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There's still time to submit to the 2024 National Flash Fiction Day Anthology and the 2024 Microfiction Competition, but be quick our submission window closes tonight at 11:59pm GMT!

For the 2024 Anthology, we're looking for flash up to 500 words on the theme is – AIR, EARTH, WATER AND FIRE.  Your work will be read by editors Karen Jones and Sara Hills.  Selected work will be published in our 2024 print/ebook anthology and be considered for our Editors' Choice Awards which come with a £50 prize.  You can read our submission details here.

For our Microfiction Competition, we're looking for flash of up to 100 words.  There is no theme.  Your work will be read by judges Sara Chansarkar, Jan Kaneen, David Rhymes and Alison Wassell.  Winners and runners-up will receive cash prizes and be published online and in our print/ebook anthology.  Full submission details can be found here.

Each project accepts submissions from writers anywhere in the world.

Our Anthology and Microfiction Competition teams look forward to reading your work!

 

This is just a friendly reminder that National Flash Fiction Day Anthology and the 2024 Microfiction Competition projects are only open for submissions for one more day.   Submissions close at 23:59 GMT on 15 February 2024.

For the 2024 Anthology, we're looking for flash up to 500 words on the theme is – AIR, EARTH, WATER AND FIRE.  Your work will be read by editors Karen Jones and Sara Hills.  Selected work will be published in our 2024 print/ebook anthology and be considered for our Editors' Choice Awards which come with a £50 prize.  You can read our submission details here.

For our Microfiction Competition, we're looking for flash of up to 100 words.  There is no theme.  Your work will be read by judges Sara Chansarkar, Jan Kaneen, David Rhymes and Alison Wassell.  Winners and runners-up will receive cash prizes and be published online and in our print/ebook anthology.  Full submission details can be found here.

Each project accepts submissions from writers anywhere in the world.

Our Anthology and Microfiction Competition teams look forward to reading your work!

 

 

Welcome to the seventh and final of our series of interviews with this year's National Flash Fiction Day Anthology Editors and Microfiction Competition Judges! Submissions for the Anthology and Microfiction Competition are open until 15 February 2024.

This week, NFFD's Ingrid Jendrzejewski chats with NFFD's Diane Simmons, the person responsible for administrating the Microfiction Competition year in and year out, about novellas-in-flash, reading techniques, travel, and her experience administrating the competition.

Diane SimmonsIJ: For years, you’ve been the mastermind behind the NFFD interview series, coming up with unique, interesting questions for our annual anthology editors and microfiction competition judges. Thank you for allowing me to turn the tables and put you in the hot seat for once!

Every year, you compile the results of the NFFD Microfiction Competition and liaise with the judges to determine the longlist, shortlist and prizewinners. Has this work led to any insights about writing microfiction or judging competitions? Do you have any advice for those who wish to enter the NFFD Microfiction Competition?

DS: I think my main advice (and it’s a bit boring) is to always read the rules. I’ve lost count of the number of times we’ve received entries that were over the word count – not just by a few words, but by hundreds! I also find that quite a few entrants use hyphens when they should have used an en or em dash – this can make a story over the word count. I’m always surprised too when people don’t put the title of the story in the document and I have to search around for it in their email or document name. It’s good to see though that the number of people putting their names/addresses/emails on their entries has decreased to almost nil – it’s always really upsetting to have to disqualify people for this.

With regard to the actual micros, I think that because of the short word count, we quite often get submissions that that are just anecdotes or jokes. Entries too can feel rushed – writing micros isn’t easy and it can often take longer to craft a 100-word story than a 1000-word one.

IJ: Your novella in flash A Tricky Dance was just published this January by Alien Buddha Press. Can you tell us a bit about it?

DS: A Tricky Dance is set in 1970s Scotland and follows spirited teenager Elspeth as she navigates the challenges of friendships, family life and ambition, discovering that even in the face of adversity, life can hold endless possibilities. The novella contains some of my favourite (and most successful) flash fictions and I enjoyed weaving them together to make a longer narrative.

