ISSN: 1946-1712

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January 1, 2008
For Writers
Liberty Hall Writers: An Interview with Mike Munsil

Two of the writers selected for inclusion in the January issue of Flash Fiction Online, Beth Wodzinski and Rod M. Santos, hone their writing skills at Liberty Hall, a writers’ forum — and I’m not making this up — where you can spit on the mat and call the cat a bastard.

Whatever the nature of their interactions with floor coverings and felines, they seem to crank out a lot of good stories. We spoke with Liberty Hall’s founder and proprietor, Mike Munsil, to find out more. Read more: HTML 


July 11, 2012
Paranoia and Delusion
Jake Freivald
Paranoia and Delusion

September 1, 2009
Review: Field Guide to Writing Flash Fiction
Jake Freivald
Review: The Field Guide to Writing Flash Fiction

Editor Jake Freivald reviews The Rose Metal Press Field Guide to Writing Flash Fiction, a collection of 25 essays dedicated to... well, you know. Read more: HTML 


January 3, 2008
For Readers
Mark Freivald
Allegory vs. Symbolism — What’s It All Mean?

In this article, Mark Freivald uses Bolesław Prus’s "Mold of the Earth" and other stories to discuss the difference between allegory and symbolism. Read more: HTML 


March 1, 2008
For Readers
Eric Garcia
Interview with Eric

Eric Garcia is a novelist and screenwriter who writes insane things. Interestingly, he seems to be able to make a living selling them. Nobody’s quite sure how this works. Read more: HTML 


June 1, 2008
For Readers
Dave Hoing
The Hand of the Dead

Dave Hoing, author of “Souls of the Harvest” from our February issue, sent me The Hand of the Dead with an odd explanation: “Although it’s short enough to qualify as flash, I’m not sure if it’s fictional enough to qualify as fiction.” Call it a speculative essay, if you like — it stems from his love of old books, and the legacy captured in the handwriting inside a 1792 bible. — Ed. Read more: HTML 


October 12, 2010
For Writers
H. P. Lovecraft
Notes on Writing Weird Fiction

This is an essay H.P. Lovecraft wrote in 1933, which was published in the June 1937 issue of The Amateur Correspondent.

My reason for writing stories is to give myself the satisfaction of visualising more clearly and detailedly and stably the vague, elusive, fragmentary impressions of wonder, beauty, and adventurous expectancy which are conveyed to me by certain sights (scenic, architectural, atmospheric, etc.), ideas, occurrences, and images encountered in art and literature. I choose weird stories because they suit my inclination best — one of my strongest and most persistent wishes being to achieve, momentarily, the illusion of some strange suspension or violation of the galling limitations of time, space, and natural law which for ever imprison us and frustrate our curiosity about the infinite cosmic spaces beyond the radius of our sight and analysis. Read more: HTML 


October 1, 2009
For Writers, 10/2009
Edgar Allan Poe
The Philosophy of Composition

This essay details the writing of Edgar Allan Poe’s most famous poem, “The Raven”. Although flash fiction isn’t poetry, it strives for the same “unity of effect” that Poe tries to obtain in his work.

Some have said that this is satire, too precise and methodical to be serious; however, I think our own work might benefit from studying its themes. Read more: HTML 


May 26, 2011
Technically Speaking #5
Bruce Holland Rogers
Tea Party Rules — The Story Contract

In the previous column I said that fiction is a special variety of lie because it is collaborative. The reader participates in making the lie into a simulated truth and responds to the simulation with thoughts and feelings as if that simulation were real. Reading a story is not so very different from cooperative play such as sitting down to a pretend tea party with a child. The child is the author.... Read more: HTML 


April 18, 2011
Technically Speaking #4
Bruce Holland Rogers
Make It a Good Lie: Verisimilitude

One of the questions often asked of novelists and story writers is “How did you get your start?” The answer I most often give is, “I lied a lot as a child.” My answer sounds glib and usually gets a laugh, but I also mean it seriously. Fiction is a special case of lying. Moreover, fiction and lying both depend on what psychologists call “theory of mind.” Read more: HTML 


March 21, 2011
Technically Speaking #3
Bruce Holland Rogers
Naming the Baby: Titles (Part II)...

