100 Stories for Queensland

100 Stories for Queensland will be released world wide on Tuesday 3rd May. It looks to be a brilliant collection of flash fiction by a whole host of fabulous authors and comes with the added bonus that the proceeds of each copy sold go toward helping those affected by the Queensland floods earlier this year.

Just look at the impressive list of names adorning the front cover:

Short Story Challenge – epilogue.

Over a year ago now I took up the gauntlet thrown by Jodi Cleghorn to read a short story a day for a whole year. I started on 14th February 2010 and am happy to say, as of the 14th February this year, I managed to stick to it and complete the challenge. Not that it was that hard, reading a great piece of short fiction every day was an absolute pleasure. Over the course of my challenge I read a wide range of titles from a host of authors both classic and contemporary. If you don’t believe me, take a look at the archive of my Short Story Challenge posts.

I also noted down my favourite stories, limiting myself to one story from each of my favourite collections, though I could easily have listed two or three from each of the authors below. These stories were the ones that moved me, while also being expertly crafted examples of what the short form is capable of:

Grief (translated as Misery in most collections) – Anton Chekhov
Marzipan – Aimee Bender
Tamagotchi – Adam Marek
The Bath – Raymond Carver
Pride & Joy – Etgar Keret
Mr Burdoff’s Visit To Germany – Lydia Davis
The Mechanical Woman – Nik Perring
The Father – Leonid Dobychin
This Is Us, Excellent – Mark Richard
Letters – Nuala Ni Chonchúir
This Is About Dixie – David Gaffney
Busy. Come. Wait – Tom Vowler
Sanctuary – Erin Pringle
Learning Stick – Jared McGinnis

Over the course of reading a short story a day for 365 days I covered a wide range of authors and genres, from sci-fi to magical realism to literary fiction and lots in-between. What really struck me was the inventiveness and life present in the short form. Yet, in the UK at least, it remains such an underrated form, one which most publishers and agents ignore when looking at work from new authors on the apocryphal basis that ‘no one buys short fiction collections.’ Most short fiction writers seem to be asked for a novel when they do grab the attention of an agent; I have lost count of the number of interviews with short fiction authors that features a some variation of this story.

Admittedly, up until around 2008 I could probably have listed the short fiction collections I owned and/or read on one hand. But in recent years, since undertaking my now completed OU Diploma in Creative Writing, I have bought and read and, most importantly, enjoyed dozens of short fiction collections by all kinds of authors. Reading and writing the form to the extent that I have over the last few years has given me a love and respect of the form that I didn’t previously have. I realise that I am perhaps an unusual case. Not everyone is going to come at fiction from the direction of the aspiring/emerging writer. Still, it’s a shame that the publishing industry in the UK largely shuns short fiction, or publishes collections of established novelists without considering new authors that have chosen to specialise in the form. Weird when you consider the appreciation the short form receives in the U.S. particularly and even in other parts of Europe.

That’s not to say the U.K. doesn’t have some great champions of the short form. The Bristol Prize, The Bridport Prize and the National Short Story Award are amongst the most prominent prizes that help spread the word about great contemporary short fiction. Publishers Roast Books, Comma Press and Salt Publishing all specialise in producing quality collections, publishing some of the best British writers working in the short form today, while digital publisher Ether Books specialises in short works for reading on mobile platforms. It would be great to see some of the larger publishers taking a chance on short fiction from debut authors but that’s probably asking way to much in the current economic climate.

Since completing the challenge I haven’t stuck to reading a short story a day, though I have read one most days and I have been posting links to the best online fiction I’ve been reading over on my tumblr, The Short and Long of It. I am certain to keep reading and writing short fiction as it is a unique form that does things that aren’t possible in any other medium. The short form’s brevity is its greatest strength.

Some links to websites/blogs that celebrate the short form:

Tania Hershman’s blog
The Short Review
Nik Perring’s blog
Vanessa Gebbie’s blog
Story
Salt Publishing
Roast Books
Comma Press
Ether Books
Scott Pack’s own Short Story Challenge

Short Story Challenge Day 269-304

I may have been too busy to post about the Short Story Challenge in the last month or so, but rest assured I have been reading a story a day. Between Thursday 11th November and Thursday 16th December I read the following:

Day 269-287

Nude – Nuala Ní Chonchúir

It took a few stories for me to find my feet with this collection and while there were some stories that failed to reach me for various reasons, this collection also contains a number of really wonderful short fictions that I must recommend. Stand out stories for me include ‘Sloe Wine,’ ‘Cowboy and Kelly,’ ‘Before Losing the Valise,’ ‘An Amarna Princess Up North,’ ‘As I Look,’ ‘To Drift and To Lift,’ and my favourite, ‘Roy Licthenstein’s Nudes In A Mirror’ – which I selected as one of my story recommendations for National Short Story Week. It’s too much to expect to like every story in a collection. What I enjoyed about this one was that it continued to challenge and surprise me as I progressed through the stories. And the stories I ended up liking, I really really like.

Day 288-290

A bunch of stories from all over the place. Alex Burrett’s surreal tale of a snake in a cafe, ‘Eggs and Omelettes’ and Tania Hershman’s short but sweet ‘Drizzling,’ are available on the Ether Books app and are well worth downloading. Also finally got round to reading the winning story from the 2010 Bristol Prize. ‘Mum’s the word,’ is as perfect a piece of flash fiction as you will find. Valerie O’Riordan’s story is a powerful and emotive piece, the impact of the writing far outweighing its slim word count.

