Flash Fiction: for writers, readers, editors, publishers, & fans

Thursday

Eric McKinley @ FlashFiction.Net: Flash Density

I am dense.

I entered a flash fiction course thinking I knew what flash fiction was. Wrong. See, I thought flash fiction meant short, short stories. A fully realized short story that just happened to be small in size but not in stature.

Turns out that's true and not true at the same time. Now, I'm wrestling with terms and definitions. Is flash fiction a composite? Is it a snapshot of a story? Is it a scene? Half a scene? A barely noticeable look away from the camera? Is it poetry disguised as prose? Is it for those who'd rather not be bothered with developing plot and character? Do I appreciate and enjoy it? Can I appreciate flash if I can't define it?

Or, is it plot based, straight ahead stories, you know, with characterization and people feeling and talking? Is it the same as the food I was raised on?

Which is it?

How does flash differ from:

Micro fiction?

Short, short fiction?

Prose poetry?

Quick fiction?

How do these classifications not get in the way of producing meaningful stories?

Who decides? What does it say if those who decide aren't the same people sitting in rooms by themselves putting down words?

When is it okay for art to be theoretical?

I am dense.

About the Author

Erick McKinley Flash Fiction WriterEric McKinley is a Philadelphian. He is soon to finish an MFA in Fiction at Rosemont College. He writes a story every now and again. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in various print and online journals. Samplings can be found here.

5 comments

From Anne Willkomm

Great post Eric! You summed it up well.

There is noth­ing wrong with being dense. We learn the most when sud­den­ly we real­ize that we have no clue what is going on. One way for the clas­si­fi­ca­tions to not get in the way of writ­ing is to pay atten­tion and take note of them, then for­get all about them and just write.

Can you appre­ci­ate flash with­out defin­ing it? Well, can you appre­ci­ate to be alive with­out a need to under­stand why?

From Eric McKinley

Thank you, Anne.

From Mary

Ok This is only my work­ing def­i­n­i­tion of flash fic­tion so for­give me if you disagree.Flash fic­tion to me is any work that tells a sto­ry com­plete­ly in 250 -500 words.Can you take that sto­ry at some lat­er date and decide it’s more yes.I found a prompt online that said set a timer for 30 min­utes and write about a ring­ing cell phone. I type 1 hand­ed so 30 min­utes for me equals out to 330 words a flash size story.I like it and i may pull it out again when life calms down and make it a longer sto­ry becuse I think it has that poten­tial. But right now I can only fit flash in my day. One teacher said that a writer is defined by the fact that u sit and come up with some­thing every day.

From Eric McKinley

Good points, Gabriel, par­tic­u­lar­ly the one about writ­ing through clas­si­fi­ca­tions.

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