Time for our fifth annual SPECULATIVE FICTION HAIKU CONTEST! Â Anyone can do this!
As a reminder, here are the rules:
For haiku, the typical subject matter is nature, but if you decide to be traditional, you must give it a fantasy, science fiction, or horror twist. We expect to be told that the peaceful wind you describe is blowing across a landscape of an unfamiliar, distant planet. And if your poem is about a flower, we hope that elegant little touch of beauty is about to be trampled by an Orc. We welcome the sublime as well as the humorous, the pedestrian along with the momentous.
Though you may use the traditional three-line haiku following a 5-7-5 syllable pattern, feel free to break that pattern. Many poets who write English haiku adhere to other expectations:
- Written in three lines, though sometimes in two or four lines
- Often offers a juxtaposition of two images or ideas
- Doesn’t rhyme
- Often uses a season-term or a word/phrase that implies a time of year
- Employs compressed, objective, descriptive language
- Often divided in two parts (the break usually comes at the end of the first line, the middle of the second line, or the end of the second line).
As inspiration, here are a few from last year:
To tremble and rage
Is the nature of the sea
Caught between two moons
Tentacled spheroid
Sitting by the warp-drive doors
Please don’t drip acid
Our interference
Disrupts the spinning seasons
Wakes the sleeping one.
After the dangling bite
A super hero is born
But what did the spider gain?
More sarcasm in her silk?
You may write as many haiku as you like. We’ll choose one author to win a book from our stacks or a FanLit t-shirt (depends on size availability).
Ph’nglui mglw’nafh/
Cthulhu R’lyeh/
Wgah’nagl fhtagn.
Okay, Sandy, that just made me laugh out loud!
The poison red rose
Grows in the desert sand pit
Sucking up the earth
It spits out acid
Like water from the mountains
Dripping down its stem
The purple skyline
Is peppered with these flowers
And their deadly drops
The cherry blossoms
Have all died. As so must we
After worlds collide.
Winds blow all alone
Final rest before fall springs
Ending of summer
Uncharted planet
Crashed ship, eerie silence
We are not alone
The first haiku was entered into a previous contest and is included solely for continuity’s sake.
A wolf howls off-key;
his pack pauses, horrified;
the crow laughs out loud.
Young wolf sings a song;
a crow silently watches
as each note rings true.
Far in the distance,
the pack celebrates success,
soon it will be whole.
A question murmured,
the crow awaits an answer;
The sasquatch chuckles.
I especially like the last one, Susan!
Thanks!
Years advance; time flies.
FanLit’s Haiku Contest’s here,
and practice I must.
Susan Emans, you win either a book from our stacks or a T-shirt. If you choose the T-shirt, please let me know what size. (Depends on size availability.)
And may I put the “sasquatch chuckles haiku on FanLit’s Twitter feed?
(If it’ll fit?)
Please contact me (Marion) with your choice and a US address. Happy reading!
Thank you so much!! I have a tshirt :) and yes, feel free to tweet the sasquatch.
Do you want a book?
Yes, emailing now. I need to complete my Rhiannon Held collection.
I wore my tshirt for luck on pokemon go charmander day.
Hello fellow Haikuers! Our Eighth annual Haiku contest is going on here: https://fantasyliterature.com/giveaway/eighth-annual-speculative-fiction-haiku-contest/