News: Will The Oil Spill Hit The East Coast?

As BP fails again and again and again to stop the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, residents on the coast from Texas to Florida are beginning to realize the magnitude of the disaster which is now the greatest environmental disaster in the history of the United States.  Already, 25% of American waters in the Gulf of Mexico are too poisonous to fish.  These fisheries may stay too poisonous to fish for years to come.  Hundreds of thousands of people watch helplessly as their livelihoods and way of life is being destroyed.  Most the people who depend on the fisheries for their family income will be ruined and will never recover from this disaster.

BP has proven that it cannot close the head of the oil well and that the only sure solution will be the relief well that is being drilled but won’t be ready until August. 

Calls for the Obama Administration to push BP aside and to take over the capping effort are nonsensical.  No administration knows more about drilling for oil one mile deep in the ocean than the oil companies that do this kind of work.  Why doesn’t Washington push BP aside?  To replace BP with what?

Something the media seems to be ignoring for the moment is, will the oil spill hit the East Coast?  Scientist have warned that the oil seems to have entered the current loop which will take the oil around the tip of Florida where the Gulf Stream will pick the oil up and spread the crude from the shores of Florida to the shores of Pennsylvania.

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Hello, my brother and sister bloggers and writers.  It’s the Old Soldier here with another edition of the Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette.  The Gazette is looking for subscribers, submissions and readers.  The Gazette has a great ebook for sale.  You’ll find all these tabs at the top of the page.  And don’t forget the contest.  Tell all your friends about The Gazette.  They’ll appreciate it.

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Does Your Story Move?

Movement in a short story is absolutely necessary.  If there is no movement you don’t have a story.  Instead, you have a sketch. 

The shorter your story is the less movement you need to make it a story.  Also, the less movement there is in a story the more believable the story will be. 

What do I mean by movement?  Movement is the amount of narrative distance your short story has to travel to reach its resolution.  So, if you’re writing a 200-word short short the story had better begin just before the resolution.  If you’re writing a 2,000-word story you can begin further away from the resolution.

When a writer creates a story, there must be just the right amount of movement to make the story seem true.

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The Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette is always open to fiction submissions.

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When I Was A Young Man (A Flash Fiction Story)

I had written my quota of pages for that day. I left my apartment and a few minutes later I was walking around the big bend in the avenue. The Cathedral of Learning of the University of Pittsburgh stood tall and gray against the bright sky. There were lots of other young people wearing shorts, holding hands and eating ice cream cones. Someone called my name.

It was Lisa Graham. She was a friend of Sandy’s. Lisa’s dark hair was cut close to her skull in back and at the sides. It was full and curly on top and swept forward down over her right eye. She wore a white, sleeveless T-shirt with RELAX in red on the front, black lace gloves with no fingers, and black cloth stretch pants ending just below her knees. Some sort of black boxing shoes were on her feet. Her socks were bright red.

“What’s amusing?” she said.

“The way you dress. I like it. Come down to the place with me.”

I bought a newspaper along the way. I liked Lisa and her punk friends. I didn’t like the way there always seemed to be something strange about her eyes. I didn’t think she needed glasses. We sat at a table next to the big window on the Bouquet Street side. Lisa seemed younger than Sandy though they were the same age. We each had a mug of beer.

“Sandy told me you work for a supermarket chain,” she said.

“Five years.”

“I can’t imagine working anywhere five years.”

“It’s only three nights a week and four hours Sunday mornings. I saved my money while I was in the army.”

“I’m just floating through school. I don’t know what I want to do. I might be dead next year.”

“Hope not.”

“I’ll stay in school as long as my parents pay for it.”

I took a drink of my beer and looked out the window.

“Do you party?” she said.

“I like to have a good time.”

“No. I mean do you party?”

“Orgies?”

She laughed, sipped some of her beer and looked at me. She said, “Is beer all you do?”

“If I’m smart.”

“I have friends who can get you anything you want.”

“Oh?”

“Did you do anything in ‘Nam?”

“My unit was clean.”

She shrugged and finished her beer and left a little while later. It was a lovely day. I had done a good amount of writing that morning and now the sunny day made me happy. I opened the newspaper. A man confessed to slaughtering his wife and children. A chemical spill had forced an evacuation. A woman police officer emptied her revolver into her sleeping live-in boyfriend. A rapist claimed his fifth local victim. A family of seven was found killed execution style. Americans were reported still being held prisoners in Vietnam. I got up and threw the paper away.

