Saturday, August 23, 2025

Geppo: The Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume L:2, May 2025

February - April 2025


an evergreen decaying from the top down dementia


thunderstone
your death a bolt
from the blue


rain-strung branch
the upside-downness
of redpolls


bag lady
a halo of pigeons
circling her head


Spring Challenge: Dandelion, tampopo


pesticide-free
the wild manes
of dandelions


Honoured to know that "rain-strung branch" was included among the favourites of Dojins Patricia J. Machmiller and Joan Zimmerman!

Also honoured that "rain-strung branch" was chosen for commentary in the subsequent issue:


Dojin's  Corner:

There is so much to like about this haiku, starting with its phrase "rain-strung" to indicate that it has rained, has stopped raining, and has left jewels of rain hanging on a branch. Line two affirms the hanging beads of water through its newly minted and lovely noun "upside-downness" (from the adjective "upside-down").

The haiku pivots on that into line three's redpolls, acrobatic and energetic small finches with a tendency to hang down to forage, gleaning branches from below for insects and seeds. The haiku also feels acrobatic and energetic. A delight.

—Joan Zimmerman

Such a perfect way to characterize the redpolls' acrobatic feeding movements as "upside-downness." One word says it all.

—Patricia J. Machmiller

At least I guessed the correct category: redpolls=birds. Although refusing to keep a life list, I do consider myself a moderate birder, but I had to look up "redpolls" to appreciate this haiku. Smaller than house finches and purple finches I doubt that I'll ever see one, as in the winter they only migrate as far south as Canada and the far northern parts of the midwest and eastern United States.

—Alison Woolpert

Geppo: The Work-Study Journal of the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, Volume L:1, February 2025

November 2024 - January 2025


Grateful to have a mention of my new book, Random Blue Sparks, included in this issue!


soup kitchen the salt and pepper hair of a veteran


light ricochets
off a snowy owl's wing . . .
ice pellets


hot tenting
the sudden sizzle
of northern lights


new year's thaw
all the snowmen
losing weight


Winter Challenge Kigo: Winter Mountain, fuyu no yama


clouds crash
into the winter mountain . . .
pain flare


Honoured to know that "soup kitchen" and "new year's thaw" were included among Dojin Patricia J. Machmiller's favourites!


Also honoured that "new year's thaw" was included among the "Voted Best" (7 or more votes) in the subsequent issue,





The Haiku Foundation: HaikuLife Film Festival 2025

This haiga video, comprised of previously published poems, was created to celebrate The Haiku Foundation's International Haiku Poetry Day HaikuLife Film Festival on April 17, 2025:


What We Make of Light

(with recitation)














The Haiku Foundation, New to Haiku: Kire and Punctuation, March 2025

Grateful to Julie Bloss Kelsey for including the following work in her article "Kire and Punctuation" (for the section titled "Parentheses") on May 2, 2025:


Fata Morgana the (in)visibility of my (dis)ability

2nd Place, 2021 Marlene Mountain Memorial Haiku Contest

The Haiku Foundation, Juxta 10 - Research and Scholarship in Haiku, December 2024

Grateful to have the following haiku translated and included in Seji Tethi's article "The Translation of English Haiku into Hindi"...

Conclusion:

"The translation of English haiku into Hindi is a multifaceted endeavor that goes beyond mere linguistic conversion. It demands an appreciation for the art of poetry, an understanding of cultural contexts, and a sensitivity to emotional nuances. Through thoughtful adaptation, translators can create haiku that not only retain the spirit of the original but also speak meaningfully to Hindi-speaking audiences. Ultimately, this process enriches both languages and fosters a deeper appreciation for the art of haiku across cultural boundaries."


