Why Flash Fiction? | The World Remains Mysterious (2024)

Flash fiction often relies on the odd and unexpected to jumpstart the story.

I’m doing my Flash Fiction workshop soon and so I’m prompted to talk about some of my motivation in giving the class and why I think it’s a useful one for writers.

What is flash fiction? As the name would imply, it’s short. Short, short, short. It’s sometimes called short-short stories for that reason. People define that length in varying numbers: the Florida Review used to award $100 and a crate of oranges to the winner of their short-short story competition, while 10 Flash Quarterly‘s editor/publisher K.C. Ball says it’s got to clock in at a 1000, and others have stretched it as far as 2000 words (which to my mind wanders into actual short story territory).

Others go much shorter, pointing to Hemingway’s famous six word story: “For sale: baby shoes, never used.” There’s twitter fiction magazines, like Thaumatrope, Nanoism, and 140 Characters (which last posted in March, alas). I actually fall in this camp, but to explain why, I need to explain the appeal that flash fiction holds for me.

Flash fiction is concentrated fiction, undiluted by digression or subplot. A flash story is an arrow thrilling in the reader’s heart, something that hits dead on. It uses the story structure in miniature and gets at the heart of what a story must do: something must change. In traditional stories, and in many of their flash counterparts, the change occurs in the main/viewpoint character. In the best ones, there is often an internal as well as external change: In conquering her fear of spiders, Polly defeats the Squids From Beyond. Because flash is short, often that’s not met and the change is one or the other. Other kinds of change might involve the setting, or some other major factor within the confines of the story.

But there is another kind of change that can occur, and that is in the reader, either emotionally or in terms of their expectations. That’s what happens in the Hemingway story. We begin with what is surely an exemplar of cuteness, because who doesn’t like baby shoes? And then we are abruptly moved away in the next two words – they’re for sale, we think, and immediately ask why? And then the hammer of tragedy: the shoes have never been used, and we supply the rest. Dead baby. Our understanding, our expectations, our emotions, all can be shifted by a piece of flash fiction. We are changed. Good fiction, or at least fiction that falls within a particular definition of “good”, changes us.

Not every flash piece does this. Flash lends itself well to humor, to the shaggy dog story, to the punchline at the end (another change in the reader, as we are moved from the expectant moment of story beginning to the ultimate laugh or groan) and it’s a good length for it. The longer the story gets, the better that punchline needs to be, or else a reader feels they’ve wasted their time. You’ll listen more readily to the office storyteller’s cleverly shaped anecdote than you will Kim from accounting, who can’t seem to stick to the point when she’s recounting the story of how the office copier got broken at the holiday party.

Sometimes flash fiction slides over into prose poetry territory. I’ll talk about that more some other time, particularly as the time approaches for the workshop I’m giving on literary and speculative fiction for Clarion West next spring.

At any rate, writing flash fiction is a useful exercise for writers. Anything that makes us practice writing is surely a good thing, and sitting down to write a flash piece fulfills that. Beyond that, it’s very satisfying to rise from the desk knowing you’ve written something in its entirety, as opposed to the tiresome nature of a novel, which swallows hours and hours of writing while swelling as slowly as ice accreting.

You can use flash to try out new techniques. One of the exercises I’m going to try tonight, in fact, draws on a piece I heard Gra Linnaea read at World Fantasy Con, written all in future tense, which I’m going to read to the class before challenging them to write their own pieces in future tense. Another draws on Randy Henderson’s most excellent THE MOST EPICLY AWESOMEST STORY! EVER!!, which I’ll use to challenge the class to think about bad writing vs. good.

Many new writers are hungry for publications, and writing flash is a good strategy for garnering some. Flash markets, by their nature, consume a lot of pieces, and where a market that publishes one story each month is buying only that one story, a flash market is buying a much larger number. Every Day Fiction, for example, runs a flash piece each day. The shorter a piece is, the easier it is on an editor’s budget.

Some resources for people who want to read flash: I used Sudden Fiction and Sudden Fiction International in a flash writing class I taught at Hopkins. For some terrific examples of the form, try Russell Edson’s work.

Why Flash Fiction? | The World Remains Mysterious (2)

Enjoy this writing advice and want more like it? Check out the classes Cat gives via the Rambo Academy for Wayward Writers, which offers both on-demand and live online writing classes for fantasy and science fiction writers from Cat and other authors, including Ann Leckie, Seanan McGuire, Fran Wilde and other talents! All classes include three free slots.

