Category: Flash Fiction

Why short stories? Why not?

It would be presumptuous to think my little site could influence you — and you, too — in your reading habits. So let me presume.

I love short stories, perhaps the main reason I write them. Yet in the publishing world, all the glitz goes to the big projects — novels, and overloaded nonfiction tomes intended to help you live your life better, or understand how our forebears fumbled the ball in centuries past.

Anyway, short stories rock. Think of it like this. It’s like streaming TV. Most episodes of popular passive programming run a half hour. To check my assumptions, I asked Mr. AI, and here’s what he/she/it said: comedies often run for 22-30 minutes, while dramas are generally 45-60 minutes long.

So, you watch short stories. No novel condenses to 30 minutes. So you’re already there.

You can buy a book of short stories, read one, put a bookmark in, set it down, and when you have a spare half hour (or less, if your chosen writer likes the flash form, that is, stories of 1,000 words or fewer, about the length of a newspaper essay) you pick it up and snack on another tightly written tale. Like eating a hamburger, and we all love hamburgers, just not all hamburgers.

For fun, check out the BBC’s annual short story awards.

Resurrected online mag Defiant Scribe welcomes my wacky wit

The barriers to entry in online literary publishing are invitingly low. Build a website. Put out a call for submissions. Accept a few of the better ones and push “publish.”

Maybe a few people other than the writers will show up and read some of the work. Likely not.

An oversimplification, perhaps, but close to the current reality. Some come. Some stay. Some go.

Defiant Scribe had a healthy run in the mid-to-late teens, published 20 editions, then took a hiatus. It’s back, the first resurrection issue out this spring. To show the perspicacity and taste of its editors, it has now accepted a slightly irreverent tale of mine, titled “Pope Wins Easter Egg Hunt.”

This is fiction. It hasn’t happened — yet. It could. Now that my story has been published, maybe I should call the Vatican and see if I could turn it into non-fiction. Or not.

When Is a Short Story Short Enough?

Trigger warning: This post has a lot of words about writing of few words.

I had no desire to write mega maxi micro fiction. Lately, I find myself doing just that.

Thank you, editors, for incentive, by creating spaces online that specialize in dishing up reallllly pared-down fictions.

Some want nothing longer than 500 words. Some want everything under 200 words. When I wrote journalism columns, I had to stop at … 700 words!

OMG!

Comparing an editor who wants nothing longer than 200 words to one who wants nothing longer than 100 is like comparing competitors in a midget boxing match. When is (oh, sorry, appropriate language police just left) twice as much of almost nothing an appealing thing?

Well, actually, it’s pretty sexy. For one reason, we live in a time of shortened attention spans. When Twitter expanded the length of allowed Tweets, it seemed to push in the opposite direction. Generally, we have become a people of conversation, texts and tweets and photos instead of text.

This is not good news for a writer, but when you find yourself in the land of micro mensch, it may be a good idea to step it down. Are we at the dawn of the 1,000-word novel?

I can write long, but my wife (when she was my boss) told me to give her nothing more than 700 words. I learned. It worked. It was a great lesson, mid-career, in how to say something succinctly.

In the world of fiction, 700 words is a very modest “flash.” It’s amazing how much you can accomplish in that space.

Not long ago, I was reminded that a group of writers and editors like it even smaller. Really small. I started sticking my toes into the waters of micro fiction. What a revelation.

I still let the story dictate length, but every so often, I have an idea that begs for extreme reduction.

The process is a marvelous exercise. It works not just to reduce a story to a 100-word nugget, but to hone skills for self-editing everything. A year ago, I wrote a mid-length story of just over 4,000 words. It has languished. Every time I return to it, I find ways to trim flab (ironic, given that the tale involves a woman with a yo-yo weight problem).

Not long ago, I took it from 4,300 words down to 3,200 words.

It’s much more powerful, because it’s much less self-indulgent. Less writing, less florid prose leads to more of what you, the reader, deserve. You deserve a story, well told, succinctly written. If I can do it in 3,200 words, you can finish it in the time it takes to eat a Reese’s cup. That’s great.

If you have any 3,200-word stories lying around, think about how you couild trim them down to 100 words. It’s worth a try. You never know how instructive the exercise could be. And how good the story could become.

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