Tuesday 9 January 2007

MAIN HAIKU SELECTIONS







EDITOR'S WELCOME

Readers are now more accustomed to the six different categories of haiku which are featured in WHR's haiku selections. Of course, a haiku poet is a single person and cannot be dissected neatly and conveniently into categories. All emotions, thoughts and feelings which are working inside a poet will interact with what he or she experiences in the world around. Quite in which way such interaction leads the poet to is unpredictable. That is part of the fascination and joy of poetry creation.

However, the end results can be displayed according to some practical and reasonable characteristics, just like there are in the same music jazz, pop songs, country Western or classical music, or within classical music piano sonatas can be separated from symphonies. WHCvanguard haiku dealing with horrendous cruelty or violent sex do not mix well with WHChaikuneoclassical haiku admiring the beauty of Mt. Fuji or depicting loneliness consoled by cricket songs. I don't want to listen to rock 'n' roll and Mozart in the same concert hall, played simultaneouly. I love Dean Martin and Luciano Pavarotti almost in equal measure but I don't listen to them together. WHC's haiku classification means just that.

It is not so much asking poets to write poems according to such categories (which in itself is an important task but...) as asking them to create anything they like but to show anything worth showing in the right showrooms. If at any given time there are no works worth showing in some of these showrooms, then just don't. Equally, poets who have no interest in kigo at all do not need to post anything, or even join, WHChaikuneoclassical any more than those with no interest in progressive and radical end of vers libre haiku should post, or even subscribe, to WHCvanguard.

There have been misunderstandings and confusion about these aims of WHC's haiku classification. Such misunderstandings or confusion must not be allowed to stand in the way of poets' creation. And these are problems of the poets' own creation and therefore problems for themselves to solve.

Readers are welcome and encouraged to submit their original haiku on a on-going basis as well as in response to our call for submission.

Kengin,

Susumu Takiguchi
Editor WHChaiku, WHR


[Introduction]

all the six categories are as follows:

(a) GENERAL CATEGORY: Haiku poems of any type, form, topic, with or without kigo;

(b) THEMED CATEGORY: Haiku poems on the theme of "Solitude" (to be broadly interpreted. No restrictions
regarding form or kigo);

(c) KIGO CATEGORY: "Leaves turn colour";

(d) NEO-CLASSICAL HAIKU: Strictly traditional (see: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WHChaikuneoclassical )

(e) SHINTAI HAIKU: "shintai haiku" (new-style freer haiku) which sits between neo-classical and vanguard.

(f) VANGUARD HAIKU: Most radical and freest haiku (see: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WHCvanguard )

Each category has The Best (First Place), Best Ten and Zatsuei (haiku of merit). From the six The Best poems, The Grand Best (the best from all categories) is chosen as the Editor's Choice of the Issue.

List of Poets Featured

Dave Bacharach, US
Kent Chadwick, US
Cathy Drinkwater Better, US
Lynn Edge
Elizabeth Fanto, US
Michael Flack, Australia
Lorin Ford, Australia
Laryalee Fraser, Canada
Damien Gabriels, France
Denis M. Garrison, US
Victor P. Gendrano, US
Olga Hooper (Origa), US
Elizabeth Howard, US
Kirsty Karkow, US
Bill Kenney, US
Deborah P. Kolodji, US
Carmel Lively, US
Vinodh Marella (Yajushi), India
Tomislav Maretic, HR
Dubravko Marijanovic, HR
Zoran Mimica, Austria
Ruzica Mokos, HR
Polona Oblak, Slovenia
Paul Pfleuger, Jr., Taiwan
Zhanna P. Rader, US
Narayanan Raghunathan, India
Terrie Leigh Relf (semi), US
Bruce Ross, US
Yuri Runov, Russia
Ann K. Schwader, US
Vaughn Seward (tanemaki koishi), Canada
Adelaide B. Shaw, US
Nancy Stewart Smith, US
Marie Summers, US
Tad Wojnicki, US/Taiwan




#########################


THE GRAND BEST (The best from all categories and thus the Editor's Choice)

Joint Winners



red and gold
the hillside threads
into autumn

Laryalee Fraser, Canada



revealing itself
upon a banana leaf,
october wind

Vaughn Seward (tanemaki koishi), Canada


* * *

I have tried in vain to choose one of these as THE GRAND BEST. Both use century-old themes. Both, nevertheless, have newness and originality. Both deal with autumn. (And both are Canadians!) Both are good. Both I like also. In other words I have absolutely no reason why I would choose one in preference to the other and one thing I don't do is to toss a coin. The only solution left for me, therefore, is to make them joint winners.