Prefer to opt for weekly interaction, advice, opportunities to ask questions, and access to the Chez Rambo Discord community and critique group? Check out Cat’s Patreon. Or sample her writing here.

Related Posts:

  • What I’m Teaching At Bellevue College, Summer 2011
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  • Fiction Reading: The Coffeemaker’s Passion
  • Fiction Reading: An Appetite for Love
  • Fiction Reading: Planet Crabby

Why Flash Fiction? | The World Remains Mysterious (6)

About Cat

Cat Rambo lives, writes, and teaches by the shores of an eagle-haunted lake in the Pacific Northwest. Her 200+ fiction publications include stories in Asimov's, Clarkesworld Magazine, and the magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. Her story, "Five Ways to Fall in Love on Planet Porcelain," from her collection Near + Far (Hydra House Books), was a 2012 Nebula nominee. Her editorship of Fantasy Magazine earned her a World Fantasy Award nomination in 2012. She is the current President of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA). She is currently working on Exiles of Tabat, the third book of the Tabat Quartet. A new story collection, Neither Here Nor There, appears from Hydra House this fall.

View all posts by Cat →

Why Flash Fiction? | The World Remains Mysterious (2024)

FAQs

What makes flash fiction interesting? ›

Flash fiction is a favored genre among the English-speaking world's most celebrated writers for its ability to convey deep truths and universal human emotions in just a few short paragraphs. When done well, flash fiction can convey deep truths and resonate with readers from all walks of life.

What is the primary focus of a flash fiction plot? ›

This is the goal of flash fiction—also referred to as micro-fiction, short short stories, or sudden fiction. Instead of focusing on plot or character development, the writer instead focuses on the narrative's movement. Every sentence, every word, should reveal something to the reader that we did not know before.

How does flash fiction commonly end the story? ›

Answer. In flash fiction, the ending might be a shocking ending, it might be ironic, whimsical, or clever. The main thing it must do is make your reader glad they spent time reading the story. They need to feel a sense of satisfaction or closure at the end.

Why is vivid imagery important in flash fiction? ›

'Imagery is mental pictures or figures of speech, like similes and metaphors; they paint vivid pictures for the reader and make her understand exactly what you mean. Using imagery can inject beauty and freshness into your short fiction. ' In simple terms, imagery brings your stories to life.

Is flash fiction known for its extreme? ›

Flash fiction is a brief form of storytelling. It is characterized by its extreme brevity. There is no specific word count defining flash fiction. It typically ranges from a few words to around 1,000 words.

What are the three main elements of flash fiction? ›

The main elements of a flash fiction are the length, the character, and a bit of a twist at the end.

What is a six-word flash fiction? ›

A six-word story is an entire story told in six words. It is a short narrative that can have all of the emotional themes of longer stories—from funny to dramatic, sad to scary. It can be poetic or straightforward.

What is a 100 word story called? ›

Drabble. Drabble is a story of exactly 100 words (not including the title). Just because the form is short doesn't mean you can skimp on the basics of a good story.

What is the element of flash fiction? ›

Flash fiction writers often use a twist or (more loosely) an unexpected ending. The unexpected ending is like a punchline, it emphasises the ending. They make the ending live on in the readers' memory, aiding the sense of the reader creating the story in their own mind.

What is flash fiction also known as? ›

Flash fiction is also known as sudden fiction, short-short stories, microfiction, or microstories.

How is flash fiction different from graphic fiction? ›

Expert-Verified Answer

Graphic Fiction was a significant interaction of words, picture boards and typography. While Flash Fiction may be a sort of fiction, defined as an awfully brief story.

What is a writer's main goal when writing a piece of flash fiction? ›

What is a writer's main goal when writing a piece of flash fiction? To make a strong impact using as few words as possible.

Are flash fiction pieces plot driven? ›

Characters and backstory: Flash fiction pieces are plot-driven and include no more than three or four characters. They may include some character development, but too much backstory can use valuable space. Description: One may think that flash fiction stories are short on description to save space.

Which of the following best describes a piece of flash fiction? ›

The best description of a piece of flash fiction is D. A quick-moving story, in which the fast pace is part of the enjoyment. Flash fiction is a form of short story writing that involves a very short story, usually no more than 1,000 words in length, that tells a complete narrative in a condensed form.

What is flash fiction also known as quizlet? ›

It is known as micro stories, postcard fiction, nanotales and short shorts. Complete plot. The successful hallmark of a flash fiction is its twist at the end of the story.

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