The place got crowded. When Henry came in he didn’t see me. He started to walk back out. I called to him and he came over and sat at my table.

“What’s up, Henry?”

“Everything’s turning to shit. I need some bucks.”

“You had three gigs last week.”

“They didn’t show.”

“The band?”

“I’m sick of bands. No body wants to practise. They just want to jam. The bass player can’t get along with the drummer. The manager is screwing the chick keyboardist. The guitarist wants to sing more lead.”

“Will a twenty help?” I gave him the money.

“I had some people lined up to see us. The band said they were tired of playing the same place every week. It was a paying gig. So what if it is the same place. It was packed every Saturday night. You’ve seen it. We were bringing in an extra two thousand dollars every Saturday night. Manny loved us. There was never any trouble. All the frat parties lined up for the fall. They were going to give us a shot here on Wednesday nights. And the band doesn’t show up.”

He was a good singer and a great performer. I hated to hear the band was no more. Sandy walked in. A shoulder bag with a long strap was slung from her left shoulder. Her light brown, short hair was windblown and she was wearing sunglasses and a long, white sleeveless sundress. Her face, neck and arms were lightly tanned. She looked fresh and very young. She saw me and made her way up to the table. Henry looked up. She took off her sunglasses and smiled down at us. Henry stood up.

“Henry, this is Sandy Meyers. Sandy, Henry Porter.”

She reached to shake his hand. He held her hand, bowed slightly and kissed the back of her hand. She made a little curtsy. He gave her his chair and pulled another one over.

“Beer?” he said to Sandy.

“Thank you.”

“Henry, let me.”

“You get the next round.”

He made his way to the bar. Sandy leaned against me and kissed me in the mouth.

“Miss me?” she said.

“Always.”

She rubbed her nose against mine. She took a brush from her shoulder bag and ran it several times through her hair. She took out a compact, looked at her hair and face and then snapped the compact shut and put it and the brush back in the shoulder bag. She pressed a leg against mine. She wormed her hand into mine and we held hands under the table. Henry came back. She let go of my hand and we kept our hands on top of the table.

I said, “Here’s to the best damn lead singer in Pittsburgh.”

“Are you a singer?”

“When I’m up there.”

“I play a little piano,” Sandy said.

“Really?”

“Chop sticks.”

“I’ll kill myself!” he said. “I swear it!”

“You don’t like chop sticks?”

“He just lost his band.”

“An easy five hundred a night,” he said. “All the suds we could drink. All kinds of frat parties lined up. They don’t show.”

She said, “I had a friend who was in an all girls band. Roadsickness. Ever hear of them?”

“You mean Carsickness,” he said.

“No. Roadsickness.”

“They play Pittsburgh?”

“Mainly house parties.”

“What happened?” he asked.

“Oh, somebody slept with somebody’s boyfriend.”

“Exactly,” he said. “It’s not music. It’s comedy.”

After the third round Henry left. Sandy and I sat and looked at each other. I said, “How was your week?”

“I found out I maxed two exams,” she said.

“Get out!”

“I’m going to get another four hours in work-study, too.”

“Wonderful.”

“I had lewd thoughts about you.”

She looked around, leaned closer to me and pulled up her long white dress. Her legs were hairless and smooth. She wasn’t wearing a slip. I felt my groin tighten up. On the inside of her right thigh near the crotch of her white panties was a fading purplish mark the size of a half-dollar. She threw her dress drown.

“Did I do that?”

“I call it your vampire kiss,” she said.

“I guess I got carried away.”

“You always get carried away. That’s what I like about making love to you.”

We were holding both of each other’s hands on the table top.

“How’s that?” I said.

“You don’t hide anything,” she said. “You don’t keep anything back. I think it’s the only time you totally let go. You’re very oral.”

“Must mean arrested development or something. You bring out the beast in me.”

“You were beastly before I met you.”

We talked about this and that and then I said, “How’s your friend Lisa?”

“Oh,” she said. “All right.”

“She was in here earlier.”

“Was she?”

“What does she do?”

“She’s a student.”

“What does she do for money?”

“Her parents have money.”

“Enough for her to buy drugs?”

She let go of my hands. “If her parents knew…”

“She deals, doesn’t she?”

