Publications

news (7.17.09)

by Scott Metz on July 17, 2009

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A few news items for troutswirl readers.

First and foremost, I would like to point out to everyone some of the hard and creative work The Haiku Foundation’s Webmaster, Dave Russo, has done. On the right hand side of the blog you will notice a number of changes have been made.

Because troutswirl contains different sections/strands, Dave had created a “Posts by Category” archive. If you allow your mouse-arrow to rest on one of the category titles (i.e. Virals), a brief definition of that section should appear inside a box. Clicking on one of the section titles allows you to access all the posts created for that individual section.

Below “Posts by Category,” a search engine has been added. Forget what posting you commented on?: type in your name. Want to see if there are any posts that mention Bashō: type in “Bashō.” Whatever you do, don’t type in “Scott Metz.” Your computer might break ;)

A section displaying a larger amount of the most recent comments left on troutswirl posts, “Comments on Posts,” has also been added.

Lastly, an archive for each of troutswirl’s first three months (May, June and July) has been added and will, of course, continue to expand with each passing month.

We hope these changes create a more pleasurable and clearer reading experience for you.

More changes are in the works, so please stay tuned. We are always open to suggestions on ways to improve the blog, so please let us know if you have any ideas.

A reminder: the in-hand deadline for the Henderson Haiku and Brady Senryu contests (run annually by the Haiku Society of America) is July 31. Send all previously unpublished haiku and senryu to:

Francine Banwarth
985 So Grandview
Dubuque, IA 52003

Any questions or concerns, email Francine at: frantic647@yahoo.com

All details and procedure can be accessed on the HSA website.

A note from Charlie Trumbull:

Please note that Modern Haiku is moving to New Mexico!

After the close of the current reading period on July 15, the MH files will be packed up for the move to Santa Fe, NM. For a period of about a month, processing of new submissions will be suspended and response times will be very slow. We will try to process subscription matters as promptly as possible, but there may be some delays in this area too. We beg your understanding! With luck, we’ll be able to meet our publishing schedule and have issue 40.3 in the mail on schedule in October.

Effective immediately, the new address for all Modern Haiku matters is:

Charles Trumbull
Editor, Modern Haiku
PO Box 33077
Santa Fe NM 87594-9998

Mail will be forwarded from our Evanston mailbox for six months, but using that box, of course, will only add to the delay in processing your submissions and subscriptions.

We think we’ll be able to keep our present e-mail address:

Haiku North America 2009 now has a blog: http://haiku09.wordpress.com/

Recent posts include:

-Paul D Miller on Haiku Trends
-A Look at HNA with Michael Dylan Welch
-A Virtual Visit with Garry Gay
-Coming August 7: An evening of music and poetry
                  &
-Robert Sibley and the Way of Shikoku






Prune Juice Issue 2 (Summer 2009)

by Scott Metz on July 5, 2009

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The new issue of Prune Juice: Journal of Senryu & Kyoka Issue 2 (Summer 2009) is now up.





Collage Haiku

by Scott Metz on June 30, 2009

Here is something I recently found and thought readers might be interested in reading and thinking about.

Others’ Lines (Second Series) by David Giannini is an e-book of Collage Haiku published in 2003 by Shearsmen Books on their website.

Click here to find Shearmen’s e-book catalogue.

Though the haiku were not “directly observed” by Giannini, readers can read them and, in essence, “directly observe” and experience the ku for themselves.

Giannini describes the work as: “A new, admittedly minor, form . . . utilizing—stealing—only first lines of poems. The lines used in each triad are placed in personal as well as collegial and historical juxtapositions. . . . A sense of mischief and mythship. . . .”

The 120 poets whose first lines he borrows are indexed at the back of the book.

The juxtapositions and jumps are indeed strong in some, offering plenty of room and space for our imaginations to explore—requiring us to not only piece the lines together in our minds and find how they connect and create meaning with one another, but also to find how the poems connect with our own minds, imaginations and experiences. The concept is fascinating, capable of much depth, and offers haiku writers, I think, interesting possibilities for haiku composition—both challenging and expanding our definition of what haiku is and can be. It won’t work for all readers, or be “acceptable,” but then what can one do with the technique to improve upon it or utilize it in other interesting and even more creative ways? Who doesn’t like a little experimentation and mischievousness?

Three examples:

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The lazy ocean in your body
The sea staves
Hidden in the blood


(13)
Your voice comes from a dark room
Not seen – yet


The white howl of March


(14)
Across the mountain I see you
Open the middle of the tree


Crows blown out of the snow



12 3-line poems

by Scott Metz on June 26, 2009

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3-line poems, presented by
The Jackdaw’s Nest


Notes From the Gean (Volume 1, Issue 1)

by Scott Metz on June 2, 2009


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The first issue of Notes From the Gean: A Journal of Japanese Short Forms (Volume 1, Issue 1) is now up. Published by Gean Tree Press, this online journal features sections containing haiku, tanka, haiga, and other special features. The editorial staff consists of Colin Stewart Jones (Managing Editor), Lorin Ford (haiku), H. Gene Murtha (tanka) and Origa (haiga).