Thursday
There are, of course, many ways to write flash fiction, but below is a listing of one way to think of narrative flash fiction—as a listing of things that I try to do in writing a certain kind of flash. Maybe such a listing will be helpful to those writing and/or teaching flash fiction. Maybe not. In any case, here it is:
[Note: In creating this list, I've borrowed phrases and qualities from the wide variety of sources I've read regarding writing (very) short fiction, and I can't quite remember them all. Especially helpful was Douglas Glover's essay that appeared in The New Quarterly on "Short Story Structure" and the writing guidebook from Pamela Painter, What If.]
- Dialogue. Lively. Interesting. "Not answering."
- Language. Charged. Compressed. Specific. Detailed. Fresh. Clich?free.
- Grammar. Modern. Not distracting. Correct.
- Style. The diction is organic to the story/character w/o sense of authorial interruptions & filters.
- Sentences. Varied. Important things last (creating tension/suspense). Sentences support narrative (the sentences rock like the character's experience on a boat, for example).
- Implication. Conscious of what doesn't need to be said overtly.
- Synecdoche. The one moment, word, image, descriptive characteristic is used to create strong writing free of wishy-washiness.
- conflict acts at the thesis at the center of the flash
- the conflict/desires are original, creative, meaningful
- every element embodies the conflict; conflict is way the "idea" gets developed & deepens
- figurative language/imagery is appropriate, connected, defamiliar
- specific, numerous details that make reader "believe"
- uses image patterns; repetitions of words, thematic topics, motifs, images, and memories; "act of questioning"
- Newness. Decisions—setting, action, dialogue, words, etc.—feel original.
- Profundity. What's figured out is meaningful, new, emotionally-packed.
- opposing actions/intentions developed throughout using "story" structure (the "formula"), yet has enough "difference" to satisfy readers' desire for continual surprise
- beginning: in medias res; engaging; clear conflict; charged; reader isn't confused
- scene/action: the conflict occurs through a series of ACTIONS that force character to deal with pressing issue(s) that are both external and internal
- dialogue: something people are trying to do to each other.
- narration: a movement from place to place using challenging obstacles to deepen conflict, get character closer to the "truth," create tension and urgency, and raise the stakes.
- ending: a non-Hollywood resolution to the beginning conflict (perhaps with a sense that there can be no gain without a commensurate loss); the sense that something important to character, writer, & reader has been figured out.
I put these 21 characteristics into 3 categories: 1-7, the language and voice; 8-15, the critical thinking; and 16-21, the structure and design.