In part one of this article, Bruce explained some theory and then wrote: The title pulls the reader in. Then the story delivers on the title. This column takes the next step.

Enough theory. What a writer lacking a title can really use is some Things to Try. Here are a few.

1. Look at your bookshelf. What are the patterns of the titles you see there? Read more: HTML 


February 20, 2011
Technically Speaking #2
Bruce Holland Rogers
Naming the Baby: Titles (Part I)...

In this article, first of a two-part series, Bruce explores the way titles affect your stories.

Titles are hard. They have to accomplish a lot in a few words. The ideal title will attract the reader who has a variety of stories to choose from, will grab the reader by the collar and say, “Hey! You! Yes, you! Here is exactly the sort of story you love!” Read more: HTML 


December 20, 2010
Technically Speaking #1
Bruce Holland Rogers
The King Is Dead...

Long live the King!

Over two years have gone by since Bruce started writing his Short-Short Sighted column. Although he’ll continue to talk about short-short stories, he’s going to branch out into writing techniques that are more broadly applicable. This is his inaugural column for Technically Speaking. Read more: HTML 


November 17, 2010
Short-Short Sighted #26
Bruce Holland Rogers
Again Again Again: Repetition

One of the first things I learned about English prose style, far back in the ancient days of grade school, was that I should vary my vocabulary. Repetition of the same word (other than prepositions, conjunctions and articles that have to be repeated often) displayed a lack of art. If I were writing a paragraph about a rose, then I should next refer to it as “flower” and then perhaps refer to its “petals,” rather than writing “rose” in three different sentences. Read more: HTML 


September 7, 2010
Short-Short Sighted #25
Bruce Holland Rogers
Big Success on a Small Scale

This month, I want to take a break from examining the forms of flash fiction and consider another aspect of flash entirely: the career aspect. What would it mean to have a successful career in flash fiction?

As readers of my essays in Word Work will know, I’m wary of any definition of success that makes money the sole measure.... Read more: HTML 


August 7, 2010
Short-Short Sighted #24
Bruce Holland Rogers
By The Numbers: The Prose Sonnet

Any time I begin a discussion of fixed forms, the first such form that I mention is the sonnet. Even if many readers can’t name the rules of a sonnet, they at least know that a sonnet is a short poem written to a set of arbitrary rules, and it’s easy to proceed from that example to a discussion of how a writer might compose by first choosing the rules and then, line by line, finding content to fit them. Read more: HTML 


May 4, 2010
Short-Short Sighted #23
Bruce Holland Rogers
Let Me Repeat That: A Prose Villanelle

One of the best-known poems in the English language is “Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night” by Dylan Thomas, a poem that Thomas wrote for his dying father. One of the first things that a reader might notice about that poem is that there are two lines in the poem that repeat exactly. Do not go gentle into that good night is the first line, the sixth line,... Read more: HTML 


May 4, 2010
Short-Short Sighted
Bruce Holland Rogers
Metamorphoses and Compassion

...And that, dear readers, is a metamorphosis tale, a story well suited to flash fiction.... Before the metamorphosis is the story of what led up to the transformation, and often the story lasts long enough after the transformation to consider its significance....

There is one risk to writing a metamorphosis story, and it refers to the phrase teaches them a lesson. Read more: HTML 


April 1, 2010
Short-Short Sighted #21
Bruce Holland Rogers
Small Rebellions: Prose Poems

These columns are about writing flash fiction, but this month I want to peer over the border to examine flash fiction’s sister genre, the prose poem. At least some flash fictions and prose poems are similar enough that it can be difficult to see just which side of the border they belong on. Russell Edson calls what he writes “poems,” but all of his work is formatted as prose and is narrative. Readers can be forgiven for thinking that it’s flash fiction. Some of my own work that I considered to be fiction when I wrote it has ended up being published as poetry. Whenever I teach a class in the “short forms” of flash fiction, prose poem, and brief literary nonfiction, one of the first things I do is show the students a variety of short prose pieces and ask them to tell me whether those works are fiction, poetry, or nonfiction. Students seldom agree completely on the genre of any of the sample writings.... Read more: HTML 


March 2, 2010
Short-Short Sighted #20
Bruce Holland Rogers
Consolidated Flash and the Collective Narrator

In this column, Bruce Holland Rogers comes back to fixed forms, discusses story collections, and introduces the collective narrator. Read more: HTML 


February 2, 2010
Short-Short Sighted #19
Bruce Holland Rogers
A Story of n Words: How Low Can You Go?

