Writing Flash: How to Craft and Publish Flash Fiction for a Booming Market
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Writing Flash - Fred D. White
PART ONE
THE FOUNDATIONS OF FLASH
1
Introduction
Flash fiction is hot.* A hybrid and fluid genre, it has the narrative grip of traditional short fiction combined with the compression, imagery, allusiveness, and evocative power of poetry. A good flash tale instantly intrigues us, may also momentarily bewilder us, and delivers an emotional jolt to the solar plexus—all within one to four pages. It leaves us with the sense that a dark, overlooked corner of this world (or some other world) has been glimpsed, a place at once familiar and strange. Flashes are fun to write because they challenge us as writers to render a substantive drama with the fewest words possible. That means you must be able to convey characters, settings, and situations in a way that suggests much more than what you lay out on the surface. Don’t let the shortness of flash stories mislead you into thinking that they’re easy to write; like poems, they’re easy to write badly. A successful flash story has all the aesthetic complexity of a story ten times its length. How can that be?
In this book, I will break down that aesthetic complexity into easily digestible lessons about the craft of flash writing so that you will be better able to master them. You first learn about the techniques of indirection: unfolding a story in a way that suggests much more than what is conveyed on the surface. You will learn to use literary tools like metaphor, symbolism, and allusion as strategies for creating stories that seem much more developed than their length would suggest. To ensure mastery of these and other nitty-gritty literary techniques, you will be asked to complete challenging but fun-to-do exercises along the way—exercises that will make you a stronger writer.
The Basics of Flash Fiction
Before we get down to the nitty-gritty of crafting flash fiction, let’s go over the basics. At the outset, I’m tempted to say that there are no basics to flash fiction. There are so many different varieties it seems purposeless to scrounge for universal elements aside from length (1,000 words or fewer is the generally accepted maximum length of a flash story, but some editors will accept slightly longer maximum lengths). Even so, we can make a few generalizations. First, flash stories are stories in the sense that some external or internal problem or struggle is brought into focus, and that one or more characters are involved, including the narrator. The problem is then resolved, or a new insight is gained into the problem.
Second, along with story, there is story compression. In other words, all the elements of a conventional length story are present (or implied) in a flash story, but they’re compressed by allusion, indirection, innuendo, and metaphorical language that can evoke several things at once. To put it another way, instead of delineating setting, circumstance, and complex character behavior over many pages, the flash writer must allude to that complexity with loaded
words and choice, precision-worded sentences or dialogue exchanges that imply a bigger picture.
As we shall see, these basics can be stretched and amplified and reshaped into all sorts of variations. Flash fiction, like poetry, invites innovation. At the same time, it has, over the few decades of its modern incarnation, produced a distinguished body of literature in its own right, as the works listed in the References section at the back of the book will attest.
Origins of Flash Fiction I: Parable, Fable, Fairy Tale, Allegory
What we call flash fiction today has been around, under different names, since ancient times. We can trace its roots to Old and New Testament parables like the Parable of the Potter in Jeremiah 18:1–10 and the Parable of the Sower in the Gospels (Matthew 13:1–23; Mark 4:3–9), and to fables (think of the fables of Aesop or La Fontaine) and myths. Fairy tales and their cousins, the folktales, grew out of these predecessors.
Here, for example, is one of Aesop’s fables:
The Farmer and the Stork
by Aesop
A farmer placed nets on his newly-sown plowlands and caught a number of cranes, which came to pick up his seed. With them he trapped a stork that had fractured his leg in the net and was earnestly beseeching the farmer to spare his life. Pray save me, Master,
he said, and let me go free this once. My broken limb should excite your pity. Besides, I am no crane, I am a stork, a bird of excellent character; and see how I love and slave for my father and mother. Look too at my feathers—they are not the least like those of a crane.
The farmer laughed aloud and said, It may be all as you say, I only know this: I have taken you with these robbers, the cranes, and you must die in their company.
Birds of a feather flock together.