IJ: A Tricky Dance is your third novella in flash, alongside An Inheritance and Finding a Way…and a little bird tells me there are others in the works. What do you like about the novella-in-flash form? What is your process for creating them? Has anything changed about how you view novellas-in-flash as you’ve settled into the form?

DS: I think that writing a NIF is just the greatest fun. I love the challenge of it. When I first came across the form, I was under the impression that each story had to stand on its own two feet and that it should be possible to take a flash out of the novella and read it on its own. I now understand that most people think the form can be a little more flexible than that, but I still enjoy the discipline of trying to make each piece independent, though I have relaxed a little.

The creation process has been different for each of my novellas. An Inheritance was the first novella I wrote. I had a story of 2000 words about a pawned brooch that had won a prize way back in 2010. I had done lots of research on pawnbroking for an Open University module and knew I wanted to write more about it, so I cut down my 2000-word story and used that as the final story in the novella, working backwards until I had my starting point. I mostly wrote new stories for the NIF.

With Finding a Way, I didn’t start off intending to write a NIF, but following the death of my daughter Laura, I wanted to put together a collection of flash fictions on the theme of grief. It was suggested to me by Jude Higgins that these stories could all be connected and it evolved into a collection of connected flash fictions. When it was published by Ad Hoc Fiction, I didn’t call it a NIF, but I would do so if I were publishing it today. Most of the stories were written after my daughter’s death, but a few such as ‘Images’ (first published in the NFFD anthology Scraps) pre-dated that time and I changed them to fit the narrative.

With A Tricky Dance I had quite a few published and prize-winning stories set in Scotland featuring teenagers/children and when I saw the Retreat West Novelette competition a few years ago, I decided it might be fun to put them all together. I changed many of the stories, combined stories and wrote new ones to fill in the gaps. I was pleased when the novella got shortlisted by Retreat West and longlisted by Bath NIF competition and continued working on it on and off for a few years until it was accepted by Alien Buddha.

IJ: Perhaps my first memory of you is being blown away by the way you read your flash at a reading for the Worcestershire LitFest & Fringe’s flash fiction anthology, and to this day, it’s a treat to hear you read your work. Do you have any advice for flash writers who want to read or perform their work?

DS: When I was first asked to read at Worcestershire Lit Fest, I was absolutely terrified and nearly turned down the chance. I googled how to do it and asked lots of writers and received a great deal of advice – too much to write down here, but these are the things I try to follow:

  • I think the most important advice is to practise loads. I usually start at least two weeks before I am due to read and I record myself on my phone. When I first started reading stories out loud, I would read to anyone who would listen – it helped take the fear away. Reading to strangers can never be as bad as doing it to people you know.
  • Don’t ever read from the book, tablet or phone – print out your story in large print and annotate when you want to take a pause etc. I also learnt that a good idea was to colour code lines of dialogue according to who is speaking.
  • Speak slowly – more slowly than seems natural. The audience needs time to take it all in especially if you are reading something funny. Allow time for laughter if necessary.
  • Try (although it’s difficult), to look at the audience occasionally while you’re speaking. It’s important to make a connection.
  • Unless you are good at dialogue/accents, if you have a choice, read a story without much dialogue.
  • You can change a story to make it sound better or clearer when it’s read out. I often add a ‘she says’ or similar, to make it clearer who is reading. If you think you are going to stumble over a word, change it.
  • Don’t drink more than one glass of wine before reading (this comes from experience). A good idea is to ask to read early on in the programme. It’s good to get it over with.

IJ: For as long as I’ve known you, you’ve had a caravan and it’s a rare year that we don’t exchange at least a couple logistical NFFD emails whilst you’re on the road. Can you say a bit about what you get out of travel? Does it feed your writing life, or is it something altogether separate?

