Showing posts with label United Haiku and Tanka Society. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United Haiku and Tanka Society. Show all posts

Saturday, January 25, 2025

United Haiku and Tanka Society, Songbirds Waka Online Journal, 2025

in the final
blue vestiges of night
a vixen's eyes
flashing like mine before
I lean into your kiss


the flames
of autumn foliage
ignite
so too this memory
of a love forgotten


night descends
and fireflies light up
the meadow
you trace a star map
across my belly


curtains
of clematis hide us
from view
let us lie together
a little while longer


restlessness
seeps into my blood
come autumn
how far must I roam
in search of your heart
 

Friday, July 19, 2024

United Haiku and Tanka Society, Fleeting Words Tanka Competition 2024

My thanks to the judge, an'ya, for her lovely commentary!


unopened cones
on silvered jack pines
at rest until
the fire's passion gives
their seed to the wind

2nd Place
2024 Fleeting Words Tanka Competition


Judging Commentary:

Yet another fine tanka by Debbie Strange of Canada takes a strong second place. In judging this contest I looked for "waka-like" entries and hers was a definite winner. The first line "unopened cones" rather than just saying "pine cones" caught my attention. Debbie has a way of turning her tanka in line 3 and skillfully completing it in the final line.


Sunday, December 31, 2023

United Haiku and Tanka Society, Songbirds Sedoka Online Journal, Premier Edition, 2023

dawn flushes
across the pale cheeks
of this winter sky

we wonder
if you will make it
through another night

Editor's Choice

Commentary by the editor, an'ya:

A very visually descriptive sedoka by Debbie Strange that utilizes nature in the first tercet and deepens to a human emotion in the second tercet. Her juxtaposition is outstanding, as we see the pale cheeks of that winter sky in the person who may not make it through another night. Debbie also has so easily managed a perfect 3/5/5 rhythm in both verses.

Wednesday, September 06, 2023

United Haiku and Tanka Society, Fleeting Words Tanka Competition 2023

My thanks to the judge, an'ya, for her lovely commentaries!


tussocks
soften the bog's edge
my thoughts
lost in this tangle
of lemming runways

3rd Place
2023 Fleeting Words Tanka Competition


Judging Commentary:

In Third Place, this interesting tanka by a consistent winner in various contests, Debbie Strange who lives in Canada. The word "tussocks" in line 1 immediately grabs the reader's attention. The person in this tanka knows enough to stay at the edge of the bog, and is aware enough to see the "lemming runways" (excellent word choice btw).


skeins of wool
unravel at my feet
in the last light
a swirl of snow geese
begins to descend

Honourable Mention
2023 Fleeting Words Tanka Competition


Judging Commentary:

Again, to Debbie, thank you for entering this HM. An incredibly visual write that allowed me to imagine a woman in her rocking chair with skeins of wool at her feet. I sense the metaphor here and can see the woman dozing off with that swirl of descending snow geese.

Thursday, December 22, 2022

United Haiku and Tanka Society, Songbirds Online Anthology, 2022

My thanks to the editor, an'ya, for selecting the following work:


world news
tansies freckle our way
with light


the green promise
of a new relationship
this fluttering
of malachite butterflies
between sun and shadow
 

Sunday, June 19, 2022

United Haiku and Tanka Society, Fleeting Words Tanka Competition 2022

My thanks to the judge, an'ya, for her lovely commentary!


dried cattails
delicately spun with frost
confections
sweetening the bitterness
of winter without you

2nd Place
2022 Fleeting Words Tanka Competition


Judging Commentary:

In Second Place is this charming tanka by Debbie Strange. Only an experienced and very aware tanka poet would notice that the "dried cattails/delicately spun with frost" look like "confections". This is a fine example of "showing" rather than "telling". She continues showing in the final lines with her use of the words "sweetening", and then relates it to a human element with "the bitterness of winter without you". Debbie has chosen her words very purposely which sets her tanka apart from others. Well done by this author, as usual. Thank you Debbie!
 

