Bumper-to-Bumper Haiku
Back in April, we invited readers to submit haiku appropriate for bumper stickers. Word of the contest spread, aided by the Internet, and more than 900 poets responded. We received nearly 3,000 poems! That made our haiku contest one of the biggest in the United States. Poetry came from across the US, as well as from Canada, Australia, Great Britain, and Japan. They were judged by haiku poets Carol Purington and Larry Kimmel, and Poetry Editor Elizabeth Lund. Everyone who entered will receive a copy of the first-prize sticker. Second- and third-place winners will receive color designs of their haiku. Honorable mentions also appear here. Many thanks to everyone who participated!
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FIRST-PLACE POEM: The judges loved the way this entry gracefully captured a mood, a moment, and a season, the criteria for all good haiku.
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summer traffic
my shadow rides up
a stranger's neck
- John Stevenson
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SECOND PLACE: This haiku also creates a striking image, the judges said, and hints at the connection between humans and nature.
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stalled traffic...
a solitary hawk
circling
- Marianna Monaco
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THIRD PLACE: The judges found the humor here irresistible. The poet captured the 'personality' of the meter.
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parking meter
sucking in coins
still skinny
- Del Turner
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Traffic Haiku
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smiling for
the highway speed-trap
cameras
--Kris Kondo,
Kanagawa, Japan
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in the afterglow
the rush-hour roar
swallows my footsteps
--Gyo Nishimata,
Chiba, Japan
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Mechanical geese
We migrate in formation
Bumper to bumper
--Amy Berrier,
Tamworth, N.H.
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Rush-hour traffic,
heavy clouds begin to pour.
Instant brake-lights sea.
--Carol Hample
Bozeman, Mont.
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The Commute
Stop-and-go morning.
Bleary eyes and yawns musing
their stop-and-go night.
--Norm D. Bloom
Boston
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big city street;
men eyeing women,
women, their feet
--Charles P. Trumbull,
Evanston, Ill.
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Traditional Haiku
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Stopping by a Farm
Cattle eyes round and dull
by the fence. Two quick cats
watch our wheels.
--John McBride,
Bettendorf, Iowa
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the smile of a passing hiker
my uphill
his downhill
--Marianna Monaco,
San Francisco
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empty inlet
lighthouse
bleating, bleating
--Jimi Weiss,
Tulsa, Okla.
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Hush! you fisherman on
Miamas River.
Singing.
--Mary Virginia Lucas,
New Canaan, Conn.
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cat and ice cube
summer hockey:
puck soon puddle
--Barbara Beth Whitewater,
Mesa, Ariz.
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Eavesdropping
on the leaves
dropping.
--Alexis K. Rotella,
Los Gatos, Calif.
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Haiku by Younger Poets
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As he whizzed by,
A flash of red caught my eye -
And the officer's.
--Alex Dixon
Franklin, Penn.
Grade 5
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Highway lane divider
White-line Morse code -
Always dashes
--Justin Stone,
Redding, Conn.
Grade 4
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On the interstate
In the brightness of the moon
Fly through outer space
--Alyssa Meinberg
Coppell, Texas
Grade 8
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Golden arches stretch
toward the heavenly sky.
The car heads to McDonald's.
--Erica Lindgren
Carrabassett Valley, Maine
Grade 8