Index cards for about three-quarters of my published haiku and senryu that start with the letter A.
Since 1988 I’ve published thousands of haiku and senryu in hundreds of journals and anthologies (see “Links”). I keep track of these haiku using 4x6-inch index cards and arrange them alphabetically in index card boxes. The poems presented here are selections from these boxes, featuring haiku and senryu that have mostly not appeared elsewhere on this website, although some do appear in trifolds and a few other places. I’ve arranged the poems in thematic groupings and miscellanies for each letter of the alphabet, and have retained the alphabetical order for all poems within each grouping. By this arbitrary choice I hope each poem might be considered individually rather than as part of each unfolding sequence, although some sequential serendipities do still occur.
These selections serve as a sort of time capsule of my haiku and senryu writing, representing both older and more recent poems, as well as variety of styles, tones, and subject matter. I might not write some of the older poems the same way today. And maybe not even the more recent poems either. I also dive into the first poem for each letter of the alphabet with a short essay exploring that poem’s history, with some bonus essays. The choice to feature whatever poem happens to be first for each letter of the alphabet gives a view into the range of haiku I’ve written without privileging what might be my best poems.
I began my index card system on 12 January 1990, inspired by seeing such a system used by editor and writer Gary Swanson, who was a cousin of my then-girlfriend (in 1989 we had visited him in Maryland, I think it was). I had asked Gary how he managed his writing submissions (in these days before some of us had computers or knew how to master them), and he showed me his index cards. He used them to track prose submissions, but I immediately knew they were perfect for haiku, because I could write an entire haiku on each index card. I know the 12 January date because I noted it on the index card for the poem "noon haze— / an aspen leaf / waving," which says it was “The first card written in this new record-keeping system! —12 Jan 90.” That card included a record of my submission of the poem to Woodnotes on 12 September 1989, returned 17 September 1989, and then submitting it to Haiku Quarterly on 11 December 1989, with “ACCEPTED” (I always put that in capital letters) marked on 13 January 1990. The poem was published in Haiku Quarterly 2:2, Summer 1990, page 26. Since these two submissions predated my index-card system, I must have been keeping track in some other way, although I’ve now forgotten the details. But I do remember that early decision to celebrate each acceptance with capital letters, and to say each unwanted poem was “returned”—never “rejected.” I also remember deciding on 4x6-inch cards, so there would be more space to record publication data than 3x5-inch cards, which was clearly optimistic.
You might also find it interesting to note the span of time between when each poem was written and when it was first published, which varies for some poems, but is often many years, as indicated after each poem included here. The lapse was shorter for most of my older poems. But more recently it has sometimes been taking eight or ten years before I catch up with publishing poems from old notebooks, with some exceptions. The selections here were all published by about September of 2024, but were mostly written many years previously. For this project, I reread all 4,500+ published haiku in my index card boxes, which has been like attending a family reunion. One eyebrow-lifting realization in reviewing all these haiku and senryu is how many of these poems first appeared in Geppo, and how many verses appeared in rengay or other linked-verse collaborations.
For additional details on my writing and publishing process, see also “My Haiku Notebooks” and “The Practical Poet: Tracking Your Haiku Submissions,” and have a look at “An Alphabet of Haiku.”
