Tuesday
Flash fiction pieces are so short that we need to make every phrase, every word count. Each and every word needs to propel the theme of the piece in some way. Each word/ phrase should also be new and exciting to the reader. One of the most horrifying aspects of reading prose is stumbling upon a cliché, even more so in flash, because in shorter pieces where every word counts, clichés “stick out like a sore thumb.” This article offers some quick tips for avoiding clichés.
1. Personify unusual ideas/ thoughts/ objects.
Instead of personifying objects/emotions in familiar ways (opportunity knocks, the camera loves me, etc.) personify objects/emotions in ways that the reader won’t expect or hasn’t read before. In “Fenway” (2001) featured in This Won’t Take but a Minute Honey, Steve Almond personifies fate when he writes, “I’m not one of those jerks, yodeling woe every time fate shifts on her throne.” It’s not usual to think of fate as being on a throne, or as being female for that matter, and so the personification adds to the effect of the sentence. After finishing a sentence, try going back over it to see whether or not an unusual personification might be added to an idea or object. Make sure that any personifications you might have already have aren’t things that readers might have heard before. Making sure your personifications aren’t clichéd will only add to your stories. If you aren’t sure, try visiting websites for lists of commonly used personifications.
2. Check your similes.
It is extremely easy to write clichéd similes, and when it happens they stick out like a sore thumb. Why? We recognize similes easily because of their formula as “like” or “as” phrases which we have been taught to us since grade school. As soon as something is “like” something else, we recognize that we are reading a specific grammatical form. Just as clichéd similes stick out “like” a sore thumb, unfamiliar similes will jump out at readers in a positive way. In her story “Sweep” Kathy Fish writes, “Lean on the broom handle and watch the clouds, roiling like indigestion.” Though we don’t often think of clouds roiling in like indigestion it makes sense as an unusual simile. One way to avoid clichéd similes is to write down an existing simile that you might have heard before, such as “strong as an ox,” and replace either ‘strong’ or ‘ox’ with something readers might not have heard before. Maybe your character is strong as a raw potato. It can also be useful to familiarize yourself with commonly used similes.
3. Use adverbs and adjectives sparingly.
Using poor or unnecessary adverbs and adjectives will dull the effect of any story. Readers will not finish the story if they feel like they have had to fight through all of those ‘ly’ words. A good example of using effective adverbs and adjectives is in another of Kathy Fish’s’ pieces, “Stampede.” In “Stampede” she uses adverbs in the first paragraph, “Her brother, Bobby, predictably and inevitably, names his pumpkin ‘Jack.’” Here she uses two adverbs right next to each other. Why does it work? It works for Fish because she rarely uses them, and so when we read two like this in the same sentence we know that they must be essential to the story. These are the only two that she uses in the story, and we come to find out that it mirrors a deeper side of Bobby as he plans to pop out of an actual coffin that his mother was able to get for Halloween. This action is the opposite of the two adverbs above and shows that Bobby is unstable and also emphasizes the instability of the family. Try going back into your stories and reevaluating your adverbs and adjectives. Are they really necessary? What do they do to propel the sentence or the theme of the piece?
4. Create conflicting images.
One way to avoid poor word choice or clichés is to take what readers would expect in a character and turn it upside down by choosing conflicting images. Steve Almond is wonderful at this. Report: Skinny Monkeys Live Longer” is narrated from the standpoint of someone who recognizes that food, when eaten in excess, is dangerous. He makes an argument that “they” want us to get fat. Almond writes about visiting his grandmother and how she would cook large amounts of food for him, “She fed me this dope like a nurse tending a lunatic.” The focus is on the word ‘dope’ as a stand in for food. We don’t normally think of grandma and dope in the same sentence. This is one reason that the word seems fresh and strange. It works for the scene, however, because the food is like dope to the narrator: he takes too much and he ends up passing out in the guest room. This could have easily have been a “food is a drug” cliché. Almond, however, avoids this by specifying a drug and pairing it with his Grandma. It’s different to think of your grandmother forcing you to do drugs, which here is the stand-in for food. Try using this formula to reinforce your similes and personifications by pairing them with a conflicting idea or image.
5. Concentrate on metaphors.
Metaphors are often what can propel, or kill, a story because often a lot of the meaning of an entire piece rests on a metaphor. For a good example, I go back to Kathy Fish’s piece “Sweep.” Fish writes, “Sweep the feathers off the porch before the rain comes and makes a paste of them.” We wonder who is she talking to, us, herself? By the end, we realize she must be talking to herself since most of us do not know the Ph.D candidate prone to sinus infections in the story. The thought that the rain can make a paste of the leaves is a great fresh phrase which immediately leaves an image of soaked and stuck leaves on a rainy day. In very few words—the story is only 66 words#8212;we understand that she is “Sweep”-ing this man out of her life. Having the characters preform an action which mirrors the thoughts of the narrator can be effective, if the images used to propel the metaphor are new to the readers.
The best way to ensure that you are not using dull word choices and clichés is to go back to the skeleton of your story and look at the grammatical backbone. Go back to the beginning and look at your similes, metaphors, images, adjectives, and adverbs. Are they going to leave your readers interested? Is each and every word doing its job? Familiarize yourself with common clichés and start a list of new and interesting ones. Doing come cliché maintenance on your pieces will ensure that readers don’t leave the piece feeling disappointed. Remember: “A cliché a day keeps readers away!”
FF.Net Author’s Note
Maranda Stewart holds a Bachelors of Arts in English Literature from Kutztown University. She is currently attending Rosemont College for her MFA in Creative writing with a concentration in poetry. She has won the Raymond Ford Award for poetry and is enjoying exploring the flash fiction genre. She agrees with William Carlos Williams who said, “It is difficult to get the news from poems, yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there,” and believes that the same can be said about flash.