In this column, Bruce Holland Rogers discusses the shortest of very short stories, and tackles, along the way, the topic, “Just what is a story, anyway?” Read more: HTML 


January 5, 2010
Short-Short Sighted #18
Bruce Holland Rogers
Ellipsis: What To Leave Out

The title says it all. Read more: HTML 


December 1, 2009
Short-Short Sighted #17
Bruce Holland Rogers
Write Rites: The Ritual Story

On using ritual in stories. Read more: HTML 


November 3, 2009
Short-Short Sighted #16
Bruce Holland Rogers
George Washington’s Life in Baseball:
Using Characters Your Reader Already Knows

Bruce Holland Rogers discusses the use of characters your audience already knows. Read more: HTML 


September 1, 2009
Short-Short Sighted #15
Bruce Holland Rogers
Collaborating with MICE:
Using Theory as a Creative Partner

Bruce Holland Rogers continues his series on writing the short-short story.

In the last four columns we have looked at Orson Scott Card’s MICE quotient and examined how it is possible to write flash fiction that depends on its success on Milieu, Idea, Character, or Event. As I wrote these columns, I was reminded of the nervous anxiety that I used to feel when I would read about theories and techniques of writing. On one hand, I would feel excited about the clarity that can arrive with a good theory: Aha! That’s why certain novels begin with the arrival of strangers and end when the strangers leave! They are novels of milieu! Read more: HTML 


August 4, 2009
Short-Short Sighted #14
Bruce Holland Rogers
Flash Fiction of Event:
Tackling a Problem

Bruce’s final column in the discussion of MICE (Milieu, Idea, Character, and Event) focuses on Event stories. Read more: HTML 


July 2, 2009
Short-Short Sighted #13
Bruce Holland Rogers
Flash Fiction of Character

Bruce continues his discussion of the MICE quotient by talking about Flash Fiction of Character. Read more: HTML 


June 2, 2009
Short-Short Sighted #12
Bruce Holland Rogers
Flash Fiction of Idea

Bruce’s column continues his discussion of the MICE (Milieu, Idea, Character, Event) quotient with a discussion about Flash Fiction of Idea. Read more: HTML 


May 5, 2009
Short-Short Sighted
Bruce Holland Rogers
Short-Short-Sighted Index

With Bruce on hiatus this month, we thought it would be a good idea to create a list of all eleven of his columns so far. He’s already covered a lot of turf: from fixed forms, traditional tales, and word-count restrictions to the deliberate shattering of form and evasion of tradition. Each has at least one story to illustrate his point, too — all of which are well worth reading. Read more: HTML 


April 2, 2009
Short-Short Sighted #11
Bruce Holland Rogers
Flash Fiction of Milieu: What It’s Like Here

This is the first of four articles covering the MICE Quotient: Milieu, Idea, Character, and Event. Bruce discusses these elements (with a tip of the hat to Orson Scott Card) and goes into greater depth on milieu. His exemplar for the month is called, Unpleasant Features of Our New Address.” Read more: HTML 


March 1, 2009
Short-Short Sighted #10
Bruce Holland Rogers
Less Than The Rules Demand: Getting By On Attitude

In this issue, Bruce Holland Rogers breaks all the rules — and shows how you can, too. His intriguing story “Baby, It Didn’t Have to Happen That Way”, illustrates his point. Read more: HTML 


February 1, 2009
Short-Short Sighted #9
Bruce Holland Rogers
Zoom! Writing A Lifetime In A Page Or Two

In this issue, Bruce Holland Rogers makes time fly by focusing on a lot of time in a small space. He uses a poignant 300-word story, “Dinosaur”, as an illustration. Read more: HTML 


January 1, 2009
Short-Short Sighted #8
Bruce Holland Rogers
Get Unreal

They say that truth is stranger than fiction, but they’re not talking about this sort of fiction. Bruce Holland Rogers covers some of the stranger styles of fiction — expressionism, surrealism, magical realism and fantasy — and shows how they can be useful in short-short stories. He offers his story “Estranged” as an example of expressionism. Read more: HTML 


