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Books short stories The writing process

From Dull to Bright

I do enjoy creating a max. 500-word story each month for the Furious Fiction competition from the Australian Writers’ Centre. I warm to the themes and criteria they choose, and look forward to spending what I can of the weekend (because that’s all they allow) being as imaginative as I can.

Here were the rules for this month:

  • Each story had to strongly feature a relationship between TWO characters. 
  • Each story had to include someone whispering.
  • Each story had to include the words JAR, UNIFORM, NEEDLE and EDGE. (Certain variations were allowed)

I decided to take a dull story and polish it to a shine. I did that by adding something new to the ending and greatly exaggerating something in the middle, but otherwise only by the way I wrote it.

My story wasn’t featured, but the fact that it was longlisted is, I think, a testament to the fact that a lot of what makes a story stand out lies simply in the writing. I could probably have improved my story, and maybe it could have been featured.

Here it is:

A Bedtime If Story

If this were pure fantasy, you’d say the numbers were unrealistic. But it’s true; their relationship lasted for fifty years, from age twenty to age seventy.

If this were pure fantasy, you’d say it needs more conflict. But it’s true; there really wasn’t much, or at least nothing worth mentioning.

If this were pure fantasy, you’d say it needs detail. I can provide that. I can talk of raising children, of delightful trips to near and far places, of long walks in various natural and unnatural settings, of together visits to museums, castles, plays, musicals, concerts, weddings, friends. I can mention how he fixed things in the house while she sewed buttons on his uniform and other clothes. How, in later years, it became increasingly difficult to thread the needle, a fact she never mentioned. How they quickly learned to avoid friction by avoiding topics because staying together was much more important, and maybe that’s why no significant conflict appears in this story.

If this were pure fantasy, you’d say the relationship is still too smooth, even though cracks are starting to appear. You’d say it jars with anything you’ve ever heard. That if you’d been sitting on the edge of your seat, waiting for the climax, you’d have fallen off it by now as sleep conquered your senses.

If this were pure fantasy, you’d have given up on the story by now. You’d have expected the end to be an accident in which they died together holding hands. Or a long, drawn-out illness, one partner caring for the other with love and tenderness. In reality, long and drawn-out was expected. Both feared that outcome. He didn’t relish the prospect of becoming gradually incapacitated; she wondered about her caring abilities, in particular about whether she possessed any. Pure fantasy would have put those fears to the test. Reality followed a shorter and easier trajectory. He fell and hit his head. No one knew why he fell.

While you suppress another yawn, I’ll leave you with a fact to dwell on. If I let you into a secret and whispered their names, tossing and turning would be the outcome. In fact, even if I didn’t…

Categories
Books short stories

Where’s My Trumpet?

Ah, there it is.

HEAR YE!

Do I have your attention?

Right, I have three things to tell you.

Firstly, and secondly, I’m going to blow my own trumpet. Oh, I just did.

I’m delighted to have had two recent acknowledgements of my hard work. The first is from the Australian Writers’ Centre. They run a monthly feature called Furious Fiction. Authors have 72 hours in which to produce an up-to-five-hundred-word story that meets their criteria. It’s not easy to “win”.

This time, the stories had to begin in the middle of something and include the words “locket” “pocket” “rocket” and “socket”. And they featured my story on their site! (You can scroll down or search for me.)

And my fifty-word story was accepted by Vine Leaves Press for their 50 Give or Take feature. These are flash stories that are sent out to subscribers once a day and will eventually appear in their annual print anthology. You can subscribe here.

By my reckoning, my story will be sent out nearly a year from now, and will appear in print in nearly a year and a half. But the acceptance arrived yesterday and I’m up in the clouds, as it happens, literally as well as metaphorically.


The other piece of news is that in August, I’m starting a new series of guest posts on this blog. Those guests I’ve approached so far all agree that the topic is interesting. What’s the topic? I’ll reveal that once I’m down from the literal clouds.

Enjoy your summer if you’re in my half of the world, winter if you’re not.

Categories
Books The writing process

How Long is a Short Story?

I’ve had two short stories published recently. The first, Train Trouble, is in the Dark Paris anthology from darkstroke. It has 4,459 words.

The second is called A Sticky Interview, and is in the collection called Appointment at 10.30 from Pure Slush. It has just 392 words.

Appointment at 10.30 and Dark Paris

Both are valid as short stories, although the latter would also fit under the flash fiction label.

Train Trouble is long enough to include two main characters, a minor character and some walk-on parts. It also contains several descriptions of places, indoors and out, and a number of scenes.

A Sticky Interview has two characters and two scenes. Descriptions are sparse and concern themselves with nothing more than the particular topic of the story. Yet, its very length led me to experiment. Where else would I write a sentence like:

The blushes lap at his throat, burning his words.

I haven’t written anything quite like that in a longer short story, and certainly not in a novel. Perhaps I should try it, but would I be able to maintain the style in a longer piece?

I won’t know if I don’t try…

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Books

Flash Mob 2013: The Results

Some better writers won the contest. But I’m here.

And the winning stories are here.

I’m off to read them – to enjoy and to learn.