Ginko (Haiku Walk, San Andreas Canyon
in India Canyons of Paom Springs)
—Photo by Deborah P Kolodji, Pasadena, CA
—Poems by Deborah P Kolodji
white marble
I am small at the feet
of Lincoln
(first pub. in The Heron’s Nest, 2003)
* * *
floating purple—
* * *
floating purple—
my daydreams follow
the water hyacinth
(first pub. in The Yuki Teikei Haiku Society Anthology, 2007)
* * *
highway
of sleeping towns
the milky way
(first published in Rattle, 2015)
* * *
thistles in bloom
* * *
thistles in bloom
grandmother’s needle
threaded with purple
(first pub. in World Haiku Review, 2002)
* * *
* * *
his oxygen tube
stretches the length of the house
winter seclusion
(first published in GEPPO, 2011)
* * *
* * *
we promise each other
nothing will change
slack tide
(first pub. in Modern Haiku, 2011)
* * *
* * *
rust in the cedars
the quiet interrupted
by heron cry
(first published in Lighting a Candle, Two Autumns Chapbook 2010,
Haiku Poets of Northern California)
* * *
* * *
cold summer
one suitcase circling
baggage claim
(first pub. in The Heron’s Nest, 2014
* * *
* * *
moon bridge
a woman broken
by spring ripples
(first pub. in Mariposa, 2009)
* * *
* * *
moving day
the clatter of marbles
in a shoe box
(first pub. in bottle rockets, 2013
* * *
* * *
in spite of your silence the birth of stars
first pub. in Intercontinental Astro-Ecologic Verse, SARM (Romanian Society
of Meteors and Astronomy, 2008)
* * *
* * *
gray morning
the whole world
a foghorn
(first pub. in Daily Haiku, 2010)
* * *
* * *
the square root
of negative one
clouds
(first pub. in frogpond, 2014)
* * *
* * *
Euler’s number
your litany
of unrepeatable excuses
(first pub. in Bones, 2015)
* * *
* * *
lingerie drawer
after the divorce
skimpier
(first pub. in “Go-Shichi-Go” column, Daily Yomiuri (Japan), 2004)
* * *
* * *
morning tidepools
a hermit crab tries on
the bottle cap
(first pub. in World Haiku Review, 2002)
* * *
* * *
summer quiet
the stars dare me
to count them
(first pub. in Daily Haiku, 2010)
* * *
* * *
moonflower
a love letter
to Captain Kirk
(
first pub. in The Heron’s Nest, 2012)
* * *
* * *
silent cannon
at Gettysburg
bird song
(first pub. in dandelion breeze, 2013 SCHSG Anthology)
Deborah P Kolodji
Storrier Stearns Japanese Garden, Pasadena, CA
—Photo by Naia
Storrier Stearns Japanese Garden, Pasadena, CA
—Photo by Naia
Deborah P Kolodji [note: no period after the P] has been writing poetry as long as she was able to hold a pencil. She has long enjoyed Japanese art and fell in love with haiku in the late 1990’s when she started attending workshops of the Southern California Haiku Study Group (www.facebook.com/SoCalHaiku). At the time, Walnut Creek poet Jerry Ball was living in Southern California and moderated the monthly workshops. As a result of the group’s mentorship, Deborah began to publish haiku in the early 2000’s.
When Jerry Ball moved back to Northern California in 2006, Deborah wanted to ensure that the haiku study group continued, so she began moderating the group workshops. Haiku study group activities remain a priority for her, whether the monthly workshops or the occasional ginko (haiku walk). Deborah currently serves as the California Regional Coordinator for the Haiku Society of America (www.hsa-haiku.org), and is on the Board of Directors for Haiku North America, a haiku conference which occurs every two years (www.haikunorthamerica.com).
After the publication of a few chapbooks, Deborah’s first full-length book of haiku and senryu was highway of sleeping towns, published by Shabda Press in 2016 (www.shabdapress.com/deborah-p-kolodji.html), which won a Touchstone Distinguished Book Award by the Haiku Foundation and an Honorable Mention in the Haiku Society of America Merit Book Awards. The above haiku are selections from that book.