Friday, September 17, 2021

United Haiku and Tanka Society, Fleeting Words Tanka Competition 2021

My thanks to the judge, Marilyn Humbert!


lost gloves sprout
from melting snowbanks
every finger
points me toward
a place I'd rather be

Honourable Mention
2021 Fleeting Words Tanka Competition
 

Saturday, November 10, 2018

United Haiku and Tanka Society, Fleeting Words Tanka Competition, 2018

Seedpods - October 2018 (e-newsletter of the UHTS)


I offer my thanks to judges Carole MacRury and Michael McClintock for honouring me with the following awards:


We are pleased to recognize the following tanka for their contribution to a literature we have come to love and which continues to attract readers and poets in diverse cultures around the world. The glory of such a wide forum is that, while nurturing what is held in common among people everywhere, it also invites individual, personal, and intimate expression of human experience.

These poems grabbed and held our attention through many readings, including re-readings of the entire roster of entries. We extend warm congratulations to the poets who wrote them. As a group, they represent a healthy, sincere, and growing engagement with tanka in contemporary poetry.

We are grateful to Sonam Chhoki and Marianna Monaco for coordinating and managing all the details that went into this annual event. They cheerfully provided us with all we needed at each step of the process.


a smudge
of blackbirds swirling
into evening . . .
how fluid the shape
of this sorrow

2nd Place

Judges' comments:

This well-constructed tanka uses sibilance to enhance the fluidity of the reading as well as the fluidity of the emotions shown through the image in the first three lines. This fine poem by Debbie Strange shows the power of understatement and the power of imagery to express deep emotions. It has that magic space where readers may enter with their own experiences. Deep sorrow, as most of us know, comes unexpectedly in dark, wave-like moments just like the "smudge of blackbirds swirling into evening". Every single word earns its place in this poem.


snow whirls
outside the henhouse . . .
father cups
my hands around
a warm brown egg

3rd Place

Judges' comments:

A sensory poem that takes us from whirling snow, straight into the warmth of a henhouse, the warmth of a father/child relationship, and the warmth of a freshly gathered brown egg. Debbie Strange's use of "cups" gives a wonderful tactile sense and understanding to this moment's magical combination of both fragility and solidness—of the brown egg, and of the love palpably felt between father and child. All is fused in one powerful image. That is quite a feat. The winter metaphor in the first line could also allude to the day when the child will draw sustenance from this warm memory long after the father is gone.


I carry
an ocean within
my pocket . . .
this blue lace agate
etched with ancient tides

Honourable Mention

Judges' comments:

...Finally, Debbie Strange writes a tanka that holds time itself in a pocket, a vast cycle of geological processes and change, as shown through a blue agate etched by the tides.


(note: there were 270 entries from 18 countries)



Sunday, February 04, 2018

United Haiku and Tanka Society, Fleeting Words Tanka Competition, 2017

Seedpods - December 2017 (e-newsletter of the UHTS)

Message from Alan Summers - UHTS President


I am delighted and honoured to announce the results for the UHTS 'Fleeting Words' Tanka Competition.

The competition received 227 entries by poets from across the globe which was judged by David Terelinck. Everything was superbly coordinated by Marianna Monaco (USA) with unstinted dedication and patience. Note: Marianna made entries anonymous to send to the judge but the winners' names are given in this report. Please enjoy the winning entries and commentaries by the judge, David Terelinck (Australia).


the growth rings
of otoliths and trees . . .
when did she
become smaller
than her daughters

2nd Place

This tanka also has an effective metaphor for conveying change in just 20 syllables. Again, it is a tanka of satisfying construction that builds line by line to a solid conclusion. There are many ways to interpret this poem. We usually associate growth rings with maturity and coming of age; but there are several ways to grow older, yet become smaller in life and outlook. We do not know if the poet is implying smallness in physical stature, social situation, or spirituality and compassion.

The social context and times in which we read poetry will often influence our appreciation of the poem, and its impact upon us. This judge is no exception. At the moment Australia is going through a debate on changing the legislation to allow for same-sex couples to marry. This has seen, in some quarters, a schism of conflicting views between parent and child in terms of marriage equality. New generations can often have a larger world view of compassion and equality, and overtake their parents in challenging outdated notions. In this way, their views can grow to be "bigger" than the parent who raised them.


the pair bonds
of prairie voles . . .
she asks
if he used to be
her husband

3rd Place

A beautiful and fresh look at the anguish and pain associated with Alzheimer's disease. Just 15 words and 17 syllables to convey such depth of meaning.

Prairie voles monogamously mate for life. Even when one dies, the remaining vole is unlikely to take a new mate. This is a touching metaphor for the fading memory between this woman and her husband. We do not know if the woman is in an aged care facility or still living at home. What we do sense is the commitment to the relationship; he is either visiting, or still with her. Despite what memory and disease has taken away, the pair bonds for this couple remain strong. And a glimmer of this shines through in her faint recognition of him and her question.


the architecture
of impending storms . . .
every cloud
that hangs over me
has a given name

Honourable Mention
.

Friday, December 23, 2016

United Haiku and Tanka Society, Fleeting Words Tanka Competition, 2016

mute swans
under a moon bridge
the things
I should have confessed
make no difference now

1st Place


Judge an'ya's comments:

Selected for the first place in this competition, is this tanka by a well known author from Canada, Debbie Strange. Smoothly composed, the words "mute swans" in line 1 and "under a moon bridge" in line 2 starts it off beautifully. Debbie creates a distinct pause before she goes into lines 3 and 4 which juxtapose with a human relationship. This tanka then finally spills over to line 5, in a flowing crescendo and the moment of closure. Simple images, and straightforward words make this tanka work for anyone and everyone who reads it.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Cattails, September 2015

a red canoe
drifts between pines
his last portage


popping open
the sound of summer
caragana pods


crape myrtle
the skinned knees
of small boys


sudden sleet
an owl chick tapping
its egg tooth


lake-light
a line of mergansers
ripples the clouds


old headstones
with mossy shoulders
leaning against
one another's curves
we take comfort here


wishing seeds
cartwheel through warm air
how quiet
this fleeting moment
this belief in miracles

Second Honorable Mention
2015 Fleeting Words Tanka Contest


Comments from the Judge:

Second Honorable Mention goes to Debbie Strange from Canada for this fine tanka. Her choice of words "wishing seeds" and "cartwheel" allow readers wonderful visuals. Once again as in Anne's tanka, the poetic device of repeating a phrase firstly in nature and again in reference to human life, proves to be quite effective.

—Fleeting Words Contest Judge an'ya, USA







United Haiku and Tanka Society, Fleeting Words Tanka Competition, 2015

wishing seeds
cartwheel through warm air
how quiet
this fleeting moment
this belief in miracles

2nd Honorable Mention


Judge an'ya's comments:

Second Honorable Mention goes to Debbie Strange from Canada for this fine tanka. Her choice of words "wishing seeds" and "cartwheel" allow readers wonderful visuals. Once again as in Anne's tanka, the poetic device of repeating a phrase firstly in nature and again in reference to human life, proves to be quite effective.

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Cattails, May 2014

leaf mulch
a nest of bunnies
halts the rake


rosemary from
your bridal bouquet
and funeral wreath
the scent of you
lingers on my hands


sand dollars
the currency of tides
in my pocket


we blow
our cares away . . .
pinwheel


mountain lupine . . .
the colour of wild
in your eyes




on the tundra
caging a winter sky
caribou bones

Third Place for Haiku
Second Annual "aha" Awards, 2014


Comments from the Judges:

In this snapshot, the author shows us how expansive this world is. From a wide-angle lens, we are brought into the closeness of what once held breath and life, yet now holds infinity . . . the heavens. We imagine the lush plant life and water from the summer tundra, but are also reminded of winter's perils and struggles of fighting for survival and giving in to the strength of Mother Nature. Through the stillness of the caribou's bones, we see the continuous movement of the seasons and the oneness of it all.

—UHTS Contest Judge b'oki, U.S.

This haiku of Debbie's struck me hard with its content and exquisite wording. The caribou bones "as a cage for the winter sky" is such a striking image. In her write-up, bo'ki captures the wholeness of the moment so beautifully that I am just here to follow up.

—UHTS Contest Judge an'ya, U.S.