Day 291-304

Willesden Herald: New Short Stories 4 – Various.

I bought this collection of shortlisted stories for the 2009/2010 Willesden Herald short story competition a while back and decided late November/early December was a good time to read it as I prepared my entry for this year’s Willesden Herald short story competition. There are stories in here by some wonderful writers, Wena Poon, Tom Vowler and Peggy Riley to name three I particularly liked. My favourite story would be a knock down drag out fight between, Nuala Ní Chonchúir’s ‘Letters’ and Jared McGinnis’s heartbreaking ‘Learning Stick.’ A great collection and a useful one in that it shows the level of quality needed in order to compete in this competition. Here’s hoping my entry for the 2010/2011 competition is up to scratch.

Me @ Chinese Whisperings

I’m over on the Chinese Whisperings site today giving my take on the process of writing a collaborative collection of short fiction with nine other writers, nineteen if you count both the Yin and the Yang books coming out later this year.

For those of you not already in the know, Chinese Whisperings is a series of conceptual short fiction collections published by eMergent publishing. The brainchild of editors Paul Anderson and Jodi Cleghorn, Chinese Whisperings will release not one, but two collections this year, the Yang book featuring stories written by ten male authors and the Yin book featuring stories written by ten female authors.

My as yet to be titled story is practically complete, with just a final polish necessary to smooth out a few edges. Oh and I need to find a title. I think I have one or two ideas but at least one might be a bit too sweary. I’ll let you know once the title is decided.

Chinese Whisperings: The Red Book – review.


Chinese Whisperings: The Red Book is a collection of ten interwoven short stories by emerging writers from across the English-speaking world, a conceptual anthology created by Australian writer Jodi Cleghorn and Scottish writer Paul Anderson. This collection, the first in a series of anthologies to be published under the Chinese Whisperings imprint, sees each successive writer taking a minor character from the preceding story and telling their story as the major character in the next. Unlike other anthologies, which might be unified by theme or year of writing, Chinese Whisperings: The Red Book has been created in a sequential fashion, the stories taking place in the same American University town, each writer often referencing events from the preceding stories to tie the ten stories together.

The setting does not limit the subject matter or theme of each piece and all the stories are individual enough to be read in isolation; yet together they become more than a sum of the parts. Often while working through the collection I found myself sucked into a particular story to then discover just how it how it links in to the larger framework. Rather than kicking you out of the present story, the effect is one of cohesion, as the connections are revealed in an organic and natural way that is increasingly satisfying the further you wade into The Red Book’s narratives. All this drives the reader forward through the collection.

Characters and storylines are surprisingly varied considering the structural and character constraints the editors and writers set themselves, moving from the perspective of an aid worker to that of a homeless man via a sleep deprived librarian and a violent street thug. The ten characters’ stories move between the internalised, such as Miranda’s, where she considers how she has come to be trapped in the clutches of a mysterious illness or Simon’s, who in the midst of sleep deprivation begins to hallucinate, and more externalised plots concerning private detectives, violent criminals and corrupt organisations.

While none of the stories feel out of place within the collection, the most successful tales, for this reader at least, are those that are the most intimate. ‘Mercurial’ is an intense, claustrophobic piece that sees Miranda trapped as much by her actions as by the sickness that assails her. ‘Not Myself’ has an hallucinatory quality that captures the wanderings of a sleep deprived mind while showing the causes can often be both more mundane and more exciting than one might think. ‘Heartache’ is a moving tale of loss, with the main character seeking reasons for actions he cannot explain.

When the stories delve into the realm of genre fiction, they still retain some of that intimacy, which helps create the strong unity of the collection. The final tale, ‘One in the Chamber,’ provides a complimentary bookend to opener ‘Mercurial,’ its use of noirish detective fiction creating a contrasting sense of claustrophobia to that of the opening tale. ‘Not My Name’ and ‘Discovery’ expand the narrative beyond the American university town setting into other continents while bonds both thematic and character driven pull the stories back into the fictional gravity well of the setting and the collection as a whole. It is this breadth of genre and style within the collection that ensures there is something for everyone within its (currently virtual) covers.

What is perhaps most striking about The Red Book is the fact that, on finishing the final tale, it leaves the reader with a desire to return to the beginning and experience the various threads of plot and character again, certain that a second read will unlock deeper complexities of connection. In fact, this is encouraged by the editors with the creation of The Red Book Reversed. Whichever direction you end up tackling these stories, the Red Book comes highly recommended as an interesting concept that manages to live up to its promise.

The Red Book is available here as an eBook via Paypal buttons in a whole host of currencies, so wherever you are in the world it’s easy to snag a copy. A paperback edition will be available March 2010. It’s also worth following CW on twitter @ChineseWhisAnth to get all the latest news and be in with a chance of winning one of the limited edition Red Book Reversed ebooks. In this digital only edition the stories are presented in reverse order, with each main character slinking into the background of subsequent stories creating all sorts of interesting new continuities.

In the interests of full disclosure, I will be writing for Chinese Whisperings – The Jade Book, due later this year. This review was note drafted before I was invited to join the CW crew. The enjoyment I got from reading this first collection (in two sittings, driven on by desire to see just how the next tale fits into the overall continuity) was a major factor in my jumping at the chance to take part in the next.