“What she doesn’t use.”

“What’s she in to?”

She sat in silence and would not look at me. The silence stretched between us. I took her hands in mine. She looked me full in the face. Any time she did that I always felt her basic sincerity. It was the sort of vulnerability and sincerity most of us lose when we stop being very young children. It made me feel she was sitting beside me naked and unaware she was naked.

“You don’t use anything,” I said. “Do you?”

“I get high on us.”

It was that day, sitting at that table, that I realized I loved Sandy Meyers.

The End

Short Story Ideas That Work

Blogging: Business or Pleasure

Blogging: What’s Your Blogging Persona?

Five Reasons Why Flash Fiction Is So Popular

Readers love well written flash fiction.  Writers love writing a good piece of flash fiction.  Editors love publishing flash fiction.  Why do all these people love flash fiction?…

It’s the Old Soldier with another edition of the Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette.  It may not officially be summer in Pittsburgh but it sure feels like summer.  It’s another hot, sunny Sunday afternoon.  I’ve just come from a nice walk to the Carnegie Public Library to exchange some film tapes and I took the long way through Schenley Park back to my apartment.  Now for a little blogging.

Why is flash fiction so popular?  How about these five reasons:

It takes up less space leaving editors more room for ads.

It requires a smaller investment of time to write.

It requires a smaller investment of time to read.

The payoff comes sooner.

It packs in more fun time and less downtime.

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Free Subscription

Have every issue of The Gazette delivered to your inbox.  The subscription tab is at the top of the page.

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The Flash Fiction Lifestyle (A Short Short Story)

Checked the page views of my blog.  Walked to “Little Italy” in Bloomfield in Pittsburgh and bought a newspaper and had two beers at Del’s while watching the news on one of the HD TVs.  More murder and more war.  Bought supplies at the supermarket and walked back to the apartment.  Tried to work on a flash fiction idea, writing in my three-ring notebook at my writing desk.

This woman comes home from work and finds her husband passed out drunk on the living room floor.  She kicks off her shoes and sits on the sofa and looks out the picture window at the lawn that needs mowing and she smokes a cigarette.

The husband comes to.

“Jake,” she says.  “I’m getting a divorce.”

“Leave me alone,” he says and goes back to sleep.

Thought for a moment.  Then ripped the page out of the three-ring notebook and threw the page in the trash can beside my writing desk.

The End

This Man and This Woman in Love (A Short Story)

The Death of Karaoke  (A Short Story)

Woman, Wife and Lover (A Short Story)

New Flash Fiction by Nathelle June A. Lumabad

It’s around 1:00 pm on a beautiful, sunny Saturday in Pittsburgh.  One of the pleasures of this blog is finding new flash fiction writing talent.  Yes, the Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette has a flash fiction contest.  The contest submission tab is at the top of the page.

Also, if your passion is writing or blogging or both, take out a free subscription to The Gazette and every issue will be delivered to your inbox.  Writing and blogging can be a lonely business.  Let The Gazette be your writing and blogging home for useful writing and blogging tips and some of the best flash fiction entertainment on the internet.  Be sure to tell your friends about The Gazette.  They’ll appreciate it.

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Breakfast

The alarm gives out a continuous, annoying ring – like that of a set of church bells come mass time. She squirms in her bed, reaches out her arm, stretches it across and over his body curled up like that of a little boy. He lets out a soft moan and straightens his body, not letting go of the pillow his arms are wrapped around. She manages to hit the stop button on the alarm clock, almost knocking off their framed wedding photo.

Six a.m. She strokes his back. “Honey, it’s six.” He grunts and moans and goes back to sleeping soundly. She waits for a few moments, and slowly climbs out of bed.

She walks quietly to the kitchen with light footsteps. She wouldn’t want to wake him up. He doesn’t like it when he’s woken up too early – the time of which changes every day. A few steps later, she’s opening the fridge, checking what she can prepare for him today. She vaguely remembers him telling her of an early business meeting he has for the day. Still, meeting or none, she takes two eggs off the rack and a pack of sweetened ham. He needs to have his breakfast.

Frying takes a few good minutes, it shouldn’t take longer. He doesn’t like waiting for his food to be cooked. It has to be ready when he’s up. He doesn’t like waiting.

