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HAIKU for You?

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Because of their short length, haiku often find their homes in journals dedicated to the haiku form specifically, or to Japanese formal poetry in general. Following are 17 journals that want your haiku and other forms of Japanese poetry in English. Not all of them are open for submissions now, but most are.

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Haikuniverse is the partner website of The Poetry Super Highway, publishes one new haiku every day, and reads submissions all year.

Haiku Journal is a print annual with an online component. They want “all forms of haiku which follow the syllabic pattern 5/7/5.” They read no-fee submissions all year and pay writers a token amount.

Modern Haiku is a long-running journal of English-language haiku and Japanese forms that reads submissions all year for their print anthology, and they have sample poems from each issue on their website.

Shamrock is the online haiku journal of the Irish Haiku Society. They’re looking for haiku, senryu, haibun and haiku-related essays, and publish bi-annually with submission deadlines of February 28 and August 31.

Failed Haiku – A Journal of English Senryu is an online monthly journal looking for “senryu, haibun, haiga, rengay, sequences, and any other related form that is senryu based.”

Acorn is a biannual print journal of “contemporary haiku” that reads submissions from January-February and July-August. They’re looking to showcase “the individual poem and the ability of haiku to reveal the extraordinary moments found in everyday life.”

Haiku Commentary is a weekly publication of Japanese poems accompanied by multiple commentaries on that poem which is a unique twist on the haiku journal. They publish haiku, senryu, tanka, haiga, haibun, and shahai and read year-round.

Frogpond is the literary magazine of the Haiku Society of America. Appearing three times a year, they’re looking to publish “the best in contemporary English-language haiku and senryu, linked forms including sequences, renku, rengay, and haibun, essays and articles on these forms, and book reviews”

Heron’s Nest is an online quarterly journal of haiku that welcomes “both modern, freestyle haiku, and haiku that adhere to a syllabic structure of 5-7-5 with the inclusion of a seasonal reference.“

Poetry Pea is a print journal and podcast publishing haiku and senryu with themed deadlines.

Wales Haiku Journal is a quarterly journal of Japanese poetry forms, though currently they are limited to haiku and haiga. They read poems “on any theme or subject, but works that embody the nature tradition of both haiku and Welsh poetry are of particular interest.”

Mayfly is a bi-annual print journal publishing only 15 haiku each issue. They have deadlines of May 15 and November 15.

Bottle Rockets is a bi-annual print journal that is looking for “What we are looking for: haiku, senryu, very short haiku-like poems (no more than 7 lines), tanka, and cheritas. Nothing else. Please don’t ask.” Their next submission window is April 1-June 1, 2021.

Blithe Spirit is the quarterly print journal of the British Haiku Society, looking for “haiku, tanka, haibun, sequences, linked forms, articles, reviews” which reads email submissions year round.

seashores is “an international journal to share the spirit of haiku” that reads haiku and senryu for their biannual print issues with deadlines in January and July.

Sonic Boom publishes a variety of poetry and art with a major section called Paper Lanterns that focuses on Japanese formal poetry including senryu, haiku (all types including poemwords, found, parallel, and concrete haiku), tanka & kyoka, sedoka, cherita and gembun. Their reading period is in October.


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Copied from an article by, Zebulon Huset, in the free, online newsletter of, Authors Publish magazine (highly recommended)
Thank you, Bill! Your postings of submission opportunities are always welcome. I assume that the Haiku form they are looking for is based on syllables and not kireji.
You can't get there from here, because when you get there you're still here and here is now there.
Quote by rolandlytle
Thank you, Bill! Your postings of submission opportunities are always welcome. I assume that the Haiku form they are looking for is based on syllables and not kireji.


The only kind I have ever written in English uses the syllabic format of five-seven-five.

This is mighty interesting, Bill.