The Bacopa Literary Review Editor’s Blog: flash is no longer fiction…

Bacopa Literary Review

Writers Alliance of Gainesville’s international journal in 8th year : Contest Submissions Open April 1, 2017 This blog cited among Top Literary Blogs for Writers and Publishing Agents.

For examples of work we seek–follow, connect, read below, or click: flash story, poetry, fiction, nonfiction.

Sunday, March 19, 2017

Flash is No Longer Fiction. . .

By Flash Story Editor Kaye Linden Bacopa Literary Review 2017 submissions will open on April 1 and include “flash story,” which can include creative nonfiction, memoir, fiction genres or a combination of these genres in 750 words or less, including micro-flash which might consist of 250 words or even fewer.
Here are a few of the criteria I look for in a flash story submission (see also 35 Tips for Writing a Brilliant Flash Story).

  1. Creative nonfiction, memoir, fiction, or a combination of these genres
  2. Tiny plot or character driven
  3. Compression: almost every word counts or carries meaning
  4. A minimum of adverbs
  5. Focus on one scene or event
  6. A minimum of dialogue
  7. A great title
  8. Consistency of tense and point of view
  9. Fresh expressions without the use of clichés
  10. Riveting language or language that moves the reader
  11. Originality
  12. Story structure: a purpose, a beginning, middle and end with conflict, conflict, conflict and resolution.

Here’s an example of my own 376-word flash story, written in response to the newspaper article cited below:

The Future Legend of How Rising Seas Drowned Saint Augustine and its Famous Statue*

The first grain of sand to go slipped unnoticed into muddy seawater and high tide washed a small chunk from the base of Ponce de Leon’s statue. Three teenage boys waded to the town plaza, climbed to the top of Ponce’s helmeted head and practiced kissing his cold lips, slapping his face when Ponce didn’t kiss back, and hanging upside down from the old head that bowed in shame at the youthful play. Perhaps Ponce felt jealous of young muscles and flexible limbs, or of the strength to climb statues and throw popcorn and peanuts from his slumped unyoung shoulders. He never did find the fountain, and with the Atlantic tide rising, rising, rising, his steel boots sucked down further, awash in brine. The boys knew, and Ponce knew, he was going under. Each evening the boys chopped off a finger, a thumb, a toe and the middle finger of the right hand became a tool to gouge out an eye, graffiti the shiny armor with she loves me, she loves me not, and scratch mud daubers and wasps from Ponce’s ears. They removed one earlobe with the sawing up and down, down and up motion of a hacksaw, laughing at the crumbling little man as he lost one appendage at a time. The boys removed the mighty sword from the gallant gentleman and topped his head with the blade in a decapitation celebration, the step-by-step ritual of taking a great warrior down. Water washed over Ponce’s knees while grains of stone fell away from the foundation in greater and greater chunks until Ponce leaned upside down, headless shoulders standing in water. One night, the boys stretched out drunk, across the rubble, across the broken fingers and toes, across the scraps of Ponce’s heroic eyes, those eyes that once upon a time surveyed the fertile flowering of La Florida where surely his immortality lay.         The water rose and rose and rose during the hurricane of 2019, a category six travesty, off the grid, never before witnessed, never before seen by the boys who drowned that night, never before seen by the city of Saint Augustine that drowned that night, never before seen by Ponce de Leon, whose hopes for a bright future drowned in rising seas.

*The Gainesville Sun, Florida, May 10, 2015: “Sea rise threatens Florida coast but no statewide plan

See also: “How Can a Mother?”
Other Resources:

  1. Micro Fiction: An Anthology of Fifty Really Short Stories, edited by Jerome Stern. New York, N.Y.: W.W. Norton & Co., 1996. Print.
  2. The Rose Metal Press Field Guide to Writing Flash Fiction: Tips from Editors, Teachers, and Writers in the Field. Masih, Tara L. Brookline, MA: Rose Metal, 2009. Print.
  3. The Rose Metal Press Field Guide to Writing Flash Nonfiction: Advice and Essential Exercises from Respected Writers, Editors, and Teachers. Moore, Dinty W. Brookline, MA: Rose Metal, 2012. Print.
  4. As this form can flash short and with impact, I refer readers to “Six One-Sentence Stories” by Bruce Holland Rogers.

Bacopa Literary Review contest submissions open April 1 – May 31, 2017

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Labels: 35 Tips for Writing a Brilliant Flash Story, Bacopa Literary Review, flash, flash fiction, flash memoir, flash stories, Kaye Linden

Kaye LindenThe Bacopa Literary Review Editor’s Blog: flash is no longer fiction…

4 Comments on “The Bacopa Literary Review Editor’s Blog: flash is no longer fiction…”

  1. Mary Ellen

    Kaye, I devoured your 35 tips for the 2nd time yesterday, and in so doing found this blog. So many thanks! I have about a month to submit, and so appreciate the freedom of your non-traditional take on flash.

    1. Kaye Linden

      Thanks Mary Ellen. I am so happy you like the tiny text book. I would be thrilled if you posted a review on Amazon. I thank you for your comments. Yes. I hope you submit to Bacopa. I need authors with something to say and a powerful voice.
      best from Kaye

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