A Miscellany (28 poems)
A Baked Potato (short essay with four poems)
Abandoned (four poems)
A Day without Rain (three poems)
After All These Years (three poems)
Afternoon (six poems)
A Lull (four poems)
At the End (three poems)
At the Whatever (eight poems)
B Miscellany (23 poems)
Baby Asleep (short essay with one poem)
Before (eight poems)
Between (nine poems)
Billowing (three poems)
C Miscellany (23 poems)
Cabbage Butterflies (short essay with one poem)
California Drought (four poems)
Cherry Blossoms (four poems)
Chilling (six poems)
Christmastime (14 poems)
Country Road (three poems)
D Miscellany (39 poems)
Dad in Hospice (short essay with one poem)
Distance (13 poems)
E Miscellany (ten poems)
Early Frost (short essay with two poems)
Early Morning Walk (short essay with one poem)
Election (three poems)
Empty (13 poems)
F Miscellany (37 poems)
Faded Hopscotch Chalk (short essay with one poem)
Fading Sunset (six poems)
Faint (three poems)
Falling (four poems)
First Day (four poems)
Funeral’s End (three poems)
G Miscellany (17 poems)
Gabriola Grass (short essay with one poem)
H Miscellany (29 poems)
Haiku Poet’s New Car (short essay with one poem)
Harvest Moon (four poems)
Heading Home (three poems)
Here and There (three poems)
Hospice (five poems)
Hospital Waiting Room (three poems)
I Miscellany (20 poems)
Ice Cream (short essay and one poem)
Indian Summer (four poems)
J Miscellany (11 poems)
January 2nd (short essay and one poem)
K Miscellany (eight poems)
Kachina Dolls (short essay and one poem)
L Miscellany (17 poems)
Lakeshore Bonfire (short essay and one poem)
Lately (18 poems)
Leaves (nine poems)
Lingering (five poems)
M Miscellany (49 poems)
Magnolia Dreams (short essay and one poem)
Melting (five poems)
Meteor Shower (short essay, timeline, and one poem)
Midday Heat (five poems)
Midsummer (seven poems)
Misty (seven poems)
Morning (nine poems)
Mother (four poems)
Moving Day (six poems)
N Miscellany (22 poems)
Nagasaki Blossoms (short essay and two poems)
Neap Tide (three poems)
News (four poems)
New Year’s Day (eight poems)
Night (ten poems)
Noon Sun (four poems)
November (four poems)
O Miscellany (29 poems)
Oak Shadows (short essay and one poem)
October (three poems)
Our Rhythmic Breathing (three poems)
Out (seven poems)
P Miscellany (25 poems)
Pages of a Letter (short essay and one poem)
Poetic (three poems)
Popping (three poems)
Power Failure (three poems)
Prairie (five poems)
Q Miscellany (nine poems)
Quarantine (short essay and one poem)
R Miscellany (31 poems)
Race Day (short essay and one poem)
Rain (12 poems)
Rainy (four poems)
Reds (eight poems)
Remaining Snow (three poems)
Remembrance Day (three poems)
Reunion (three poems)
Rumours (four poems)
S Miscellany (63 poems)
Safeway Entrance (short essay and one poem)
Scent (four poems)
School (six poems)
Sidewalk Sale (three poems)
Silent (five poems)
Slant (three poems)
Small Town (four poems)
Snow (22 poems)
Snow Day (three poems)
Snowy (four poems)
Spring (20 poems)
Spring Breeze (five poems)
Spring Cleaning (five poems)
Spring Thaw (five poems)
Steady (three poems)
Still (nine poems)
Sudden (nine poems)
Sultry (three poems)
Summer (24 poems)
Summer Rain (four poems)
Summer’s End (five poems)
Summer Solstice (four poems)
Summer Stars (three poems)
Summer Stillness (three poems)
Summer Sun (three poems)
Sun (seven poems)
Sunbreak (five poems)
T Miscellany (95 poems)
Tailgate Party (short essay and one poem)
Taking (three poems)
Thanksgiving (three poems)
The Ferry (three poems)
The Moon (three poems)
The Scent (four poems)
Through (five poems)
Thunder (six poems)
Tourists (three poems)
Trees (three poems)
Turning (six poems)
U Miscellany (seven poems)
Ultrasound Picture (short essay and one poem)
Un (eight poems)
Under (nine poems)
Used (three poems)
V Miscellany (eight poems)
Vacant Lot (short essay and one poem)
Valentine’s Day (six poems)
W Miscellany (35 poems)
Wafted by the Breeze (short essay and one poem)
Warm (six poems)
Wet (six poems)
Winter (21 poems)
X Miscellany (no poems!)
[to come]
[to come]