December 19, 2025
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
BlazeVOX [books]
www.blazevox.org • editor@blazevox.org; Geoffrey Gatza: 716-873-5454
Buffalo, New York
A Whisper Becomes a World: BlazeVOX Announces Reading Whispers: Book of Triple Haiku by J. Chester Johnson
(For those purchasing one copy of Reading Whispers: Book of Triple Haiku, Chester will send, free of charge, a personalized, inscribed bookplate for placement on inside front cover of the book; in addition, for those purchasing four or more Reading Whispers: Book of Triple Haiku, you will receive, free of charge, a personalized, inscribed copy of Chester’s highly praised book, Now And Then: Selected Longer Poems). If applicable, please let him know the number of books you’re purchasing from BlazeVOX or at Amazon: jchester@jchesterjohnson.com. Please also include your mailing address.
BlazeVOX [books] is delighted to announce the publication of Reading Whispers: Book of Triple Haiku, a luminous new work by acclaimed poet and essayist J. Chester Johnson. Long celebrated for his clarity, moral vision, and imaginative reach, Johnson turns now to the intricacies of brevity, revealing just how expansive a few lines can become in the right hands.
In Reading Whispers, Johnson creates an innovative structure: the “triple haiku,” a form that places three haiku in conversation beneath a unifying title. The result is a kind of lyric echo chamber, images suspended and extended, resonating across the white space of the page. If traditional haiku invites readers into a moment, Johnson’s triple haiku opens the door to a roomful of them.
Poet Kimiko Hahn calls the collection “a heartfelt innovation,” noting how Johnson’s linked imagery follows in the tradition of Japanese verse sequences while expanding their interpretive space for contemporary American poetry. Cornelius Eady, Co-founder of Cave Canem and winner of the 2025 Wallace Stevens Award, praises the way Johnson “shows you how much space there is between these strong, wise and open lines… Enough space to fit a world.”
These poems are compact yet unbounded: nine-line fields of emotion, sly humor, contemplative turns, and moments of radiant clarity. “At its frequent best,” writes Edward Mendelson of Columbia University, the book “presents a whole world of emotion… in nine brief lines.”
For readers familiar with Johnson’s work on race, civil rights, and national healing, including his widely acclaimed nonfiction book Damaged Heritage, Reading Whispers will feel connected yet surprising. As poet Barry Wallenstein observes, Johnson’s new poems reveal “a voice happily free of certainties and absolutes; playful, gentle, wise.” The political and personal currents that run through Johnson’s previous writing appear here in distilled form, “mini meditations,” he writes, glimpsed sidelong, truths arriving “at a slant.”
Johnson’s longstanding contributions to American letters carry a unique breadth: from his role in retranslating the Psalms for the Episcopal Church, to his iconic poem “St. Paul’s Chapel” (a central 9/11 recovery-site text with over 1.5 million copies distributed), to his expansive work on civil rights and the legacy of the Elaine Race Massacre. His writing appears in the Civil Rights Archives at Queens College, and he has been recognized at the Harvard Alumni Authors’ Book Fair, among many other honors.
Reading Whispers showcases yet another dimension of his capacious craft, an intimacy of scale paired with a resonance that lingers long after each poem’s final syllable.
Book Information
Title: Reading Whispers: Book of Triple Haiku
Author: J. Chester Johnson
Publisher: BlazeVOX [books]
ISBN: 978-1-60964-524-3
Format: Perfect-bound paperback
Length: 104 pages
Price: $18
Available now at BlazeVOX [books]: www.blazevox.org
Also available at Amazon.