drifting sands
sometimes the poem
writes itself

Winning Haiku, 2023 Drifting Sands Wearable Art and Haiku Contest

The Haiku Foundation, Haiku of the Day (formerly Per Diem), July 2025

Selected by R. Ganesh for the theme of "Socio-Political Ku": July 18, 2025


refugee train
small hands starfished
against the glass

1st Place, 2024 Triveni Awards 

The Haiku Foundation, Haiku of the Day (formerly Per Diem), May 2025

Selected by Jim Kacian for the theme of "Haiku About Glaciers": May 3, 2025


calving glacier
i decide when
to let go

Failed Haiku 4.46, 2019

The Haiku Foundation: EarthRise Rolling Haiku Collaboration, April 2025

Theme: International Year of Glaciers' Preservation


solo hike the chatter marks of glaciers

First Frost, Issue 9, Spring 2025

 

Laurels: Tanka Society of America Online Journal, Number 4, August 2025

My thanks to guest editor Jackie Chou for including the following tanka for the theme: "time"!


tonight
the soliloquy of snow
does not console . . .
your voice forever lost
to those who loved you


Kokako, Number 43, September 2025

Grateful to have a lovely review of "Random Blue Sparks" by the editor, Graham Bates, included in this issue. It can be accessed under the book's title tab of this blog.


homelessness
the driftwood's hole
filled with a stone


rime ice
the spikes of burrs
grow longer


childhood days
spent digging for treasure
on the beach
you still wear the pendant
I made from pirate glass


the wind
strumming ocean waves
what music
do you have in store
for me tomorrow




The Cicada's Cry: A Micro-Zine of Haiku Poetry, Summer 2025

ice cream cart
a child counting
sand dollars

Monday, August 11, 2025

New Zealand Poetry Society International Poetry Competition, 2025

My thanks to Scott Mason, the judge of this contest!


campfire nights
we ride in on the back
of a song

3rd Place

Judge's Commentary:

This poem also holds a surprise in its third line, yet one that deepens the evocative tone established in its first. The words "campfire nights" conjure feelings of good, old-fashioned fellowship and here, in an almost mystical if secular sort of union, the poem's protagonists join in even before they arrive. A memorable mood piece.

Haiku Society of America, Merit Book Awards, 2025

Thrilled to have received 3rd Place in the Haiku Society of America Merit Book Awards for 2025 (for books published in 2024) for Random Blue Sparks (Snapshot Press, 2024)


My thanks to the judges! Commentary to follow:
 

The Solitary Daisy, Issue 53, May 2025

Grateful to have the following work reposted from a haiga published in Tinywords 25.1, May 2025:

refugee train
small hands starfished
against the glass 

1st Place
2024 Triveni Awards

Wales Haiku Journal, Summer 2025

a cathedral
of arched rushes . . .
marsh warblers


Triya Mag: Monsoon Edition, June/July 2025

Translated into Hindi


sea pebbles
glistening in the sun
we, too
lose more of ourselves
with every passing wave

Honourable Mention, 2020 British Haiku Society Tanka Awards


snowmelt
the wild crocuses
you loved

2nd Place, 2019 Morioka International Haiku Contest



 

Time Haiku, Number 62, August 2025

the postman
says another blizzard
is brewing . . .
I reread your letters,
steeped in my solitude


katabatic winds
blowing off the glacier
overnight,
tundra and ptarmigan
seasoned with stars


you kept
most of yourself hidden
from the world . . .
an iceberg flips over,
showing its true colours

Sonic Boom, July 2025

worry bone the sperm whale clicking inside my jaw

Prune Juice, Issue 46, August 2025

Grateful to have the following work included in the last issue edited by Antoinette Cheung and P.H. Fischer:


tsundoku
we don't know what
we don't know

(note: tsundoku: the art of book accumulation)


 

Presence, Number 82, July 2025

Grateful to the new Presence team, James Roderick Burns, Ken Cockburn, and Becky Dwyer for the following acceptances in their inaugural issue as editors:


depths of winter
the parrot mimics
your cough


a whale pod
bubble-netting prey
all the patterns
we made together
begin to dissolve

a tea can
of mismatched buttons
in the workshop
I often wonder why
you singled me out