She listens to the little sizzling sounds on the pan as she sets the table. Two plates, two pairs of knives and forks and two tall glasses. He was never the coffee type, so he’d have a tall glass of orange juice instead. She shouldn’t forget. He gets upset when she does.

Just as she was transferring the newly cooked slices of ham on a ceramic plate, heavy footsteps arrive. “Honey! Time for breakfast!” He sluggishly gets to the table, putting down his laptop. She can’t see the screen, but he’s typing away. Probably an overdue email, she thinks to herself.

“I have a breakfast meeting today. Didn’t I tell you yesterday?” She can’t quite remember when he told her – when he got home? At dinner? Just before she turned out the lights? Or how he said it – angry? A matter-of-factly?

“Oh.” That was all she could say.

Then the phone rang. She walks quickly to the phone.

“Hello?”

 
“Hi, Anne.” 

“Who is this?”

 
“Has your husband left?” 

“No, we’re not on the 53rd.”

He has a puzzling look on his face. Credit card, she mouthed, hand on the receiver.

“I miss you. I’ll come by when he’s gone.”

“Yes, that’s the street that you’re looking for.”

She twirls the telephone cord playfully. He’s typing heavily.

“I can’t wait to be with you.”

“Neither can I. I don’t understand why you have our number in your list.”

“Alright then. I love you.”

“Thank you for deleting it. You take care, too. I hope you find what you’re looking for.”

Then she hung up.

“Are they offering a new card?” He peers from the laptop screen and takes a sip.

 
“Yes, some new company. They were calling for another person in the street next to ours.”
 
He looks back to the laptop screen and types faster and harder.

She takes her fork and plays with the now cold slices of ham.

The End

  
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Nathelle June A. Lumabad is an almost 21-year old Comparative Literature major from the Philippines. She is currently employed as a copyeditor in one of the country’s business districts. She enjoys playing with ideas in her head and jotting them down on random sheets of paper before they suddenly disappear.
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Do You Read Like A Writer?

When I read Hemingway, Raymond Carver, F. Scott Fitzgerald or John O’Hara I read to learn.  Or I should say, first I read for entertainment and then I re-read to learn.  I read the work of these authors over and over again.  I’ve read many other writers, too; but I come back to the work of these writers because their work is the standard that I measure my own writing against.

You no doubt have your own favorite writers.  Use them to measure your work against.  Writing better means reading better, reading to learn.

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What’s Your Philosophy Of Writing?

Do you really want your writing to be unique?  If you do, what is your philosophy of writing?  If you don’t have one, let me suggest that you figure out a personal philosophy of writing.  If you cannot state in a few sentences your philosophy of writing you probably are not projecting a consistent literary style.  And if you don’t have a consistent literary style, your writing will not seem unique to a reading audience.

I write flash fiction the way I do because I try to adhere to a conscious literary philosophy.

Compressionism is the use of words to paint a picture that tells a story.  

What is your philosophy of writing?

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Once again, let me encourage you to use your life as a source of inspiration for your flash fiction, micro fiction, mini fiction, postcard fiction, very short stories, short shorts and hint fiction.

Of course you can make things up but if you use your imagination your personal life is a wealth of raw material to form into short stories by your imaginative fire.  Find the many small and large significant events in your life.  Then just let flash fiction give these events form. 

A flash fiction story captures a significant moment in time.  A flash fiction story is a significant event with closure.  Closure can point to a change in direction, a summation or a realization.  The basic form of all short stories is the setup, the buildup and the resolution.

Here are a few links that may help you out.

Short Story Ideas That Work

Creative Writing and The Short Short Story

Ideas for Creative Writing

What’s Your Fiction Writing Style?

What’s Love Got To Do With It?

If we’re talking about blogging and writing, love has a great deal to do with it.  I’m not talking about the sort of love that a man has for a woman or a parent has for a child.  I’m talking about the sort of love a writer has for written language.  I’m talking about the sort of commitment that comes from love for the written language.  I’m talking about passion.  That’s what love has to do with it.

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Looking For A Pair Of Blue jeans

Well, the Old Soldier gets his social security check in a couple of days.  Besides paying things like the rent and the phone and internet bill, high on the agenda is a new pair of blue jeans.

I’ve got suit pants that I don’t wear any longer since I retired but only two pairs of blue jeans that are worn out.  It’s time for a new pair.  I have a uniform: blue jeans and several light-weight long sleeve black jerseys with a small Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh logo over the heart.  This is my blogger, writer’s uniform along with a University of Pittsburgh baseball cap for outside.

