Flash Fiction
Flash Fiction—sometimes called Micro, Brief, or Sudden Fiction—is a very short-short story, each piece only about 250-400 words. Though derided by some as a sign of dying literacy or the product of an overstimulated, media-stunned, zero-attention-span culture, Flash Fiction can actually be quite difficult, varied, and imaginative. As Mark Strand says, "It can do in a page what a novel does in two hundred. It covers years in less time, time in almost no time. It wants to deliver us to where we were before we began." And Joyce Carol Oates: "We who love prose fiction love these miniature tales both to read and to write because they are so finite, so highly compressed and highly charged." And John L'Heureux: "The short-short story is an exercise in virtuosity that tightens the circle of mystery surrounding what we know." Because of obvious time contraints at Governor's School, Flash Fiction is a manageable and fun genre for the Creative Writing group |
Look over the following:
An Article on Microfiction Guidelines
Sample Stories
Print out and read the following:
An Introduction to Micro Fiction
Berry *
Chin *
Giles *
McNally *
Miller *
Powell *
Read the following (don't need to print them out):
A Few Flash Fiction Pieces from Pif Magazine
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