I spotted this on the Angry Robot blog* the other day:
The concept of Six Word Stories apparently started, or at least gathered a great apocryphal origin, when someone bet Ernest Hemingway he couldn’t tell a story in such a short space. The response of the great man - “For sale: baby shoes. Never worn.” - still carries a real punch today, where in these times of Twittering and Flash fiction the six worders have made a real comeback.
You can find the best recent Science Fiction entries here. My personal favourite has to be this one by Watchmen scribe Alan Moore:
Machine. Unexpectedly, I’d invented a time
* BTW - on the same blog was this exciting news!
"The modern master of the gamebook format" (Rob Sanders)... "Can do dark very well" (Jonathan Oliver)... "Green gets mileage out of his monsters" (SFX Magazine)... "It takes a firm editorial hand and a keen understanding of the tone of each piece to make a collection this diverse work, and Green makes it look effortless" (Starburst Magazine)... "A charming blend of camp creatures, humour, and genuine horror" (Set the Tape)
Wednesday, 1 April 2009
A story in six words? Really?
Labels:
Alan Moore,
Angry Robot,
Dan Abnett,
Science Fiction,
Writers,
Writing
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