—from FairyTalesCollection.com
In a mere 145 words, Aesop has created a dramatic situation that keeps us reading to the end. Will the captured stork argue his case convincingly enough to save his life? Is his argument a valid one? Does the farmer’s counterargument—his verdict—falsify the crane’s? The tagged-on moral vindicates the farmer’s decision. Every sentence in the fable builds steadily upon the situation. It is this degree of unity that fables share with flash tales.
Many flash fiction writers continue to write modern-day parables, fables, and fairy tales and allegories. For example, in a flash parable titled Dream #6
by the Egyptian author Naguib Mahfouz, winner of the 1988 Nobel Prize for Literature, one of the narrator’s teachers returns from heaven after forty years to give his former pupil a folder containing corrections to the mistakes in his teachings.
Another example, this one cast as a modern fairy tale, is The Blue Jar,
by the Danish writer Isak Dinesen (famous for her memoir Out of Africa). This flash story, from Dinesen’s collection Winter’s Tales (1942), even opens like a fairy tale: There was once an immensely rich old Englishman who had once been a courtier to the Queen and who now … cared for nothing but collecting ancient blue china.
The Englishman’s daughter, the Lady Helena, breaks away from the entrapments of royalty to continue her father’s sailing adventures, and to pursue her lifelong quest to find precious pieces of ancient china possessed of a very rare shade of blue. We are soon caught up in Lady Helena’s mystical vision of reality symbolized by that elusive shade of blue. In a mere thousand words, Dinesen immerses us in an alternate universe of uncanny beauty and human destiny.
Allegories are fairy-tale-like in the way characters or objects literally embody abstractions—think of John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress (1687), in which Obstinacy, Sloth, Presumption, Envy, etc., are flesh-and-blood persons who obstruct the struggle of the protagonist, Christian, from achieving his goal of reaching the Celestial City. The allegory can still today serve as a template for morality tales.
I like to think of modern-day parables, fables, fairy tales, and allegories as flash morality tales because their concentrated nature allows their themes to shine through; but unlike many fables, such as Aesop’s Fables, their themes or morals
are not explicitly stated. Quite the contrary, the themes of many flash tales are only implicit, subject to reader interpretation.
These short tales take an abstract and complex concept (usually one that is theological or philosophical—but could also be scientific or psychological) and illustrates it in a dramatic, entertaining manner so that the truth can be readily understood and appreciated.
Origins of Flash Fiction II: The Sketch
Another cousin of flash fiction is the sketch, a snapshot of daily life, often humorous, witty, light-hearted, or satirical. Sketches can be in prose, fictional or nonfictional, or be rendered in play format. Classic examples include the Salmagundi Papers (1807) by Washington Irving (under his pseudonym Jonathan Oldstyle, Gentleman); Sketches by Boz (1836), the first published book by Charles Dickens—a collection of his sketches for the London Morning Chronicle; several of Mark Twain’s humor pieces, collected in The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County and Other Sketches (1867), and Sketches, New and Old (1875); and Langston Hughes’s Simple
sketches, written originally for an African-American newspaper and collected in the volumes Simple Speaks His Mind (1950), The Best of Simple (1961), and Simple’s Uncle Sam (1963). A contemporary example of the humorous or satirical sketch is the weekly Shouts & Murmurs
feature in The New Yorker magazine.
For advice on how to compose humorous and satirical flash fiction, see Chapter 6.
The Influence of the Short Story on Flash Fiction
The traditional short story has influenced the development of flash fiction from parable, fairy tale, or sketch to an independent genre. The short story sought, in the words of its earliest theorist, Edgar Allan Poe, to distinguish itself from the novel by limiting itself to a single, unified effect. In his review of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Twice-Told Tales, Poe characterized the short story writer as one who has conceived, with deliberate care, a certain unique or single effect to be wrought out,
and then combines such events as may best aid him in establishing this preconceived effect.
Furthermore, if the very first sentence does not bring about this effect, then he has failed in his first step.
For Poe, nothing in the story should diverge from this design. Flash fiction takes Poe’s unified effect principle one step further: by virtue of its extreme brevity, the flash tale needs to strike the reader with a singular knockout punch—a single effect on steroids!
