f/k/a . . .

February 10, 2008

the published haiku of david giacalone (2005 - 2007)

Filed under: Uncategorized — David Giacalone @ 5:32 pm
boy writing flip My haiku were first accepted for publication in haiku journals in early 2005. This page is for anyone interested in following my “progress” in this poetic genre (but not interested enough to click all of the links in my dagosan haikai archives). I’ve compiled each of the poems — about 90 haiku and senryu — which were selected by journal or anthology editors for publication in 2005 through 2007, and presented them below, in chronological order of their appearance. Hyperlinks are provided to all of the pieces available online.

Rather than clutter this page with my personal reaction to the process of reviewing my “published haiku oeuvre,” I’ve offered a few inanities and banalities in a simultaneous posting here.

 

2005

 

alone —
hugging
warm laundry

new paperback —
the sun sets
without me

- from The Heron’s Nest (March 2005); “alone” & “new paperback

frozen river–
snow hides
the elm’s reflection

- Mainichi Daily News Haiku Column No. 669 (March 5, 2005)

to-read list
and summer corn
growing, growing

old dog and master
jostling
for the tiny spot of shade

storm alert
every kind of cloud
in one sky

blue sky
behind bare branches
year-end bonus

- Legal Studies Forum XXIX:1 (2005; pages 275 - 276)


it’s pink! it’s purple!
sunset inspires
more bickering

- Frogpond — the journal of the Haiku Society of America, Vol. XXVIII, #2 (2005) - click to see a subsequent haiga incorporating this poem -

that little grunt
dad always made–
putting on my socks

- Frogpond (XXVIII: 2, 2005); repub. in inside the mirror: Red Moon Anthology 2005; used in a memorial haiga, here.

Adirondack chair
upholstered
with snow

Spring arrives –
peeps
melting on the dashboard


first scull of the year
my arms ache
just waving

cherry tomatoes
on toothpicks — a vapor trail
spears the midday moon

her chocolate breath
mingles with mine –
easter sunset

- - Simply Haiku (Vol. 3, No. 4, Winter 2005)


fallen blossoms –
soon
just another tree

mom’s arthritis
acting up again–
I take two Advil

squinting to see him –
another generation
sent to right field

roadrunnerAA - Roadrunner Haiku Journal (V:4, Nov. 2005; image: by Aurora Antonovic); “squinting to see him” - Tie, The Scorpion Prize for Best Haiku/Senryu of ISSUE V:4; repub. in Baseball Haiku (Ed. Cor van den Heuvel and Nanae Tamura; W.W. Norton Press 2007)

winding road –
under the influence
of a strawberry moon

………………. in The Heron’s Nest (VII: 4, Winter 2005)

2006

 

last week of the year
ice floes rush
to the waterfall

january thaw
motionless trees
tremble in the river

hazy winter moon
the face I met
when our skin was smooth

….. Roadrunner Haiku Journal Issue VI: 1 (Feb. 2006)

Indian Summer –
a squirrel tips over
the bag of rock salt

- The Heron’s Nest VIII:I, March 2006 thnLogoG

falling blossoms –
soon
just another tree

Adirondack chair
upholstered
with snow

frozen river –
snow hides
the elm’s reflection

- Legal Studies Forum XXX (March 2006)

last day of winter –
ice smothers
the early buds

c’mon, equinox –
anxious to plant
impatiens

storm windows off:
the old man curses
the noisy neighbors

- Nisqually Delta Review (Winter-Spring, 2006; errata page)

farewell picnic –
wind blows the blossoms
off the dogwoods

waking
to dogwood blossoms –
the boys like pink today

april showers!
trudging back
to fetch a snow brush

almost april –
baked apple season
lingers

spring arrives –
new snow bleaches
old snowbanks

the smile that humbles
the cherry blossoms -
too far to see her

rain
on my bald spot –
recalling dry-scalp Aprils

coldest day this winter –
the early buds
miscarry

brushing off the snow -
warm enough today
for a park bench moment

- Haiku Harvest (Spring & Summer 2006, Vol. 6 No. 1)

low gray sky –
an afghan warming
on the radiator

- The Heron’s Nest (VIII: 2, 12 #5, June 2006)

sculpting cloud peaks
from shampoo suds –
crooked fingers

muddy bootprints
in the kitchen -
spring follows us home

U-Haul tires
spin on the ice –
windchimes packed in a box

wintry mix
a snow buddha
and a mud buddha

mid-March winds -
a too-warm coat
suddenly too thin

hardboiled eggs -
the first one
peels easily

- ………………… in Clouds Peak #1 (July 2006)

at the crosswalk -
leaves and a garbage can
hurry past

autumn equinox –
awakening to
summer’s last cricket

rattle, whir, hum –
three-fan
august night

Columbus Day rain—
first cozy evening
since spring

too cold for fireflies—
campfire sparks
float past the rocks

perched on
the sumo’s belly–
one large pumpkin

- - Nisqually Delta Review (summer/fall issue 2006)
“too cold for fireflies—” & “autumn equinox –” - Editor’s Choice Selections

almost sunset
the weekend dad
drags a sled up the hill

hard-to-peel
tangerine –
her citrus-scented fingers

…………………. in Frogpond XXIX: 2 (2006)

sudden downpour –
no one wins
the wet-t-shirt contest

…………… tinywords Aug. 12, 2006

the pond ices over -
impressionist to
cubist overnight

early March –
the weather vane goose
still heading south

winter gale –
the crows fly farther
than the crow flies

small sad face
in the puddle –
last weekend’s snowman

a warm yule . . .
the ice-fishing hole
mostly hole

…….. Simply Haiku (Autumn 2006, Vol. 4 no. 3); “small sad face” - repub. a procession of ripples anthology (p. 18)

morning shadows -
the gunslingers wait
for high noon

the view
from the sofa -
April madness

- HaigaOnline Issue 7-2 (Autumn-Winter 2006)
Click to see the original photo-poem haiga combinations -
morning shadows” & “view from the sofa

her words sting –
the mosquitos take me
just as I am

- Frogpond, XXIX: 3 Fall 2006

Mother’s Day– thnLogoG
admiring lilacs
just past their peak

The Heron’s Nest (VIII: 4, December 2006) -

rubbernecking
the sunset geese –
our tailgater honks

- tinywords - December 12, 2006

 

