Conference Anthology for Haiku North America 2011
Call for Submissions
In-Hand Deadline (for registered attendees only): June 15, 2011
The 2011 HNA anthology is the eleventh conference anthology, and will be edited by Michael Dylan Welch and Ruth Yarrow, with artwork by Dejah Léger. As with previous anthologies, this year's collection will seek to represent as many conference participants and presenters as possible. You must be a registered conference attendee to have your work included. If you are attending HNA 2011, please send five unpublished haiku or senryu (on any theme) to both Michael Dylan Welch and Ruth Yarrow by the deadline of June 15, 2011.
All conference attendees who submit by the in-hand deadline will be guaranteed to have one poem selected for the anthology (after the deadline, the editors will try to include as many late registrants as possible, but cannot guarantee inclusion). Poems must be sent by email to both editors (if you do not have email access, you must submit by post just to Ruth Yarrow). Email submissions must be pasted into the body of the email message (no attachments, please). With your five poems, please include your name as you want it to appear in the anthology, and the city/state, city/province, or city/country where you live (we include this information with each name).
Email five unpublished haiku/senryu submissions to both [email protected] and [email protected].
Send postal submissions only if you do not have email access:
Ruth Yarrow
4417 Cascadia Avenue South
Seattle, WA 98118
HNA Conference Anthology Editors
Michael Dylan Welch is a poet, editor, and publisher. In 1991 he cofounded Haiku North America, and has edited all eleven HNA conference anthologies. In 1996 he cofounded the American Haiku Archives, and in 2000 he founded the Tanka Society of America, serving as its president for five years. He is currently first vice president of the Haiku Society of America. His poems have won first place in numerous contests (including the Henderson, Brady, Tokutomi, and Drevniok contests), and have appeared in hundreds of journals and anthologies in more than a dozen languages. His website, which features hundreds of haiku essays, reviews, and poems, is www.graceguts.com.
Ruth Yarrow taught ecology in colleges and environmental centers in the northeastern United States for several dozen years. She and her husband retired in the northwest where they continue to work on environmental, peace, and justice issues and revel in mountain backpacking. Ruth has published more than 600 haiku in the major haiku journals and also published five books of haiku. She has led workshops, judged contests, edited journals, and coordinated her local haiku group. She finds that writing haiku helps her be aware of the richness of life.
In-Hand Deadline (for registered attendees only): June 15, 2011
The 2011 HNA anthology is the eleventh conference anthology, and will be edited by Michael Dylan Welch and Ruth Yarrow, with artwork by Dejah Léger. As with previous anthologies, this year's collection will seek to represent as many conference participants and presenters as possible. You must be a registered conference attendee to have your work included. If you are attending HNA 2011, please send five unpublished haiku or senryu (on any theme) to both Michael Dylan Welch and Ruth Yarrow by the deadline of June 15, 2011.
All conference attendees who submit by the in-hand deadline will be guaranteed to have one poem selected for the anthology (after the deadline, the editors will try to include as many late registrants as possible, but cannot guarantee inclusion). Poems must be sent by email to both editors (if you do not have email access, you must submit by post just to Ruth Yarrow). Email submissions must be pasted into the body of the email message (no attachments, please). With your five poems, please include your name as you want it to appear in the anthology, and the city/state, city/province, or city/country where you live (we include this information with each name).
Email five unpublished haiku/senryu submissions to both [email protected] and [email protected].
Send postal submissions only if you do not have email access:
Ruth Yarrow
4417 Cascadia Avenue South
Seattle, WA 98118
HNA Conference Anthology Editors
Michael Dylan Welch is a poet, editor, and publisher. In 1991 he cofounded Haiku North America, and has edited all eleven HNA conference anthologies. In 1996 he cofounded the American Haiku Archives, and in 2000 he founded the Tanka Society of America, serving as its president for five years. He is currently first vice president of the Haiku Society of America. His poems have won first place in numerous contests (including the Henderson, Brady, Tokutomi, and Drevniok contests), and have appeared in hundreds of journals and anthologies in more than a dozen languages. His website, which features hundreds of haiku essays, reviews, and poems, is www.graceguts.com.
Ruth Yarrow taught ecology in colleges and environmental centers in the northeastern United States for several dozen years. She and her husband retired in the northwest where they continue to work on environmental, peace, and justice issues and revel in mountain backpacking. Ruth has published more than 600 haiku in the major haiku journals and also published five books of haiku. She has led workshops, judged contests, edited journals, and coordinated her local haiku group. She finds that writing haiku helps her be aware of the richness of life.