'threads into autumn' and that the october wind is 'revealing itself upon a banana leaf' are the bits which make each of these haiku special respectively. The former is excellence of wording or expression. 'nishiki wo oru' is a Japanese expression which means to weave or thread cloths of exquisite colours and Fraser's phrase is surprisingly close to it, even if it may be a sheer coincidence. 'threads into' gives a sense of movement and the progression of time, as well as a skilful sketch of the autumn landscape.

Seward's is a case of superior grasp of an ordinary occurrence in an unusual and innovative way. We are accustomed to such expressions as whatever leaf or leaves swaying or trembling. However, to see wind revealing itself because of the certain movement of the banana leaf is new indeed.

Both are extremely good examples that we can still create a new and original haiku using the hackneyed and stereotypical materials.


******************************************************



(a) GENERAL CATEGORY:

THE BEST


deep ocean fog
the ferry passes
a last buoy

Bruce Ross, US

*

BEST TEN (In no particular order but includes THE BEST)


1

first chill
a spider weaves his web
under the neon light

Polona Oblak, Slovenia

2

doctor's waiting room
tropical plants
reach for light


Elizabeth Fanto, US

3

Summer day —
the whole valley is just for me
and the skylarks

Zhanna Rader, US

4

short day —
clouds race across
the prairie sky

Laryalee Fraser, Canada

5

Without distant peaks
the plain looks so dreary
swept by autumn wind

Yuri Runov, Russia

6

Spring again —

how can it be when my son

died last autumn?



Nancy Stewart Smith, US

7


deep ocean fog
the ferry passes
a last buoy

Bruce Ross, US

8

autumn evening
following my shadow
into the shadows

Bill Kenney, US

9

old path
grassed over
spring

Tad Wojnicki, US/Taiwan

10

the old couple
not ready to go in —
autumn evening

Bill Kenney, US

*

ZATSUEI (In no particular order)

widow's walk
a pool of leaves circles
the river birch

Kirsty Karkow, US

*


Hurrican Katrina: Fifteen Haiku
Septembet 2005

New Orleans floodwaters:
the face of the mutt
stranded in a tree

suddenly homeless
a mother holds her babies
too tight

water swirls
around submerged street signs—
rainbows of oil

in water-logged buildings
broken windows gape...
helicopter sound

floating rooftops
flames leap
from the water's surface

nightfall—
gunshots ring out
across the dark water

crowded shelter
the old woman's
tear-streaked face

amid search and resuce
video of looters
with a cart of TVs

manna from heaven—
helicopter-dropped MREs
splash down

sunlit tarmac:
a soldier carries a child
in each arm

rooftop rescue—
beneath the floodwaters
countless dead

sunset:
a journalist in hip waders
begins his report

photo-ops and sound bytes—
exhausted relief workers
hand out water

rifles at the ready
going door to door
in search of life

fetid waters
on his porch a hold-out
smiles and waves at the camera

Cathy Drinkwater Better, US

*

A night walk
with fireflies to the music
of tree frogs

Zhanna Rader, US

*

moonlight fresco
on the snowy slope
pawprints

Laryalee Fraser, Canada

*

early worship
sparrow shadows crisscross
the stained-glass dove

Elizabeth Howard, US

*

sunrise
the night fisherman reels
in his line

Lynn Edge, US


early morning
the heron's double image
glides downriver

Lynn Edge, US


*

Snow on a crow's back —
white on black, on white
Kent Chadwick, US

*

garden spider
a sunray caught
in its web

Marie Summers, US

*

watering —
a lizard laps up the drops
spilt on the pavement

Damien Gabriels, France

*

a rock on the hill
on a petrified shell
lichen grows

Polona Oblak, Slovenia
*

white dawn
a moon crab sinks back
into sand



Lorin Ford, Australia

*

moonlit bridge —
my shadow checks the path
before my steps

Olga Hooper (Origa), US
*

Tedious chit-chat...
light taps of the evening rain
in old apple trees.

