Warren Kaplan is a professor at the BU School of Public Health, teaching and doing research in pharmaceutical policy and “access to medicines." He is also a "recovering patent attorney” who last worked as an attorney at Biogen. Before that, he earned a PhD in ecology, also from BU, but at the Marine Biological Lab in Woods Hole, Mass. “Patent lawyers have to be science geeks from a prior life...,” he says. “I worked in Brazil studying production and consumption of greenhouse gases in the rain forest, among other places. I've written poems and haiku before but I've never won anything.”
Mark Bernstein is a grandfather, cook, cyclist, architect, and technical writer who has lived in Newton Centre for 40 years. On a beautiful spring day he noticed Poetry Newton’s call for Haiku. “I was sipping my morning coffee on the front porch,” he explains, “immersed in the quiet I love so much. No irritating machine noise to sour my day!"
Ralph Culver's haiku and senryu have been widely published, along with his poetry in longer forms. His latest collection of poems is “A Passable Man” (2021), and he has a new book, “This to This,” forthcoming in 2024. He divides his time between Vermont and central Pennsylvania.