Although Deborah enjoys teaching haiku and generally conducts about 20 haiku workshops a year, her background is in mathematics and information technology. She received a bachelor’s degree in Mathematics from the University of Southern California and currently works as a senior technical consultant for a business software company. Some of her poems reflect her interests in mathematics, technology, and science.
Fueled by interests in science and technology, Deborah also enjoys writing speculative poetry. [Scifaiku ("science fiction haiku") is a form of science fiction poetry first announced by Tom Brinck with his 1995 Scifaiku Manifesto. It is inspired by Japanese haiku, but explores science, science fiction (SF), and other speculative fiction themes, such as fantasy and horror.] Before embracing haiku, most of Deborah’s poetry publications were in places like Star*Line, the journal of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Poetry Association, Strange Horizons, Mythic Delirium, and Dreams and Nightmares. She served as the president of the Science Fiction Poetry Association from 2006-2010 (www.sfpoetry.com).
Now Deborah often writes poetry inspired by both of these passions for haiku and science fiction & fantasy. In 2012, a speculative haiku sequence, “Bashō After Cinderella”, was published by Rattle (#38) in its Tribute to Speculative Poetry (Winter 2012). “Haiku #3 (autumn)” in this sequence was awarded a Dwarf Stars Award by the Science Fiction & Fantasy Poetry Association in 2013, which lead to the “pumpkin vine” haiku’s inclusion in the 2015 Nebula Awards Showcase by the Science Fiction & Fantasy Writer’s Association (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebula_Awards_Showcase_2015). It may be heard at www.rattle.com/basho-after-cinderella-by-deborah-p-kolodji/.
Basho After Cinderella
(i)
a glass slipper
in the middle of the road
spring rain
(ii)
thistles in bloom
village gossip
after the ball
(iii)
pumpkin vine
a mouse remembers
how to neigh
(iv)
fairy dust snow
perfectly-sized boots
for her bare feet
Bolsa China Ecological Reserve in Huntington Beach, CA
—Photo by Deborah P Kolodji
Some other samples of speculative haiku:
drooping tulips
the outstretched arm
of a rusted robot
(first pub. in Grievous Angel, 2016)
* * *
unexpected delay
opening the airlock
butterflies
first published in Star*Line, 2016)
* * *
not what you seem
under the surface
water on Mars
(first pub. in Star*Line, 2017)
* * *
nuclear winter
a new orbit
for the half moon
(first pub. in Dreams & Nightmares, 2018)
______________________
Today's LittleNip:
quicksand
under the lander
your goodbye static
(first pub. in Grievous Angel, 2017)
_____________________
—Medusa, with many thanks to Deborah P Kolodji for joining us in today’s Kitchen! Don’t be a stranger, Deborah!
Deborah reminds us that the Haiku Poets of Northern California’s annual Two Autumns Reading will take place this coming Sunday, 1-5pm, at Fort Mason in San Francisco. Info: www.hpnc.org/schedule/. She also notes that there is some interest in forming a haiku group up in our area. Interested?
Southern California Haiku Study Group, July 2018 meeting
—Photo by Lynn Allgood.
Standing: Kathabela Wilson, Debbie Kolodji, Wakako Rollinger,
—Photo by Lynn Allgood.
Standing: Kathabela Wilson, Debbie Kolodji, Wakako Rollinger,
Bonnie Santos,
Vibiana Aparicio-Chamberlin, Sharon Yee,
Toni Steele, Scott Galasso
Sitting: Janis Lukstein, Greg Longenecker, Lynn, Beki Reese,
Sitting: Janis Lukstein, Greg Longenecker, Lynn, Beki Reese,
Kim Esser, James Won
Photos in this column can be enlarged by clicking on them once,
then click on the X in the top right corner to come back
to Medusa.
then click on the X in the top right corner to come back
to Medusa.