December 1, 2008
Short-Short Sighted #7
Bruce Holland Rogers
Counting and Multiplying: The Birth and Evolution of the Three-Six-Nine

The latest installment of Bruce Holland Rogers’s “Short-Short Sighted” column discusses the “369” — a form so rigid that one might wonder whether it can be effective. After reading this column, you’ll stop wondering. Read more: HTML 


November 1, 2008
Short-Short Sighted #6
Bruce Holland Rogers
Once Upon A Time: Fairy Tales

The latest installment of Bruce Holland Rogers’s “Short-Short Sighted” column discusses fairy tales. His short-short story example, “The Dead Boy At Your Window,” is a haunting example — and winner of the Bram Stoker and the Pushcart Prize. Don’t miss it. Read more: HTML 


October 1, 2008
Short-Short Sighted #5
Bruce Holland Rogers
Take a Letter...
or a Fire Extinguisher

The latest installment of Bruce Holland Rogers’s “Short-Short Sighted” column discusses fixed forms found “in the wild,” in letters and travel guides and even fire extinguishers. His short-short story What to Expect is about pregnancy — and a little bit more. Read more: HTML 


September 1, 2008
Short-Short Sighted #4
Bruce Holland Rogers
One Loopy Sentence At A Time

The latest installment of Bruce Holland Rogers’s “Short-Short Sighted” column discusses fixed forms — using rigidity to inspire creativity. His 400-word story The House of Women serves as an example. Read more: HTML 


August 1, 2008
Short-Short Sighted #3
Bruce Holland Rogers
Momentum, Disruption, and Proof of Deflection

In the latest installment of his “Short-Short Sighted” column, Bruce Holland Rogers discusses a three-point structure for creating short-short stories: Momentum, Disruption, and Proof of Deflection. And he provides an extremely short story (238 words) called “Daddy” to show you how a master does it. Read more: HTML 


July 1, 2008
Short-Short Sighted #2
Bruce Holland Rogers
The Fabulist’s Tale

Bruce Holland Rogers’s “Short-Short Sighted” column this month is called The Fabulist’s Tale. In it, he discusses fables and gives us a story of his own as an example. Read more: HTML 


June 1, 2008
Short-Short Sighted #1
Bruce Holland Rogers
You’ll Know It When You See It

Flash Fiction Online is extremely proud to welcome Bruce Holland Rogers, award-winning author and educator, as he begins his new column, entitled “Short-Short Sighted: Writing the Short-Short Story.” His first column frames the question that will lead us through the rest of his columns: What exactly is this short-short story thing that we keep talking about? Read more: HTML 


February 1, 2008
For Readers
Bruce Holland Rogers
An Interview with Bruce Holland Rogers

Bruce Holland Rogers is an award-winning fiction writer and teacher, best known for his short — sometimes extremely short — fiction. Among many other places, his stories were included in both the original 1992 Flash Fiction anthology that coined the term and its 2006 follow-up, Flash Fiction Forward. The Keyhole Opera, a collection of his short stories, won the 2006 World Fantasy Award for best collection. He also wrote Word Work: Surviving and Thriving As a Writer, and is on the faculty of the Whidbey Writers Workshop MFA program. His “Reconstruction Work” appeared in Flash Fiction Online’s inaugural issue.

Though he bases himself in Eugene, Oregon, we caught up with him in London, where he’s living until July, 2008. Read more: HTML 


July 6, 2010
For Writers
Mark Twain
Before Your Next Critique Group...

Have you writers ever been critiqued in such a scathing, vicious fashion that you don’t know whether you want to crawl into a hole or beat the critquer with a bat?

Can you imagine getting that kind of critique from Mark Twain?

That’s what happened to James Fenimore Cooper and his novel The Deerslayer. Just wow. And yet there are good lessons in there, too. Read more: HTML 


August 1, 2008
Writing Speculative Flash Fiction
Suzanne Vincent
Writing Speculative Fiction for the Flash Fiction Market

Suzanne Vincent gets practical on writing extremely short speculative fiction. Read more: HTML 


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