Tag Archives: haibun

What the Book! Haibun A Writer’s Guide

In Rattle Magazine Issue 87, Lew Watts, the Welsh Poet, was interviewed by the editor, Timothy Green. It is a fascinating, wide-ranging and entertaining interview about all things ‘haibun’ and during the interview, this book was mentioned.


A confession. I’ve been mispronouncing ‘haibun’ for some time. Even now when I see the word on paper, ‘halibun’ pops into my head. I even cracked jokes involving ‘halibun and chips’. But back to the book.


This book is essential reading for anyone interesting in reading and writing haibun. It is accessible, entertaining and breaks down the essential ingredients that go into a haibun. That is no mean feat, because, like the haiku there is an ineffable quality to the haibun.

arcane moon
po-faced
fades to morning

Okay, pump the brakes. A good haiku makes or breaks the haibun. The other ingredients…title, and prose complete the trinity. What this book does well, through several fascinating examples, is explain how these three ingredients spark off each other and cause the reader to revisit the haibun again and again.

So go out and buy this book, you won’t regret it!

Three Poems Published in The Galway Review (Pandemic Postcards)

Thank you to the editors at The Galway Review for publishing three of my poems: Pandemic Postcards, Whistler – The Morning After and Gibson’s Landing (Summer 2021).

You can read them here!

Bonus Postcard……

Backyard Wedding by the Fraser River
tug boats and log booms
a band playing soul
the sweet, sweet smell of Purell
guests on Zoom.

Taking part in Open Link over at dverse

Halibuns (Haibuns) and Photo of a Hummingbird

Waiting for the Man
It’s a Sunday afternoon in late May and I’m sitting outside The Post Coital Beetle watching the traffic on Broadway. At the next table, four bearded guys wearing flat caps and plaid shirts, looking like The Lost Sons of Mumford, are downing pints of over-hopped pale ale and talking about Death Cab For Cutie. And who is this I see slouching along Broadway, his bald head shining in the sun? No, it is not an image out of Spiritus Mundi, it’s not one of the boys of summer, it’s Slim, a man with all the charm of a pit bull with distemper; his remaining hair is scrunched into an angry man-bun and he’s wearing a white T shirt, a size too small. The T shirt asks a series of questions:


Is u at?
At issue?
Is it u?

The second and third lines of the message are on a different plane because of Slim’s stomach which is about the size of a regulation soccer ball. So, the effect is almost cubist, images stealthily approaching the eye. He sits down; we order a plate of nachos which arrives looking like a volcano discharging molten cheese. He turns and says:


Let’s talk
about the effable
in the room.

One of Those Conversations

“Hang on” he says, “I am feeling a vague fin de saison ennui, a certain je ne sais quoi and I have this urge to use every hackneyed French phrase I know in a pathetic attempt to sound world-weary, like I’m sitting in an outdoor café, a scarf knotted at my neck, smoking a Gitane and nursing an existential crisis.”

rain swept pier
lone tourist
bends to the wind.

Note: A little while back it occurred to me that I may have been writing halibuns without knowing it. So I started to revisit some previous posts and trying to halibun them. (I know, ‘halibun’ is not a verb). The hummingbird , of course, has nothing to do with the halibunnery!

By the way is it “halibun” or “haibun” or both?

Taking part in open link over at dverse.