenty years or so.
 * 1999, The New Orleans Review (Loyola University), volume 25, page 47, section title
 * Mathemaku for Beethoven
 * 2005, Betsy Franco, Conversations with a Poet: Inviting Poetry into K-12 Classrooms (Richard C. Owen; ISBN 1572747404, 9781572747401), page 210
 * Poet/critic Bob Grumman writes a regular column about poetry for Small Press Review. Although best known as a poet for his hybrid of haiku and mathematics, the “mathemaku,” he also composes visual and traditional poetry.