Writing Flash as Preparation for Writing Traditional Short Stories and Novels
This may sound a bit contradictory after I’ve pointed out that flash fiction is complex, and writing it takes considerable skill; but it is nevertheless true that learning to write this highly concentrated mode of fiction is excellent training for writing long fiction. It may seem that in longer fiction a writer can spread things out
in a more casual manner. In truth, compression and complexity are just as important in long fiction, including novels, as they are in flash fiction. Longer fiction allows for a greater number of character interactions, more complex interactions, and more fully rendered settings and plot progressions (and regressions). I would argue that the skill you acquire from rendering significant detail in flash fiction will enrich your long story or novel greatly.
While I’m on the subject of longer fiction, it is interesting to note that some flash fiction writers have learned to have their novel cake and eat it too by writing their novels as a series of flash episodes, each able to stand on its own, yet together forming a coherent narrative. A good example of this is Zachary Mason’s novel The Lost Books of the Odyssey (2010), consisting of 44 episodes, most of them flash length, depicting untold adventures of Odysseus. Another memorable example is Alan Lightman’s 1993 bestseller Einstein’s Dreams, each of the thirty episodes being an imagined dream Einstein has about the possible nature of time (e.g., Suppose time is a circle, bending back on itself
; There is a place where time stands still. Raindrops hang motionless in the air.
)
Shaping a Flash Tale: A Quick Overview
There is no one entirely satisfactory definition of flash fiction because, like poetry, the genre keeps evolving in a dozen directions at once. Some flash fiction writers model their stories after parables; others experiment by creating text-image collages; still others experiment with unusual viewpoint characters. Bruce Holland Rogers, for example, has written a flash tale from the point of view of an infant trying to make sense of the world: "The dog’s nose is here, then it is not, then it is here again. Voices come and go … He invents a language that contains all of his awareness … Aglaglagl. That last
word" happens to be the title of the story, which appears in the anthology Flash Fiction Forward (Norton, 2006).
In Chapters 4–7, I will take you through a step-by-step procedure for writing each kind of flash tale; but for now, let me introduce a basic set of guideline. To get started, imagine a scenario in which an adolescent or adult protagonist is confronted with a problem, struggles to resolve the problem, and experiences a significant change or revelation (epiphany) as a result of that struggle.
First, brainstorm
Don’t go with the first thing that enters your mind; instead, conjure up several potential situations or predicaments and choose the best one. Let’s say you jotted down a dozen of them, and then narrowed it to the following three:
• While shopping, a woman spots a man who resembles her dead husband and, despite her better judgment, starts following him.
• A young man becomes enamored with a woman who literally casts a spell over him, compelling him to do things against his nature.
• While examining an ancient burial site, an archaeologist feels an alien presence taking over her consciousness.
Next, determine the story premise in a synopsis
Establish your story premise in a one-paragraph synopsis. Let’s shape a synopsis for each of the above potential situations:
• Maureen followed the man into the sporting goods store—the very one her husband went to when he needed new golf clubs. This is insane, she kept repeating to herself as she moved closer to him so she could see his face more clearly.
(What happens next? Does the man notice her? If so, how does he react?)
• The dark-haired woman in the hotel lobby looked up from her magazine and gazed at me so intently that I stopped in my tracks. Even though I had never seen her before in my life, I felt as though we were somehow connected.
(Is she a reporter? A fan? Her identity could suggest something about the narrator’s profession.)
• First, the wall of the ground surrounding the dig seemed to soften; then it yawned open. Dr. Barton lurched back, gasping. Working long hours in the brutal Outback can induce hallucinations, but this was no hallucination.
(Was her reaction psychosomatic? Had she chanced upon an ancient cult with magical powers that were still viable?)
Notice in each case how character and setting are molded simultaneously with the situation, all within the space of one or two sentences. This is what is meant by compression.
Now, draft the story
As you write the story, remember to include the three elements (listed below) needed to make reading the story a worthwhile experience: