Showing posts with label Warp and Weft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warp and Weft. Show all posts

Sunday, February 04, 2018

Hedgerow Poems, Number 122, Winter 2017

Print Edition



A Selection from Warp and Weft: Tanka Threads:


folding into me


riding pillion
my heart against
your back
we unzip the highway
at the velocity of night


delivered
to your opening door
in mason jars
of wild plums and fireflies
you hold me in your hands


crossing over
the bridge of sighs
I felt you
folding into me
folding into prayer


The following haiga incorporates my 3rd place winning poem in the 2014 Hortensia Anderson Awards administered by the United Haiku and Tanka society:





The following poem is my contribution to the collaborative sequence of haiku, a stairway to the stars, written with Steve Hodge, Simon Hanson, Ron C. Moss, and Caroline Skanne:


frost-spun
a spider's web
unravels me








Sunday, December 03, 2017

Ribbons, Volume 13, Number 3, Fall 2017

I can hear
clouds rustling against
taffeta skies . . .
my senses sharper
since you went away




Note:

This issue also contains a lovely review of my book, Warp and Weft: Tanka Threads (Michelle Brock, Australia). It may be accessed in  the "Books & Reviews" section of this blog.




Thursday, July 14, 2016

Cattails, January 2016

dusty sky
refugees make kites
from plastic bags


bagpipes skirl
across the prairie
Dad goes home


midnight sun
will you miss me
when I'm gone


in the hills
cattle lowing between
silences


aftermath
a skunk forages
in fireweed


the dry ache
of a long goodbye
how do we
reach the other side
with the bridge washed out


Tanka Editor's Choice:

This Editor's Choice is by Debbie Strange from Canada, and it demonstrates a songlike rhythm which is pleasing to the ear and desirable in the tanka form. However I chose it not only for the melody but for its contents and its juxtaposition as well. Representative of an aching heart after a long goodbye, we are left to wonder how to reach the other side with the bridge washed out. Metaphoric in its content, leaves a reader to believe in that old saying that "love always finds a way".

—UHTS cattails tanka editor an'ya, USA






Note: This issue also contains a lovely review of Warp and Weft, Tanka Threads by an'ya which may be accessed via the book's title page of this blog.






Thursday, June 02, 2016

Skylark, Vol. 4, Number 1, Summer 2016

ease me down
into cool waters
plait my hair
with green willow roots
make of me your anchor


this is the song
of our humpback hearts
when we listen
to the ocean breathing
blood returns to water



Note: This issue also contains a lovely review of Warp and Weft, Tanka Threads by Jenny Ward Angyal which may be accessed via the "Books and Reviews" page of this blog.

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Atlas Poetica, Number 24, March 2016

newly planted
evening-scented stock
at the end
of this careworn day
the sweetness of night


late harvest
the roar of combines
all night long
looming through grain dust
there be dragons


how we longed
for the circus to come
one last chance
to hang by our heels
from the high-wire moon


white-tailed deer
between tamaracks
our past
e l o n g a t i n g
with each golden hour


a black dog
slavers at the edges
of my mind
is there no escaping
this inevitable defeat


drum circle
my heart pounding
in my mouth
these words that taste of blood
and sound like thunder


she is small-boned
with beautiful plumage
this tanka bird
whose every short song
lifts us into glory

(for Kathabela Wilson)


Midnight Shift


Winter nights are never quiet when I spend them alone, brooding in bed like an egg in a nest of down.

A plane drones overhead. In rising winds, evergreen branches scratch messages against the windowpane.

Our clock chimes on the hour. The dog's nails tap dance across hardwood before she settles down with a sigh. The furnace grumbles through its cycles, struggling to keep bone-rattling temperatures at bay. My body tenses as a sharp crack splits the air. This old house speaks its own language, and the strings of my guitar respond with sympathetic vibrations.

the sound of tires
squeaking on new snow
a winter bird
rises from her rest
fluffing up her feathers


Note: This issue also contains a lovely review of Warp and Weft, Tanka Threads by Maxianne Berger which may be accessed via the "Books and Reviews" page of this blog.






Sunday, September 20, 2015

NeverEnding Story, September 2015

Cool Announcement: A New Release, Warp and Weft, Tanka Threads

My Dear Readers:

I'm happy to share with you this exciting news: NeverEnding Story contributor Debbie Strange just published her first collection of tanka, titled Warp and Weft, Tanka Threads (edited by M. Kei and available in print and ebook at Amazon), which "weaves tanka into short threads of three each, each triptych building into a larger sequence that tells the story of a poet with a raven's eye."


Selected Tanka:


at the stoplight
she squeegees
car windows
her scrawny arms tattooed
with poetry and addiction


my hands
tend the wild roses
upon your grave
in blood and blossoms
I sanctify your name


scattered
beneath the roses
these questions:
are you not more than ash
am I not more than rain


riding pillion
my heart
against your back
we unzip the highway
at the velocity of night


moonbeam quills
through our windows
transcribing
the grammar of shadows
into the poetry of light


at the top
of a ferris wheel
two spiders
spin neon orbs
into the night


a nimbus
around the frost moon
above us
the hushed wings
of a snowy owl