Showing posts with label Haiku Society of America. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Haiku Society of America. Show all posts

Monday, August 11, 2025

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:
 

Tuesday, November 28, 2023

Saturday, December 03, 2022

Friday, July 22, 2022

Haiku Society of America Newsletter, Volume 37, Number 7, July 2022

My thanks to the HSA President, Jay Friedenberg, for choosing the following monoku for commentary:


assigned gender the 25,000 sexes of split-grill mushrooms

Kontinuum, Volume 1.1, 2021


Poets are often afraid of using their art to explore sensitive issues in politics and culture. This monoku does just that. There is a lot of current debate over how gender is determined, for example whether it is primarily biological in nature or more shaped by environment. Debbie Strange sets the stage with the first two words but what follows takes us on an interesting detour. It is the case that some fungi have many thousands of sexes. What then does this mean for people? Nature astounds us with its variety and suggests all sorts of possibilities. There is a hidden lesson in this lesson about the natural world.
 

Monday, February 07, 2022

Monday, November 08, 2021

Frogpond, Vol. 44, Number 3, Autumn 2021

wolf pack
our social glue
u n s t i c k s


This issue includes Kristen Lindquist's lovely review of The Language of Loss: Haiku & Tanka Conversations:


My thanks to Kristen for taking the time to write such a thoughtful and appreciative review! A transcript of her review may be accessed under this blog's tab for The Language of Loss.


This issue also includes Randy Brooks' wonderful review of A New Resonance 12:



My thanks to Randy for the following excerpt regarding my work:

Debbie Strange is a master at setting a scene, then inviting the reader to settle in for a story. She doesn't provide the end of the story, but just enough to get us anticipating or imagining possibilities. We get the gist and feel the feeling of the tale:

porch swing
songs where we least
expect them


This issue also includes the results of the 2021 Haiku Society of America Merit Book Awards for books published in 2020. My thanks to the judges, Ce Rosenow and Bryan Rickert for awarding The Language of Loss: Haiku & Tanka Conversations an honourable mention in this contest! Their comments follow:

True to its name, Debbie Strange's The Language of Loss explores the many facets of loss and survival using both haiku and tanka. One haiku and one tanka are paired beautifully on every page. Never predictable and always revealing, this book delivers consistent quality from start to finish.

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Haiku Society of America, Merit Book Awards, 2021

Thrilled to have received an Honourable Mention in the Haiku Society of America Merit Book Awards for 2021 (for books published in 2020) for The Language of Loss: Haiku & Tanka Conversations (Sable Books 2020).


My thanks to judges Ce Rosenow and Bryan Rickert for their lovely comments:

"True to its name, The Language of Loss explores the many facets of loss and survival using both haiku and tanka. One haiku and one tanka are paired beautifully on every page. Never predictable and always revealing, this book delivers consistent quality from start to finish."

This book was also the winner of the 2019 Sable Books International Women's Haiku Book Contest, judged by Roberta Beary, esteemed author of The Unworn Necklace and Deflection.



 

Sunday, October 14, 2018

Four Hundred and Two Snails, Haiku Society of America Members' Anthology 2018

starflowers
light the woodland . . .
we find our way

Winner (Month of May)
2017 Snapshot Press Haiku Calendar Competition


Thursday, November 09, 2017

Friday, December 23, 2016