It is nearly impossible to overstate the impact Nick Virgilio has had on North American haiku, and haiku in general. Influential in moving the form away from the formal strictures that governed haiku practitioners when the form first hit United States shores (and third-grade classrooms everywhere), Nick's haiku are spare, gorgeous creations that reward multiple readings. Drawing from his life and experiences in Camden, NJ and traveling with the Navy, as well as, most notably, the death of his younger brother in Vietnam, Nick's poems can seem both traditional and urban -- humble and individual, reflecting details from Nick's observations walking around his town and its environs, all the while tapping into vast universal sentiments.
This collection includes some of NIck's previously published work, some unpublished haiku from the vast repository housed at Rutgers University, interviews with NIck and essays by Nick, as well as a beautiful foreword, afterword, and also a loving tribute from Nick's friend and pastor. Family photos and photographed pages from Nick's original typed manuscripts (including drafts and notes) are also included. Someday, scholars will write about the influence of Catholicism on his work, his proximity to Basho, Buson and Issa, the importance of Camden flora and fauna to his work, and the influence Nick had on the relaxing of the kigo in North American haiku. This collection points to that, but does not allow the context, biography or academic theorizing to get in the way of the pure poetry and musicality of Nick's work.
It may seem incongruous that Nick is buried in a Camden cemetery next to Walt Whitman. On the surface they might seem to have little in common. But what Whitman accomplished in his verbose lists and catalogues, infinitely detailing the American experience, Nick does by reflecting his large-heartedness inward: the spare gems he left allow readers to examine crystallized emotion and focus on the uniqueness of experience, the uniqueness of Nick's experiences as well as the reader's.