DS: I’m never happier than when I’m writing in my caravan, preferably with a view of the sea. I find that being in such a small space (and my caravan is VERY small), allows me to concentrate. There are very few chores that need doing and the only other demand on my time is to go out and explore, but as I’m a lazy person, sitting writing with a glass of wine often wins. I do have holidays in the caravan though where I never take out my laptop, but it’s always there just in case.

 

 

We are delighted to announce our Best Small Fictions nominations for the 2023 National Flash Fiction Day season.

Congratulations and good luck to the following:

  • 'Cuttlefish' by Patricia Q. Bidar
  • 'Grapefruit in June' by Kik Lodge
  • 'Then, Now' by Marie Gethins
  • 'Time Takes' by Anne Summerfield
  • 'You Die First' by Andy Lavender

You can read all these stories and more in print or via ebook in Scratching the Sands: 2023 National Flash Fiction Day Anthology, available from the National Flash Fiction Day Bookshop.

Congratulations as well to the Best Small Fictions and Best Microfiction nominees of our sister projects, FlashFlood and The Write-In.  You can read more about FlashFlood nominees here (BSF) and here (BM) and The Write-In nominees here (BSF) and here (BM).

Welcome to the sixth in our series of interviews with this year's National Flash Fiction Day Anthology Editors and Microfiction Competition Judges! Submissions for the Anthology and Microfiction Competition are open until 15 February 2024.

This week, NFFD's Diane Simmons chats with Alison Wassell, one of this year's NFFD Microfiction Competition Judges, about everything from titles to short story writing to her advice for those entering the Microfiction Competition....

 

Photo of Alison WassellDS: Thank you for agreeing to be one of the micro fiction judges. Do you have any advice for anyone who has never written a 100-word flash before, but would like to give it a go?

AW: You have a very small canvas, but you can still tell a big story if you make every word count. In flash, and particularly in micro, there is no need to over-explain. What’s not said can be as important as the words on the page. Don’t be afraid to ask the reader to do a bit of work and fill in the gaps for themselves. I’m a big fan of ambiguity, and it doesn’t really bother me if someone interprets my story in a way that’s different from what was in my head when I wrote it.

DS: As well as being a successful flash writer, you also write regularly for The People’s Friend and have had over 50 stories published in their magazine. Do you always know when you start a story which market you are aiming for?

AW: I always start a story for The People’s Friend knowing that that’s where I will be sending it. It’s a niche market, and completely unlike anything else I write. They’re much longer, for one thing. With flash, I write the story first, then think about the best place to submit it.

DS: Is there a flash fiction writer who has influenced your own writing? Or one who you particularly admire?

AW: The list of writers whose work I read and think ‘I wish I’d written that,’ is endless. To name just a few Elizabeth Ingram Wallace, Sara Hills, Jude Higgins, James Montgomery, Cathy Ulrich, Sarah Freligh. I’ve learned, and continue to learn, so much from reading their work. I aspire to one day write as well as they do, but with my own personal style.

DS: Have you always written fiction? If not, can you remember what inspired you to start?

AW: I always loved writing stories as a child, but my adult writing ‘career’ didn’t begin until I was in my mid-forties. I think I initially started writing as a kind of therapy after my parents died unexpectedly, within eighteen months of each other. Most of what I wrote was rubbish, but it felt good to set things down on paper. I went on to do a short course with the Open University called ‘Start Writing Fiction’. I loved it, and the tutor said I should start submitting to journals. I wrote longer stories at first, and had some success, but when I discovered flash I was hooked. I was always told off at school for not writing enough, and now I’d found a form of writing where less was definitely more.

DS: Most people consider titles to be very important, particularly in flash. Do titles come easily to you?

AW: I think the shorter the piece, the more important the title, and not just because it gives you extra words! A title can make or break a story. Occasionally, I think of a great title first, and write a story to fit it. More often, I really struggle. Many of my stories had half a dozen or more titles before I found one I was happy with, and there are more on my laptop waiting for inspiration to strike. The worst thing is when you have had something published, then think of the perfect title for it.