Yuri Runov, Russia

*

aeons pass ~
yellow butterfly still
on the red rose

Narayanan Raghunathan, India

*

a sun appears
at midnight ~ the lamp

lights by itself



Narayanan Raghunathan, India



*



island through the haze
quivering with
the clamour of cicadas



Tomislav Maretic, HR

*

dancing with waves
snowflakes and sea foam
winter game

Ruzica Mokos, HR


*

Birds greet the morning. . .

sunlight filtering through the leaves

warm summer rain



Michael Flack, Australia



*



no money
— just the time
left

Zoran Mimica, Austria



*



waiting for a verdict —
the window becomes opaque
with frost

Denis M. Garrison, US



*






(b) THEMED CATEGORY (Solitude):



THE BEST




a stray stork
the sound of planes landing
and taking off

Polona Oblak, Slovenia

*


BEST TEN (In no particular order but includes THE BEST)

1

alone on the beach
the wavelength
of a single thought

Laryalee Fraser, Canada

2


a stray stork
the sound of planes landing
and taking off

Polona Oblak, Slovenia

3

Cutting old hazel —
we grew up together
and aged...

Yuri Runov, Russia

4

a widow watches
the setting sun, unmoved
by the loon's cry

Victor P. Gendrano, US

5

aimless feet
wander
in solitude

Vinodh Marella (Yajushi), India

6


the old couple
silent together sharing
solitudes

Bill Kenney, US

7

grandma's house
dust mites and memories
live in the attic

Carmel Lively, US

8


solitude
only the hum
of a dryer on low

Terrie Leigh Relf (semi), US

9

all alone —
urinating on my
own shadow

Dubravko Marijanovic, HR

10

winter isolation —
only the death visits
remote villages

Tomislav Maretic, HR

*

ZATSUEI


shallow water
a heron and I watch
one small fish

Kirsty Karkow, Maine USA

*

Alone at last —
a scuba tank on my back
and fish around

Zhanna Rader, US

*

late day stillness
a single acorn hits
the back deck

Bruce Ross, US

*

crowded subway —
careful to avoid
all the eyes

Dave Bacharach, US

*

camping alone —
the faces of women
in the fire

Dave Bacharach, US

*

long-distance call
lying alone and cold
in the double bed

Elizabeth Howard, US

*

hidden waterfall
in the redwoods
a lone hiker

Deborah P. Kolodji, US


*

a swift crossed the sky
that moment
she was gone

Denis M. Garrison, US


*

sleepless —
how even the moon
is alone

Ann K. Schwader, US




(c) KIGO CATEGORY: "Leaves turning colour"



THE BEST



red and gold
the hillside threads
into autumn

Laryalee Fraser, Canada



BEST TEN (In no particular order but includes THE BEST)

1

How carelessly
the birch throws away its gold
to the autumn wind

Yuri Runov, Russia

2

all the leaves are brown. . .

my son's ashes and dog

both lost to me



Nancy Stewart Smith, US

3


Leaves turning —
this year the old man watches them
only from his window

Zhanna Rader, US

4


red and gold
the hillside threads
into autumn

Laryalee Fraser, Canada

5

asphalt driveway —
a leaf mosaic
shifts its pattern


Adelaide B. Shaw, US

6


leaves turning color
I ask my hairdresser
to hide the gray

Deborah P. Kolodji, US

7


marching band
red and yellow leaves swirl
with the panoply of flags

Elizabeth Howard, US

8

leaves turning color
last green patches as green
as they will ever be

Bill Kenney, US

9


red leaves!
the tree climbing vine

drops its disguise



Lorin Ford, Australia


10

grey morning
the first yellow birch leaf
behind the wiper

Polona Oblak, Slovenia

*

ZATSUEI (In no particular order)