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If you are a blogger or a writer of flash fiction, micro fiction, sudden fiction, hint fiction, mini fiction, tweet fiction, postcard fiction or very short stories, I want to direct your attention to the links in the sidebar on the right.

I’m sure you will find something of interest.

Short Story Ideas That Work

The One Thing a Writer Must Know About Writing Flash Fiction

Writing Flash Fiction Tweets

This Is Your Life

Are you a student?  Are you a manager?  Are you a cab driver?  Are you a nurse?  Are you a homemaker?  Are you a husband or a wife or a boyfriend or a girlfriend?  Are you divorced?  Are you young, middle age or a senior citizen?  Are you retired like me?

Excellent.  Your life will make for great flash fiction.  Try writing flash fiction.  The Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette is here to help you do just that.  Use the subscription tab at the top of the page to take out a free subscription and have every issue of The Gazette delivered to your inbox.

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News: BP Oil Spill Keeps Getting Worse

The coast line from Texas to Louisiana is slowly feeling the impact of the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.  Media outlets are reporting that scientists are warning that oil plumes, some ten miles long, beneath the surface of the water have entered the loop stream and are headed around the tip of Florida for the East Coast of the United States.

Although BP has inserted a pipe in the head of the oil well that is one mile below the surface of the ocean, at least 200,000 gallons of oil is still spilling into the ocean every day.  Scientists are expressing fears that the wetlands of Louisiana may not recover from the devastation of the oil spill for generations to come.

The only sure solution for stopping the oil spill is the drilling of relief wells; but these relief wells will not come online for at least another month.  In the meantime the destruction goes on as it spreads over an ever-increasing area of coast lines and ocean.

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Building A Short Story

The familiar classic form of a short story is pretty much set in stone.  There is the setup, the buildup and the payoff.  This is the same form for flash fiction, sudden fiction, short short stories and very short stories.

Or a writer can think of a story as a building.  Here are some of the building blocks.

There must be a protagonist.  I like to rummage around in my own life and come up with a projection of myself to play this part.

For conflict I pick a situation I have first hand knowledge of.  That way I know what I’m writing about.

Locale is either Vietnam or Pittsburgh.  Usually it’s Pittsburgh since I was in Vietnam for only a year a long time ago and Pittsburgh has been my home since I was born.

This is how you can build a story one brick at a time.

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In The Shadow Of The Cathedral Of Learning

I was back from Vietnam and discharged from the army. I was young and in college. A light snow was falling. It was night and I could see that farther down the avenue the commercial district was all lit up. I was glad I had decided to stay in Pittsburgh to go to school. I wasn’t so happy about joining the fraternity I had joined.

Well this time I wasn’t going to take any more guff from Tom. It didn’t matter that he had been drunk earlier. It didn’t matter that he was my fraternity brother. When he was sober he was too big to mess with, but he was probably still drunk and getting drunker and I could take him. I was well into the commercial district when someone spoke to me. The person was past me and I stopped and turned to see who it was and it was Joyce Lynn Summerton.

She said, “And where are you on your way to in such a huff?”

“To kick some butt!” I didn’t like the anger in my voice. I didn’t like that Joyce could hear the anger, too.

Joyce Lynn Summerton was in my Monday, Wednesday and Friday ten o’clock. I looked at her hair, eyes and mouth. Her complexion had a slight glow from the chill in the air. There was something in her shoulder bag. I shifted my books and notebook to my other hand.

More calmly I said, “You don’t make it to any of our parties anymore.”

“Not like I use to,” she said. “Some of the fraternity brothers get too rowdy for me.”

“Me too.”

We stood in silence for a moment. Her gloved right hand came up and squeezed her coat together at her throat even though her muffler must have kept out the chilly air. She smiled at me and then looked away.

“I’m headed back to the dorms to sit in front of the boob tube,” she said. “On a Friday night. Do you believe it? I just made a run for some popcorn to pop.”

I nodded and smiled.

“Well,” she said, “have to slide.”

“Joyce?”

She turned back to me.

I said, “Do you think I could come up and watch some TV with you?”

“In my room?”

“I’ll go whenever you want me to.”

“Frank, I don’t know.”

“Are you seeing someone?”

“A boyfriend?” She laughed. “No, I don’t have a boyfriend.”

