USA

  • Peggy Heinrich

    he played with numbers
    in his mind, drove a golf ball
    straight ahead for miles,
    but couldn't talk about
    his love or his despair


     
    even before Hitler
    my parents talked about
    where we're not wanted ---
    my parents loved me
    why didn't everyone

  • Peter Jastermsky

    shrouded in fog
    the day’s last hope –
    spent horizon

     

    breakfast for one
    a morning held together
    by sparrows

     


    wishing for a branch
    of my own
    family tree

  • Philip Whitley

    at her touch the river points upstream

    Under the Bashō 07 November 2018

  • Philip Whitley

    in my bed a spider on the ceiling

     

    riverain words runtogether

     

    removing a box turtle’s hiss from the driveway

     

  • Philip Whitley


    the dog and I walk past your silence again

    Failed Haiku 02.2019_Volume 4, Issue 39

  • Polette, Keith

    above the timberline—
    callused hands
    swinging the axe



    december morning—
    the church bell
    shattering the cold

     

    moonless night
    too dark to read
    my thoughts

     

  • Polette, Keith

     

    the flower nourished on nothing but yes
     

     
    starting to play in the key of see
     

     
    i being the third person in your first person point of view
     
     

    no ravens for weeks the porch light on
     
     

    words ending white sounds the chrysanthemum
     
     
     
    butterfly a quantum mechanic in flight
     
      

    starlings wheeling straight out of the seventeenth century
     
     
     
    sky blackening the crow on the tip of the tongue
     
     

    barking with dogs all night horse in the morning
     
     
     
    deaf leaf trees bark roots rot

     

  • Polette, Keith


    one bowl empty a jowl just short of sartre


    rabidly dogged frothing towards subtraction

      
    a sinister pariah left a left handed drum beater

     
    on trial
    capital letter
    stabbing joseph k
    in the i

     

  • Polette, Keith

    eclipse . . .
    the quiet ways
    we overlap

     

    spring
    the dogwood tree
    budding blackbirds

     

    empty nest . . .
    sliding the rent check
    into the mailbox

     

    rose bud
    so much sleep beneath
    so many lids

     

    winter’s end
    birdsong beginning
    to thaw

  • Powell, Perry L.

    fading light
    another trip back
    to the mountain

  • Pray, Sandi

  • Ray Caligiuri

    let the meat puppets go after the unspeakable thought train ride

     

    that little erotic touch starts my brain washing day

     

    full of innuendo fistfuls of mistrust and cash go along the same way

     

    another last senior moment algorithm ascends into a cloud

     

  • Rebecca Drouilhet

    menopause...
    the calm
    after the storm

     

    caught
    in the spider's web...
    autumn sunset

     

    autumn twilight...
    the things
    I almost see

     

  • Reese, Beki

    Easter lilies
    on his unmarked grave -
    unkept promises

    What The Wind Can't Touch - SCHSG Anthology 2016

  • Richard Grahn

    South of Tomorrow  
     
    A peaceful country road winds its way through the quiet fields and pastures just south of the Mason-Dixon Line here in Maryland. This lazy pathway is not encumbered with bumper-to-bumper traffic, the honking of horns or the sounds of marching armies. In fact, the only real commotion here is caused by a few red-winged blackbirds flitting about; squabbling over whatever piece of real estate it is that they’re hell-bent on plundering next. The occasional tractor chugs by and, every so often, a car. The Doppler Effect seems very noticeable here or so I’ve noticed. I was aimlessly driving my own car down this road when I just had to stop, get out, and listen to the view. 
     
    dragonflies stirring...
    imprints of wind
    on a cloud
     
    The scent of hay, corn, fresh-tilled earth and cow manure mingle together and saturate the warm summer air. It’s a country thing. As you might guess, there’s a lot that goes into concocting the average bucolic day but I’m just a tourist passing by. What do I know?

    A grasshopper jumps out of the tall grass beside the road and lands at my feet. I’m careful not to step on it as I get back into the car and start the engine. The noise shocks the air and the grasshopper wings away. I pull back onto the road, lost in the sound of the waves I’m making, semi-oblivious to my own existence and overcome with a sudden urge to turn on the radio and listen to some country music. 
     

     
    Contemporary Haibun Online, Volume 14, Number 1, April 2018
  • Richard Grahn


    toes to crest
                       between the sheets
    my kisses climb—
                       as we embrace
    arms wrapped
                       fingers twirl
                                            in tangled vines,
                        across your back . . .
    hands roam freely
                       hearts running wild
     

    Inspired by the form, Parallel Haiku, pioneered by Johannes J. S. Bjerg

     

  • Risë E Daniels


    evening shower…
    a parade of umbrellas
    scurries by

     

    sunlight dancing
    on newly formed leaves
    ... the journey ahead

  • Risë E. Daniels

    meditative walk…
    sensing the silence of
    the temple bell


    sanctuary –
    finding solace in what
    I’ve always known


  • Roberta Beach Jacobson

    tonight's
    crescent moon
    - more than just a comma

    The Pangolin Review, Issue 6 (8 September 2018)

  • Roberta Beach Jacobson

    one more tattoo
    and he'll run
    out of leg