Dear Readers,
You didn’t think I wouldn’t finish out the week, do you?
Because I aim to keep each daily edition small, I end up with a list of haiku in my “To Publish” queue that, by virtue of timing or other factors, didn’t make it into a daily issue. These are pieces I enjoyed so much that I hate to simply send them back to their respective owners, so here they are! But before that, here are several paragraphs of gratitude for everyone who helped me make this another successful year.
A publication does not exist without writers, so first and foremost, thanks to everyone who sent in work. We had nearly double the number of submissions we had in 2023! Even if your work didn’t get chosen, please know that I got a little endorphin boost every time I was notified of a new submission.
Thank you to the 2024 guest editors:
Korie Beth Brown, PhD
Carol Dorf
Jennifer Gurney
Barrie Levine
Michele Rule
Jessica Allyson
Nancy Brady
Katherine E. Winnick
C.X. Turner
Lakshmi Iyer
I loved seeing each of your approaches and the haiku you selected. I feel like I’ve really gotten to know you better as poets based on what you published each day. Thanks also for being patient as we dealt with some logistical and technical issues. Thanks also for offering a week of your time, amidst everything else in your life, to help with this project.
Next, I would like to thank our most recent tip jar contributors. These folks donated between August 18th and August 31st.
Thanks to these tip jar contributors in the second half of August!
Katja Fox
Kimberly Kuchar
Kathryn Haydon
Betsy Hearne
Wilda Morris
Anonymous
Of course, I have to extend another round of gratitude for every tip jar contributor throughout the 2024 journal run. While the technological overhead for this publication is thankfully low, the time investment is high. While I love Haiku Girl Summer enough that I see myself running it for a long time, I am thankful for all the financial support people have been able to offer for my time, and the time of the 10 guest editors I got to work with this year.
I’m also grateful to everyone who liked a post, made a comment, restacked on Substack, or posted issues to your various social media platforms. I appreciate that you took the time to share these wonderful haiku, and to let us know when a particular issue resonated with you. Just as a publication cannot exist without writers, it also cannot exist without readers. Many haiku practitioners believe that a poem is not complete until someone reads it. Thank you for helping us complete these poems.
While this space will be mostly dormant until 2025, I will make occasional updates about next year’s guest editor slots, updated guidelines, and a new submission link. I hope the rest of 2024 is kind to you.
Sincerely,
Allyson Whipple
Founding Editor
ballerina tutu
cottonwood seeds
edge the lawn
Sangita Kalarical
Minnesota, USA
dark of the moon—water runs in the irrigation ditch
*
some reader, not me,
marked this haiku by Bunson
about a monsoon
Miriam Sagan
Santa Fe, NM, USA
breaking the tedium
of 100-degree heat—
dust devils
Julie Bloss Kelsey
Germantown, MD, USA
Instagram: julieblosskelsey
Twitter: mamajoules
lime racing stripes
a Texas whiptail
whips inside the house
Claire Vogel Camargo
Austin, TX, USA
jacaranda blue—
the scent of memories
going back home
*
just a dandelion—
the last wish should not be wasted
Maria Tosti
Perugia, Italy
Website: https://mariatosti.wixsite.com/mariatosti
heady blossoms nod
in the blanketing heat
flower bed
EJ Craft
Seattle, WA
Instagram: ellenjcraft
one petal trampled
loves me
loves me not
*
pluff mud the shoes left behind
Margaret Walker
Lincoln, NE, USA
private beach
the taste of strawberries
tiny & wild
kjmunro
Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, Canada
Website: kjmunro1560.wordpress.com
shimmering heat—
the rise and fall of voices
at the domino table
*
dandelion sun—
a girl in the outfield
lies down
Sandra Simpson
Tauranga, New Zealand
Website: https://breathhaiku.wordpress.com/
thunder rumble . . .
the softness
of a calf's lashes
*
moon dance . . .
a shimmer at the edge
of the crane's pond
Theresa A. Cancro
Wilmington, DE, USA
all those petals
that have flown away
tax declaration
Marie Derley
Ath, Wallonia, Belgium
wind-whipped afternoons
heavy-petaled sunflowers
hold each other up
Tracie Renee Amirante Padal
Illinois, USA
Links: https://linktr.ee/tracie.renee
early beachcombing
what the tide brings
sand still cold
Lisa Billa
San Jose, CA, USA
evening lull —
we become
one again
Aly Droyd
United Kingdom
An absolute delight and honour! Thank you, Allyson. Also a thank you to all the talented poets who trusted their words to guest editors ❤️
It was delightful spending the summer with Haiku Girl poetry! Thank you Allyson and guest editors for your time and energy to make this happen. ❤️