I was delighted to discover that the following haiku was shortlisted for the Best-of-Issue Award in Presence 81:


sugar maples
small boys running
until they can't

Our Best Haiga: Black & White Haiga/Haisha, August 2025

Curated by Lavana Kray


August 1, 2025


(note: this haiga first appeared in Cantos, March 2024)



Dwarf Stars 2025 - The Best Very Short Speculative Poems Published in 2024

Honoured to have the following work chosen for this anthology of shortlisted poems. My thanks to the editor, Miguel O. Mitchell!


a fawn steps
into the fairy ring . . .
lunar eclipse

The Cicada's Cry, Summer 2024
 

Haiku 2025: 100 Notable Ku from 2024, Modern Haiku Press, 2025

Thrilled to be included in this anthology edited by Lee Gurga and Scott Metz!


reproductive choice making a baby glacier

Password: Journal of Very Short Poetry, Issue 1.2, May 2024

Haiku 21.2: An Anthology of Contemporary English-language Haiku, 2025

Thrilled to be included in this anthology edited by Lee Gurga and Scott Metz!


summer fair
our dog retrieves
a lost boy

Mariposa 40, Spring/Summer 2019


soft rain
the lily and I with stars
in our throats

Under the Basho, 2018

Heliosparrow Poetry Journal, August 2025

Featured August 11, 2025:



 

Heliosparrow Poetry Journal, July 2025

Featured July 30, 2025:




Hedgerow Poems, Number 149, 2025

swift current
a dipper dives
into its song

Half Day Moon Journal, Issue No. 3, August 2025

boreal rain our skin pelted with blackflies

Haiga in Focus, Issue 85, August 2025

 Curated by Claudia Brefeld


Translated into German





Fresh Out: An Arts and Poetry Collective, July 2025

 Curated by Eric A. Lohman


Featured Artist: July 22, 2025


(note: this haiku first appeared in the Edmonton Japanese Community Association Spring Haiku Competition Anthology, 2024)


#FemkuMag, Issue 39, Summer 2025

fogged in
a friend jumps off the bridge
to nowhere


bully culture
six coyotes surround
a mule deer


if we had one
to call our own . . .
star nursery


Note: this issue also includes a lovely review of Random Blue Sparks. It can be accessed under the Random Blue Sparks tab of this blog. My deepest thanks to Rowan Beckett Minor for the sensitive reading and commentary.
 

Enchanted Garden Haiku Journal, Issue 12, At the Sky Gates, July 2025

Translated into Romanian


lambing season
a flock of clouds
at loose ends



 

Daily Haiku: Charlotte Digregorio's Writer's Blog,. July 2025

Daily Haiku Special - July 17, 2025 - theme "peace"


the peace
that accompanies
forgiveness
after this long drought
an ecstasy of rain

GUSTS, Number 25, Spring/Summer 2017

Daily Haiga: An Edited Journal of Traditional and Contemporary Haiga, July 2025

Featured Artist: July 8, 2025


Note: this haiku was first published in Modern Haiku 55.1, 2024

Contemporary Haibun Online, Issue 21.2, August 2025

Haiga Gallery: selected by Ron Moss



 

Bottle Rockets, Vol. 27, Number 1 (or #53), August 2025

Milky Way
the short life span
of my baby sister
 

Blithe Spirit, Volume 35, Number 3, August 2025

mourning rituals
a loon's wail haunts
the lake


the mudpuppy
on my bucket list . . .
moonlit pond

(note: mudpuppies are nocturnal salamanders)


red welts
of jagged sky besmirch
the sky
this morning, I am
storm-stung with dread
 

A Fine Line: The Magazine of the New Zealand Poetry Society, Winter 2025

alpine camp
meteors falling
into our mouths

Modern Haiku, Volume 55.1, 2024