Conference Anthology for Haiku North America 2011
Call for Submissions
In-Hand Deadline (for registered attendees only): June 15, 2011
The 2011 HNA anthology is the eleventh conference anthology, and will be edited by Michael Dylan Welch and Ruth Yarrow, with artwork by Dejah Léger. As with previous anthologies, this year's collection will seek to represent as many conference participants and presenters as possible. You must be a registered conference attendee to have your work included. If you are attending HNA 2011, please send five unpublished haiku or senryu (on any theme) to both Michael Dylan Welch and Ruth Yarrow by the deadline of June 15, 2011.
All conference attendees who submit by the in-hand deadline will be guaranteed to have one poem selected for the anthology (after the deadline, the editors will try to include as many late registrants as possible, but cannot guarantee inclusion). Poems must be sent by email to both editors (if you do not have email access, you must submit by post just to Ruth Yarrow). Email submissions must be pasted into the body of the email message (no attachments, please). With your five poems, please include your name as you want it to appear in the anthology, and the city/state, city/province, or city/country where you live (we include this information with each name).
Email five unpublished haiku/senryu submissions to both [email protected] and [email protected].
Send postal submissions only if you do not have email access:
Ruth Yarrow
4417 Cascadia Avenue South
Seattle, WA 98118
HNA Conference Anthology Editors
Michael Dylan Welch is a poet, editor, and publisher. In 1991 he cofounded Haiku North America, and has edited all eleven HNA conference anthologies. In 1996 he cofounded the American Haiku Archives, and in 2000 he founded the Tanka Society of America, serving as its president for five years. He is currently first vice president of the Haiku Society of America. His poems have won first place in numerous contests (including the Henderson, Brady, Tokutomi, and Drevniok contests), and have appeared in hundreds of journals and anthologies in more than a dozen languages. His website, which features hundreds of haiku essays, reviews, and poems, is www.graceguts.com.
Ruth Yarrow taught ecology in colleges and environmental centers in the northeastern United States for several dozen years. She and her husband retired in the northwest where they continue to work on environmental, peace, and justice issues and revel in mountain backpacking. Ruth has published more than 600 haiku in the major haiku journals and also published five books of haiku. She has led workshops, judged contests, edited journals, and coordinated her local haiku group. She finds that writing haiku helps her be aware of the richness of life.
In-Hand Deadline (for registered attendees only): June 15, 2011
The 2011 HNA anthology is the eleventh conference anthology, and will be edited by Michael Dylan Welch and Ruth Yarrow, with artwork by Dejah Léger. As with previous anthologies, this year's collection will seek to represent as many conference participants and presenters as possible. You must be a registered conference attendee to have your work included. If you are attending HNA 2011, please send five unpublished haiku or senryu (on any theme) to both Michael Dylan Welch and Ruth Yarrow by the deadline of June 15, 2011.
All conference attendees who submit by the in-hand deadline will be guaranteed to have one poem selected for the anthology (after the deadline, the editors will try to include as many late registrants as possible, but cannot guarantee inclusion). Poems must be sent by email to both editors (if you do not have email access, you must submit by post just to Ruth Yarrow). Email submissions must be pasted into the body of the email message (no attachments, please). With your five poems, please include your name as you want it to appear in the anthology, and the city/state, city/province, or city/country where you live (we include this information with each name).
Email five unpublished haiku/senryu submissions to both [email protected] and [email protected].
Send postal submissions only if you do not have email access:
Ruth Yarrow
4417 Cascadia Avenue South
Seattle, WA 98118
HNA Conference Anthology Editors
Michael Dylan Welch is a poet, editor, and publisher. In 1991 he cofounded Haiku North America, and has edited all eleven HNA conference anthologies. In 1996 he cofounded the American Haiku Archives, and in 2000 he founded the Tanka Society of America, serving as its president for five years. He is currently first vice president of the Haiku Society of America. His poems have won first place in numerous contests (including the Henderson, Brady, Tokutomi, and Drevniok contests), and have appeared in hundreds of journals and anthologies in more than a dozen languages. His website, which features hundreds of haiku essays, reviews, and poems, is www.graceguts.com.
Ruth Yarrow taught ecology in colleges and environmental centers in the northeastern United States for several dozen years. She and her husband retired in the northwest where they continue to work on environmental, peace, and justice issues and revel in mountain backpacking. Ruth has published more than 600 haiku in the major haiku journals and also published five books of haiku. She has led workshops, judged contests, edited journals, and coordinated her local haiku group. She finds that writing haiku helps her be aware of the richness of life.