“Today’s science fiction is tomorrow’s science fact.
–attributed to Isaac Asimov
Imagine journeying across the stars in a generation spacecraft, like when European explorers crossed the ocean in Caravels. Or a comparable one in which a starship travels to a distant star for a duration no longer than a transatlantic flight. Visualize a world in which scientists have discovered—and neutralized—the gene that causes aging. Or one in which AI, fully in control of most of society, demands a contract with humanity recognizing its rights as a sentient lifeform. Frank Tassone, here, your host for another Haibun Monday, where we blend prose and haiku. Today, let’s dive into the deep end of the poetry pool. Let’s explore Scifi haibun!
During the last dVerse OLN Live, Bjorn, Sanaa, and I discussed prompts related to sci-fi poetry. Sanaa & I thought what a wild idea it would be to write both sci-fi poetry and haibun. Thus, here we are.
As you no doubt already know, Science Fiction (SciFi) is a sub-genre of Speculative Fiction, literature that utilizes settings and motifs of a reality different than our own. Fantasy, certain styles of Horror, and, of course, Science Fiction, are the common expressions of Speculative fiction.
Science Fiction literature speculates on how advances in technology can influence our collective lives. Whether exploring how novel inventions profoundly impact society, or presenting entirely new settings for humanity through advanced spaceflight, science fiction is one of the few genres of literature that still ask the overarching moral questions: Who are we? What do we do with our lives? What is right and wrong about how we act, and what we choose to do?
But how can Haiku and Haibun fit into science fiction?
Enter Julie Bloss Kelsey, a self-identified “haiku and scifiku poet.” In a video introducing her “SciFaiku” poetry, she states:
“The term scifaiku, for science fiction haiku, was coined by Tom Brinck in 1995 as part of his SciFaiku Manifesto. Scifaiku was written before that time, but no one paid much attention to it. Since 1995, scifaiku poets have expanded the term to include other speculative realms such as fantasyku and horrorku.”
She goes on to present some of her own Scfaiku:
first holiday meal—
my mother- in-law’s tentacles
in every dish
– Star*Line 37.2, Spring 2014alien charm—
his first gift to me
was a tracking collar
– Scifaikuest, May 2018 (online)the perfect cover
for our spaceship…
lenticular cloud
– Star*Line 37.2, Spring 2014
Alan Summers, a master haibunist, and teacher of the form, offers his take on sci Fi haibun (excerpted from Nova Normandy 3044:
Nova Normandy 3044
First there are the phantoms, wheeling around the up currents
in an early morning acid;
the sun shielded behind laser carved mountains.
Next the spray is smashed outward, and slides between cloud scraped
shards. The tones of cloud banks subdued, and I stink in all the guises of magnesium, and iron and chlorine gripped in Co2
it’s that persistence of sweetness and chalk leaping out and through me,
disturbing
and my water defined by the colour it takes from the
sky.
I’m just me, feeling stupid as usual, alone in detritus, at the dull edge
of debris, snapping in and out of reminiscences…
The fact is I have never felt part of anyone’s landscape, and it’s really
too late to do that now. I invent tricks, some allied to memory, some to
encase empathy; a familiar scent of nostalgia for times long past:
counting tadpoles
the six year old
saves the world
Ready to stretch your artistic range, poets? Prepared to dabble in the wonders of technology and its influence on our world? Then write your own science-fiction-themed haibun! Any variety of science fiction is welcome, of course. Space Opera, Dystopian Future, Urban contemporary: go where your gut leads!
New to haibun? The form consists of one to a few paragraphs of prose—usually written in the present tense—that evoke an experience and are often non-fictional/autobiographical. They may be preceded or followed by one or more haiku—nature-based, using a seasonal image—that complement without directly repeating what the prose stated.
New to dVerse? Here is what you do:
- Write a science-fiction haibun.
- Post it on your personal site/blog.
- Include a link back to dVerse in your post.
- Copy your link onto the Mr. Linky.
- Remember to click the small checkbox about data protection.
- Read and comment on some of your fellow poets’ work.
- Like and leave a comment below if you choose to do so.
- Have fun!

Hello, I so look forward to what will pop up here, me I took a dark journey into space….
In space no one can hear you scream
Looking forward to it, Bjorn!
Good evening poets, and thanks for hosting, Frank. I didn’t know where to start with this prompt and then, suddenly, I had an idea, and the haibun wrote itself.
Glad you stuck to it, Kim!
Thanks Frank!
Welcome, poets!
The pub is open!
can you serve me some alien cocktail?
I have an Alpha Centauri Mauve ale, or a Betelgeuse starburst rum.
or would you prefer a Polaris Burbundy?
The Polaris Burbundy sounds delicious
Coming right up!
This should prove to be an interesting challenge, Frank. Thanks for hosting. I think I will give it a try!
Great, Dwight! Can’t wait!
:>) I had fun writing this one!
Hi Frank….this was way out of my usual, but I really enjoyed the challenge! Thanks for the prompt. 🙂
Thanks for joining in, Mish!
hi frank
hi poets
revenge is best served cold, space is cold very cold.
now if only I could recall which sci-fi character said that?
thanks frank for a fun prompt as a sci-fi fan I really enjoyed this.
rog
Happy to see you join in, Rog.
& it was Khan, from “Star Trek II: the Wrath of Khan,” who said that! 😉
One day
Welcome, Christine! 😀
My speculative fiction happens right here on Earth…
And what a speculative fiction it was!
Well, poets, that’s it for me. Bar’s still open for you. Last one out, turn off the lights.
See you on the trail tomorrow!
Pingback: Returning Home | Elderberry Tea
Pingback: Reena Saxena
Pingback: Sci-Fi Haibun challenge from dVerse: Squy-high and deeply – writingpresence
Pingback: Absorbing Possibility – Haibun by Paul Vincent Cannon | parallax
I was wondering if it would come up before year’s end, and here we are. Thank you Frank for brining this.
The pleasure’s all mine! Happy to see you join in!
Thank you for an interesting Haibun , Frank. 🙂
Happy you joined in!
Thank you for the interesting challenge! Scifaiku! Who knew?
Guess I’ll have a Cosmos if you’re still serving.
Always! One Cosmos, coming up!
Thanks for the prompt, thought I would continue with something … cheers!
Pingback: City of the Damned: a haibun – LesleyScoble.com
Hi Frank, Thank you for your sci-fi haibun prompt. It was a wonderful challenge. I think I got carried away and nearly wrote a book! Many thanks for the inspiration. 🙏
Wow!