as leaves turn
a laughing gull
on every rock

Kirsty Karkow, Maine USA

*

Windy day —
red maple waving good-by
to its leaves

Zhanna Rader, US

*

autumn equinox
the two burning bush
brighter red

Bruce Ross, US

*

early September
with the first color changes
how white the birch

Bruce Ross, US

*

mountain trek
a spray of red leaves
hanging from the bluff

Elizabeth Howard, US

*

her last quilt
an abstract pattern
of fall leaves

Carmel Lively, US

*

coming back from work
first yellow leaves
in the path of the garage

Damien Gabriels, France

*
sunny California
only the maple trees wear
golden leaves


Victor P. Gendrano, US

*

Indian summer
footpath paved in gold —
acacia leaves

Polona Oblak, Slovenia

*

yellowing leaves —

she quits cigarettes

again



Lorin Ford, Australia



*



unfolding autumn
with color change, the tree
has shrunk

Olga Hooper (Origa), US





(d) NEO-CLASSICAL HAIKU:


THE BEST



revealing itself
upon a banana leaf,
october wind

Vaughn Seward (tanemaki koishi), Canada


*

BEST TEN

1


nameless flowers

sway in the cool breeze ~

a butterfly names them ~



Narayanan Raghunathan, India



2


end of August
evening advances
shadow by shadow

Bill Kenney, US

3


autumn dusk
grandpa gazes at the bird
flying alone

Victor P. Gendrano, US

4


revealing itself
upon a banana leaf,
october wind

Vaughn Seward (tanemaki koishi), Canada

5


downtown sidewalk
cherry petals
clog the cracks

Tad Wojnicki, US/Taiwan

6

a muskrat
glides in silence,
under the ice

Vaughn Seward (tanemaki koishi), Canada

7

sun-baked earth —
black ants crawling
into a cracked rock

Terrie Leigh Relf (semi), US

8


now fading into dawn
the moon that shone so brightly
in the midnight sky

Bill Kenney, US

9


first snowfall —
here is a christmas card
to be mailed, last year

Vaughn Seward (tanemaki koishi), Canada

10


crisp winter day —
columns of chimney smoke
hold up the sky

Olga Hooper (Origa), US



*


ZATSUEI (In no particular order)


No one in the park —
gusty rain is whipping
the bare tree branches

Zhanna Rader, US

*

coolness
into the Black Sea
lightning

Bruce Ross, US

*

dead reeds
along the Danube River
dragonflies

Bruce Ross, US

*

frosty evening —
the faint thump
of a basketball

Vaughn Seward (tanemaki koishi), Canada

*



(e) SHINTAI HAIKU:


THE BEST

Autumn wind —
her ex's ashes blow
into her face

Zhanna Rader, US



*


BEST TEN (In no particular order)

1


home from the coast
when the door opens
coffee scent and her voice

Denis M. Garrison, US

2


old photograph
my wife's face
before she knew mine

Bill Kenney, US

3


cicada's persistence where the artist was shot in the back

Paul Pfleuger, Jr., Taiwan

4

bricklayer asleep
fountain of flies springing up
every turn and toss


Vinodh Marella (Yajushi), India

5


Autumn wind —
her ex's ashes blow
into her face

Zhanna Rader, US

6


field of greens
and pleasing me most
these dry weeds

Bruce Ross, US

7

birthday cake
left in the oven
late bus


Terrie Leigh Relf (semi), US

8

do I know you —
my young face looks at me
from an old photo

Bill Kenney, US

9


sugar cane bowing promptly before the new moon

Paul Pfleuger, Jr., Taiwan

10

first great grandchild. . .

raindrops chuckling

down the spout



Nancy Stewart Smith, US

*

ZATSUEI (In no particular order)



earthquake news —
grandson's head resting
on my shoulder

Olga Hooper (Origa), US

*

hydrangea bed ~

a dragonfly, a honeybee

in sunlight chats



Narayanan Raghunathan, India










(f) VANGUARD HAIKU:


THE BEST

earthquake stills —

the living huddle

in sullen rain




Nancy Stewart Smith, US



*

BEST TEN


1

WORLD WAR II IN THE PHILIPPINES

by Victor P. Gendrano, US




made to movie
Bataan death march
too real for me


my brother
at fifteen learns
to shoot and kill


my sisters
still in high school
became first-aiders


through jungles
I carry their
provisions


my parents
hide their tears
on lonely nights


bayonets do not
discriminate
they only kill


women brigade
smuggling food
to prisoners


barely fourteen
she suffers silently
in nakedness


against their will
young girls became
comfort women


take your pick
bayonet or malaria
or play dead


wayside graves
no sign nor cross
long way from home


he dies
with the natives he helped -
Japanese soldier


in war
everybody loses
but war itself


Bataan, Corregidor
Capas, Manila
remember them

2


Their three-legged dog
still playing by the road —
cars zooming by

Zhanna P. Rader, US

3


Internet love —
virtual hug spans
the ocean

Olga Hooper (Origa), US


4

visions of Mandalas ~

I reach infinite cosmoses

of unborn beginnings



Narayanan Raghunathan, India



5

power outage the uncomfortable silence

Deborah P. Kolodji, US

6

earthquake stills —

the living huddle

in sullen rain




Nancy Stewart Smith, US



7


Gang rape —
the body
isn’t found

Zhanna P. Rader, US

8


into a pot
feathers and all —
the end of spring

Paul Pfleuger, Jr., Taiwan

9

Chinese New Year --
augury on the beast
inside me

Olga Hooper (Origa), US

10


laughing pumpkins
fly into the spring sky ~

hungry eagles chase



Narayanan Raghunathan, India


*


ZATSUEI (In no particular order)


below the highway's agitato
a drifter asleep

Paul Pfleuger, Jr., Taiwan

*

car accident. . .
a shattered hip and fire ants

in hidden places



Nancy Stewart Smith, US


*


valley fruit
sinking my teeth
I draw blood

Tad Wojnicki, US/Taiwan



*



Sequence "The Haiku Box"

The Haiku Box

haiku in a box
on all six sides
different labels

deciphering labels
twelve greybeard teachers
each eminent somewhere

haiku unread
for twenty-four reasons
the box unopened

brush strokes faded
after forty-eight years
of hot debate

an empty box
a ninety-six degree day
no end of hot wind

NOTES: This sequence deals satirically with haiku
politics.

Denis M. Garrison, US



*



Sequence "Terror War"

Terror War

for half an instant
a monstrous peony blooms
above the bus stop
red-orange in pale blue sky
then the shock wave hits

I missed the bus —
now it flies
back at me

somewhere in the flames
cell phones ring
constantly

black smoke lifts
streams of blood
mix in the gutter

a slim hand holds
a shopping list —
her bent ring

fatal weeds
huge fire-blooms
the flowers of death

blocks from the blast
drivers curse traffic
suddenly sirens

the news turned off
time for comedy
no attacks here

morning paper
front page photo
my son ... my son!

bomber's funeral
mourners' wild eyes when
a bus backfires

NOTES: This haiku sequence, headed by a tanka, is
inspired by the attack in London.



Denis M. Garrison, US


*



smashed windows
an old jazz man
marches the saints in


(image taken from television coverage of looting following hurricane
Katrina in New Orleans -- "saints" refers to jazz/gospel song standard
"When the Saints Go Marching In")

Ann K. Schwader, US

*

a 5 ft jump —
38 years to
touch ground!

(Israel pulled out of the Egypt-Gaza buffer zone known as 'philadelphi corridor' on 13th Sept,05 -
immediately followed by Egyptian boys, men, women and even gun toting militants. Egyptian boys jumped into Gaza (just across the 5' high wall) to play with their Palestinian counterparts after a gap of 38 years!)


Vinodh Marella (Yajushi), India

*