There was a display window near us. Several mannequins in swim suits were posing on a sunny beach. Joyce was looking at the display window. She put her gloved hands in the pockets of her coat and then looked at me and said, “I’ll have to sign you in.”

We started walking for the dorms.

“So,” she said, “how’ve you been?”

“Great.”

The End

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Support The Gazette by downloading your copy of Compressionism: The Pittsburgh Stories. 

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Short Story Ideas That Work

Flash Fiction Means Never Saying You’re Sorry

Writing Great Dialogue Made Easy

I have a short story from the archives for you today, but before we get to it there are a couple of announcements to be made.

First, if you have not taken out a free subscription to the Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette let me encourage you to do so.  The subscription tab is at the top of the page.  With a free subscription, every issue of The Gazette will be delivered to your inbox.

Secondly, support The Gazette by going to the sidebar on the right and clicking on the first link to download the ebook Compressionism: The Pittsburgh Stories.  The ebook is the best fiction this publication has to offer.  The price is only $6.00 and your support will be greatly appreciate.  The ebook will be worth it.

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The following flash fiction story was written several years ago.  Usually, my characters are from the working class because I’m from the working class; but this time I wanted to use my imagination more to see if I could write about a character who is not working class.

Part of the fun of writing is stretching the imagination.  So, in this flash fiction story that is exactly what I did.  Notice the use of dialogue.  Action is the writer’s strongest tool for creating character and dialogue is action.

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Meeting Rachel’s Family

“Uncle Bobby,” Rachel said, “this is Jeff Hollister.”

It was a hot, sunny Saturday afternoon in Pittsburgh and the vast back lawn was full of people. Uncle Bobby shook my hand and then put a protective arm over Rachel’s shoulders. Uncle Bobby had a big belly. The three of us talked for a while and then Uncle Bobby said to me, “So, Rachel tells me you’re looking for a new apartment.”

I glanced at Rachel and said, “I think I’m going to need more room.”

“Jeff, there’s Mother.”

As we walked over to meet Mrs. Bloomberg I looked around at all the people. One very pregnant woman sat in a lawn chair under the shade of a tree. She was fanning herself with an oriental style fan. A tall, skinny redheaded man in a multi-colored shirt and white shorts bent over her with a paper plate full of food. She smiled up at him and took the plate of food.

“Well,” Mrs Bloomberg said to Rachel, “I finally get to meet your new gentleman friend.”

“Mother, this is Jeff Hollister.”

“Yes,” Mrs Bloomberg said, looking me over. I wore white deck shoes with no socks, white painter’s overalls with the cuffs rolled up and an old gray short sleeve jersey. A rubber band held my dark brown hair back in a long pony tail. “Rachel didn’t tell me you owned a yacht, Mr. Hollister.”

“I wish.”

“Rachel, dear, please find your father and tell him he simply must come out and help me with this mob. I can’t do it all alone and I don’t want him and his cronies fouling up the house with those awful smelling cigars. They can watch baseball any time.” Rachel gave me a look and then left. Mrs. Bloomberg turned to me and said, “Who wants to watch a last place team anyway?” She smiled.

Mrs. Bloomberg was tall and slim. She wore a sleeveless, shimmering blue long dress. She was the only woman wearing a long dress. She had clear, dark brown eyes. Her skin was unblemished and nearly unlined. She didn’t appear to be sweating. Taking my left arm, she began to walk me around the vast, well-kept lawn.

“Tell me a little about yourself, Mr. Hollister.”

Teenagers splashed about in the in-ground swimming pool. The smell of grilling meat floated in the warm air. A volleyball game was going on. Many of the adults stood around laughing, talking and drinking.

“I teach composition and literature at the community college.”

“Yes.”

“I’d like to move on to a four-year institution.”

“Yes.”

“I’m thirty-four. I hope some day to run a little book shop of my own.”

“Children?”

“No children.”

Several people had approached to talk to her, but by some signal I could not detect she had let them know she was not to be disturbed.

She said, “Rachel is my youngest. I assume she has informed you of the unhappiness caused by her previous marriage, a most unsuitable match.”

I felt guilty…

The next day, Sunday, Rachel and I went to visit friends. I drove. The sky was bright blue and the air was warm.

“It’s beautiful out this way,” Rachel said.

