Why do you write flash? What makes it different for you? I write in many genres and forms, but flash has become a mainstay because it invites the best of all worlds: story, lyricism, intensity, authenticity, innovation. Flash really called to me after my kids were born, partly for pragmatic reasons: I’m a slow writer … Continue reading Mini-Interview with Jennifer Wortman
Interviews
Mini-Interview with Sophie van Llewyn
Why do you write flash? What makes it different for you? I should start by stating that I’m probably a novelist, at my core. I began writing by finishing a novel, but then I didn’t have a clue about editing it. So I moved to shorter forms of fictions. Through AdHoc Fiction, I discovered flash … Continue reading Mini-Interview with Sophie van Llewyn
Mini-Interview with Leonora Desar
Why do you write flash? What makes it different for you? My brain naturally loves flash. I’m not sure if it’s a journalism thing (I used to be a journalist).[1]. It might just be an attention thing, or maybe a commitment thing. I think though it’s a bullshit thing. I hate writing/drafting long stuff and … Continue reading Mini-Interview with Leonora Desar
Mini-Interview with Megan Pillow Davis
Why do you write flash? What makes it different for you? I started writing flash because I felt like I’d lost something in my writing. In myself, too, to be honest. I’d had some very demoralizing experiences with critique where professors saw nothing of value in my work, and I lost a lot of confidence … Continue reading Mini-Interview with Megan Pillow Davis
Mini-Interview with Michele Finn Johnson
Why do you write flash? What makes it different for you? Flash is like a no-fuss best friend to me—it’s much easier to manage than the more time-consuming, “high maintenance” short stories and essays that I also write. I can usually count on flash to show up when I’ve got limited time to dedicate to … Continue reading Mini-Interview with Michele Finn Johnson
Mini-Interview with Michelle Ross
Why do you write flash? What makes it different for you? Writing flash has made me a better writer because it’s taught me so much about compression and silences, the importance of what is intentionally left unsaid. It’s also an extremely practical form for when I have only small snatches of time to write. Although … Continue reading Mini-Interview with Michelle Ross
Mini-Interview with Sara Lippmann
Why do you write flash? What makes it different for you? I received Black Tickets as a gift from my first undergrad workshop instructor, the fearless and scary smart Lucy Corin, and that generosity – with her notes in margins – affected me deeply. (I’ve since hijacked that practice, and give books to my students … Continue reading Mini-Interview with Sara Lippmann
Mini-Interview with Jan Stinchcomb
Why do you write flash? What makes it different for you? I’ve always been delighted by the challenge of flash. It seems like it would be impossible, or like it sets you up to fail. All flash writers are close cousins of Sisyphus and Charlie Brown. What's your writerly lifejacket: character or plot? Character, definitely. … Continue reading Mini-Interview with Jan Stinchcomb
Mini-Interview with Kristin Bonilla
Why do you write flash? What makes it different for you? Is it weird that I’ve never thought about this? I like understatement, efficiency, playfulness, nuance. These are seemingly contradictory things but together they create tension and intrigue. Flash is an ideal form for me, in that regard. My favorite novelists started out as poets. … Continue reading Mini-Interview with Kristin Bonilla
Mini-Interview with Kate Finegan
Why do you write flash? What makes it different for you? In high school and college, I was really into writing poetry. I like how poetry and flash convey an intense experience succinctly. I see flash as a well-sharpened knife that can slice to the heart of the matter quickly, or a bolt of lightning … Continue reading Mini-Interview with Kate Finegan