 

2007

 

 

curtain time:
the stage crew as silent
as the props

snowmelt
sunset
comes too soon

the lawn crunches
Spring’s first bocce match
postponed

april storm –
borrowing the neighbor’s
rock salt

a foot of snow
a month too soon
candles for nightlights

his face frozen –
just like mama
always said

- Simply Haiku Journal, Modern Haiga, Vol. 5 no. 1 (Spring 2007); photos by Arthur Giacalone; see the original photo-poem haiga by clicking on these links:
curtain time:” - “snow melt” - “the lawn crunches” -
april storm –” - “a foot of snow” - “his face frozen –”

alone at dusk
footsteps approach
from behind

- from World Haiku Association 44th Haiga Contest (April 2007)

squinting to see him
another generation
sent to right field

law office picnic
the ump consults
his Blackberry

BaseballHaikuCover - in Baseball Haiku (Cor van den Heuvel and Nanae Tamura, eds., W.W. Norton Press, April 2007) “squinting” - org. pub. Roadrunner Haiku Journal (V:4, Nov. 2005; tie Scorpion Prize)
lull in the parade
small hands reach
for the same balloon

- orig. version pub. 45th WHA Haiga Contest (May 2007)
- poem slightly revised (thanks AA), at MagnaPoetsJF (June 1, 2007)

three feet of snow
the firehouse dog
follows the hose

early thaw
she serves the canard
a l’orange

drawn butter
and chardonnay –
he sets the trap

ladybug
in the spider’s web -
yesterday’s horoscope

catnap onshore –
a wake sinks
the dream flotilla

on the novice trail –
climbers wave
from the peak

- in HaigaOnline Spring/Summer 2007 Vol. 8-1
- see the original photo-poem haiga by clicking on these links:
three feet of snow” - “early thaw” - “drawn butter” -
ladybug” - “catnap onshore –” - “on the novice trail --”

mommy, look!
an early moon floats
above the setting sun

…. The 49th. WHA Haiga Contest (10/2007) - click to see the original haiga photo-poem -

first the scent -
lilac bushes
’round the corner

blustery day
one tulip
keeps his head

blossoms on the breeze –
the tilt
of illegible gravestones

full morning moon –
the working girl’s
gauzy blouse

fireworks finale!
her eyes return
to the fireflies

– - Simply Haiku, Autumn 2007, vol 5 no 3 -

“full morning moon” - repub. in dust of summers: The Red Moon Anthology of English-Language Haiku 2007 (Red Moon Press, 2008)

first snowfall -
a city-full
of student drivers

………. in tinywords November 23, 2007

cloud-covered night–
no moon, no fireflies,
no goodnight kiss

. . . in “Lanterns: a firefly anthology” (Edited by Stanford M. Forrester, Bottle Rockets Press, 2007}

hazy harvest moon
the face I met
when our skin was smooth

…….. The Heron’s Nest (Vol. IX: 4, Dec. 2007)
[Note: This poem was re-written to commemorate the 60th Wedding Anniversary of Arthur & Connie Giacalone; the original version appeared in Roadrunner Haiku Journal Issue VI: 1 (Feb. 2006)]

 

In 2006, I began to dabble in a number of other “haikai” — haiku-related literary forms. In addition to spending a significant amount of time creating photography-based “modern haiga” (which combine a graphic image with a subtly-linked haiku or senryu), I’ve written a few haibun (short prose with a linked poem), and co-authored one renku and one rengay. Links to the haiga can be found throughout this page. You can see some of the other pieces at the following publications:

don't forget Finally, here are poems published in the Haiku Society of America annual Members’ Anthology, which promises to publish one poem out of five submitted by each member.

silently
she lures me to the kitchen
peeled tangerine

- Walking the Same Path (HSA, 2004 Members’ Anthology

big thaw overnight –
reflections
on the river

-loose change: HSA, 2005 Members’ Anthology HSALogo

the sway
of platinum blondes -
cattails in the snow

- fish in love: HSA, 2006 Members’ Anthology

eyeing
that mosquito –
frog and I

- from “flower of another country: HSA, 2007 Members’ Anthology” [also used in this haiga, which appeared at: MagnaPoets Japanese Form weblog, May 24, 2007]

 

 

 

4 Comments »

  1. I’ve only had a chance to skim through a couple of times but my first impression is that these are impressive.

    Comment by John Stevenson — February 11, 2008 @ 5:16 pm

  2. Many thanks, John. You are too kind, but I sort of like that in both friends and haiku editors.

    Comment by David Giacalone — February 11, 2008 @ 6:28 pm

  3. I found myself smiling frequently. A lot of very nice individual poems; a real treat to read a body of work like this. Thanks for putting this together to share with us!

    Comment by Carolyn Hall — February 12, 2008 @ 2:00 am

  4. Thanks for making my day, Carolyn. Your opinion means a lot.

    Comment by David Giacalone — February 12, 2008 @ 7:46 am

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