Pennsylvania farm land rolled by on both sides of the highway. There were cows munching and horses grazing and acres and acres of corn. Anthony and Christine Johnson lived just outside of Harrisburg. Tony was my best friend. I parked in his driveway.

“Hello hello hello,” Tony called to us as he came down his modest front lawn. In the driveway he and I bear hugged each other. And then he turned to Rachel and said, “Rachel, welcome back.” They hugged and kissed each other on the cheek. Tony said, “Christine and little Brandon are out back. Rachel, you look great, girl. Jeff must be good for you.”

“We’ll see how good he is.”

Later, Tony and I went down into the game room. We sat at the short bar sipping bottled beer. An Alicia Keys CD played softly in the background. I looked around. He and Christine had done a lot of remodeling.

Tony said, “I’m getting this vibe. Is everything okay between you and Rachel?”

I took a long pull on my beer. I swore him to secrecy. And then I told him.

“Rachel’s pregnant.”

The End

Short Story Ideas That Work

Blogging: Don’t Quit Your Day Job

Writing Great Dialogue Made Easy

What Writers Can Learn From The Movies

Show don’t tell.  Show don’t tell.  Show don’t tell.  When I was a teaching assistant at the University of Pittsburgh from 2004 to 2006 I was constantly telling my writing students to “show don’t tell”.  What does “show don’t tell” mean? 

It means presenting a short story in a way so that the reader sees in his or her mind what is going on in the story instead of the writer “explaining” what is going on.

Seeing something is far more immediate than being told about something.  But just how does a writer write in such a way that the reader can see the story in his or her mind?

The only way for a writer to make a story more visual is to describe actions and things.  A reader can see an action.  A reader can see a thing.  But the writer must not write about any action or thing.  The writer must write about those actions and those things that are invested with meaning.

In this way, the flash fiction, short short, very short story and micro fiction writer must spend less time writing about thoughts and emotions and more time writing about meaningful actions and things.

This is why a “show don’t tell” story will always be tighter than a story that explains.

The ebook that is available here at the Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette is a perfect example of “show don’t tell” fiction.  Just go to the sidebar on the right and click on the link to download your copy of Compressionism: The Pittsburgh Stories.

That Flash Fiction State Of Mind

A flash fiction writer never knows when an idea for a short story will strike.  That means that we writers of the very short story must always be open to inspiration.

Good morning, my brother and sister bloggers and writers.  It’s nearly noon here in Pittsburgh on an overcast Friday.  The Old Soldier is ready to begin another day of blogging.  Of course, I’m thinking about the writing of flash fiction.

It’s been awhile since I wrote a new flash fiction story for the Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette.  Like you, I’ve been distracted by life.  But that’s okay.  Life is where flash fiction stories come from.

So, if you have not had enough time for writing, don’t worry about it.  You’ll have a good idea for a story soon enough.

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The Secrets of Creative Writing

A Flash Fiction Story For Bloggers

I have a flash fiction story for you about a blogger.  I’m a blogger and blogging is always on my mind.  I blog just about every day.  I like it.  Since I’m retired, blogging is now my profession.  I take blogging very seriously. 

I’m also a flash fiction writer.  Writing flash fiction and blogging go together nicely.  Not too long ago I wrote a short story about a blogger.  This story is not autobiographical.  I had to use my imagination.  Writing flash fiction is definitely about using your imagination. 

So, in my imagination I made myself younger and gave myself a sexy girlfriend and I came up with the flash fiction story Tainted Love 

Now it’s time for my walk.  It’s a beautiful Thursday afternoon in Pittsburgh.  Don’t forget to join the email subscription list.  It’s at the top of the page.

Why Do Writers Write Flash Fiction?

Every creative writer does not want to write flash fiction.  Flash fiction is for the writer who can think big but write small.  Flash fiction is for the writer who can write short on long subjects.  Flash fiction is for the writer who wants to take a snap shot of life, a snap shot that implies what came before and what will come afterwards.

The best flash fiction allows the reader to take a short journey with a protagonist, a journey that will in some way be important to someone.

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Death, Sexuality and the Flash Fiction Writer

Flash Fiction is Like a Slice of Pizza

Revision and the Flash Fiction Writer

Subscribe To The Gazette Today

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Hello, my brother and sister bloggers and writers.  This is the Old Soldier reporting from the heart of the nitty, gritty city.  If you are a blogger or a writer or a reader who cares about good writing this blog is for you.

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Explore The Landscape Of Your Mind

You have a secret self, don’t you?  I know I do.  I know you do.  No one really knows who you are.  Well, one of the comforting things about writing flash fiction, very short stories, micro fiction, hint fiction, mini fiction, postcard fiction and snap fiction is that you can put little pieces of who you really are into your creative writing.  That way you can share who you really are with the entire world but nobody gets hurt.

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Is Your Blog Sticky?

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Never Run Out Of Material Again

You know what to write about.  You’ve always known what to write about.  You just want to hear me say it.  But before I do say it I want to say good morning.  It’s the Old Soldier here with another lively edition of The Gazette.  Let’s see.  It’s around 11:30 am here in Pittsburgh on an overcast, chilly day.  It’s still a good day for blogging and writing.  I’ve got a flash fiction story from the archives in this blog posting for you and of course some tips on writing the flash fiction story.

But before we get to the tips and the story take a minute to subscribe to The Gazette.  It will only take a moment and the subscription is free.  And every morning a new edition of The Gazette will be delivered to your inbox.  You can read The Gazette with your morning coffee or tea or hot chocolate.  The subscription tab is at the top of the page.

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Are you a writer?  Are you having trouble coming up with things to write about?  Don’t sweat what to write about; worry about grounding yourself in the form of the short story which is the same form that the flash fiction story has: the setup, the buildup and the payoff (resolution).

The story, “Crazy Mocha,” that I posted on 12/01/08 on this blog is 100% true, just like it happened to me.  I wrote it sitting in Crazy Mocha in Bloomfield.  I was just writing observations about the place, not thinking about what I was going to do with the observations.  When I got back to my apartment and began to type my observations into my blog, it was only just before I hit the publish button (after reading the article over and over and over and over and over and over and over again to get it just right) that I realized it had the classic flash fiction story form: setup, buildup and payoff.

So, ground yourself in the form of the flash fiction story; and don’t worry about your subject matter because your subject matter is “you”.

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Crazy Mocha

It’s 2:45 pm and I’m in the Crazy Mocha in Bloomfield.  I tell the young woman behind the counter that this is my first time here and could she suggest something.

“I’ve sold a lot of Caramel Lattes today.”

“Okay, I’ll have that.”

I’m really not a coffee drinker but I’m trying something new.  While she makes my latte I scan the board against the wall over her head that list what the place serves and the prices.  Then I notice an advertisement for hot chocolate on the wall that I walked past as I entered but paid no attention to.  I should have gotten that, I say to myself. 

I take my Caramel Latte to one of the small tables in the back that lines each wall.  I take off my windbreaker but leave on my hoodie with the hood down, long shoreman’s cloth cap still on my head.  I put my package of bleach and mouth wash on the chair across from me at the little table, my windbreaker draped over the back of the chair. 

There are three customers in the back with me and two customers at different tables up front next to the big window that looks out on Liberty Avenue, the sky overcast.  All five of the other customers are working at their laptops, the three in back with me face toward the big window up front like I do but the two that sit next to the window face away.  I’m the only person with a pencil and pad.  I’m probably the oldest person in the place.  Several customers stand ordering at the counter.  Soft alternative music comes from the PA system.  The lights are medium low; but bright enough so that I don’t need to put on my glasses to write.  The place is relaxing.  I drink my latte and jot in my notepad.  Finally, I check my bus schedule.  Finish my latte.  Bundle back up, get my package, take my cup and saucer up front, say goodbye to the young woman and leave. 

I’ll definitely go back.  It’s a good place to write.  Next time I’ll order the hot chocolate.

The End

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Great Characterization and the Very Short Story

The Joy And Pain Of Flash Fiction

Let’s say you are a creative writer and something happens to you that you think will make an excellent flash fiction story.  Writing a flash fiction story means you have to fit whatever happened to you into 1,000 words or less. 

The joy comes after the story is finished and you know it’s good.  The pain comes from trying to fit what happened to you into 1,000 words.

There’s only one solution.  You must leave things out.  But leaving things out does not mean you forget about them.  For a flash fiction story to succeed, a flash fiction writer must make sure that the things in the story will imply the things that are not in the story.

This is the joy and pain of flash fiction.

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Short Story Ideas That Work

Blogging: Life Against Death

Writing Short Stories That Come Alive

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