The Flash Fiction Writer And The Subject Of Death

Edgar Allan Poe had a brilliant career writing about death.  He died in 1849 and we are still reading his work.  He is part of the culture.  Death is a valid subject for any serious writer even if the writer writes comedy.  And the flash fiction short story can handle any subject matter, even the subject of death.

I’ve gone back into the archives and pulled out an old story of mine to illustrate this point; but the story is also a great illustration of show don’t tell writing.  The story has very little exposition in it.  Exposition is telling.

Now I’m not saying there is no place for exposition in fiction.  Obviously there is; but the more telling you do the less immediacy your story will have for the reader.  Action is the name of the game.  By the way, dialogue is action, too.  And action is built on concrete, sense details: things the reader can see, hear, smell, taste and touch.  Of these five sense details, sight is the most important one.  You want your reader to “see” the action in your story.

Edgar Allan Poe also made a career out of exposition, of telling the reader what was going on; but unless you are a literary genius like Poe you are better off with show don’t tell.

I based the follow story on my experiences as a young soldier in Vietnam.

Oh, one final thought before we get into the story.  Because the flash fiction story is so short, the more exposition there is in your story the more it will read like an essay.  Now we don’t want that, do we?

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Sky Troopers

 

It sounded like a fast ball pitched against the port hull of the big chopper.  Scott Delaney felt his stomach flutter and the pulse beat faster in his throat.  The door gunners were searching the jungle below.  Viet Cong were known to be in the area.  Over the deafening sound of the twin rotary blades and the high-pitched whine of the twin jet engines in the stern, the sharp impact came again.

Like Scott, many of the soldiers were teenagers, their sweaty faces gaunt with sunken eyes.  The door gunners were in harnesses as they leaned far out, one to port and one to starboard, trying to see where the rounds were coming from.  Scott held his toy-like rifle, the butt against the vibrating floor plates, up between his knees and waited. Over the deafening noise the sharp impact came again.

The new kid sitting directly across from Scott screamed and lurched forward and hit the deck.  His rifle clattered and his helmet rolled away on the deck.  Scott and others had been splattered with gore.  Scott had never been splattered with gore before.  The kid was crying, pleading for his mother.  Sarge started wrapping the kid, but soon it didn’t matter.  Scott had never seen anyone die before.

The door gunners were returning fire now.  The spent shell casings spewed into space.  The sharp impact came again.  Scott sensed the big chopper losing altitude.

Burt Johnson tapped Scott on the shoulder and nodded at the porthole behind them.  In the jungle below was a clearing, the unit landing zone.  A four man landing crew waited on the ground.  That’s when Scott smelt it.

Scott looked forward.  The two pilots struggled to keep control.  Scott looked aft.  The crew chief was standing, and then he crouched down and dipped the first two fingers of the right hand into a dark liquid on the deck.  He rubbed the liquid between the thumb and first two fingers.  He smelt it.  He tasted it.  He stood up and began speaking rapidly into the mike of his head set to the pilots up front.

Scott looked out the porthole behind him.  Now he could not see the landing zone.  There were only trees everywhere.  Suddenly they were in the trees.  Scott was flung against the port hull.  Everyone shouting.  He was flung back against the starboard hull except now it was the deck.  Others fell on top of him, everyone shouting.

There was a loud, guttural WHOOOOOOOOSH!  Scott felt the great heat.  The crew chief came running wildly from the stern, his uniform ablaze.  He stumbled to his knees in flames.  Scott struggled to get up.  He grabbed someone’s leg.  He was kicked and stomped until he let go.  Above him everyone pushed and shoved while others stepped on him.  He had lost his helmet.  He had lost his rifle.  He couldn’t get up.  The smoke choked him.  Men screamed.  He knew he was going to die.

Burt Johnson got him under the arm pits and pulled him up.  Other hands lifted him up.  More hands pulled him out.

What was let of the crew chief was found in the smoldering wreckage.

The End

 
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It’s going to be another warm (80s) day in Pittsburgh.  The Old Soldier finally used the automated phone renewal service for Poe: Poetry and Tales.  Now the book is not due back at the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh until August 3oth.

Pittsburgh - Oakland: Carnegie Library of Pitt...

Pittsburgh – Oakland: Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh Main Branch (Photo credit: wallyg)

I enjoy Poe even though he uses too much exposition for my taste.  He does a lot of telling.  As a rule, I repeat, as a rule it’s better to show not tell.  But if you’re a literary genius like Edgar Allan Poe you can break the rules and get away with it.

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This Is How To Make Your Fiction Short And Deep

What do I mean by “deep”?  I mean, does your story resonate?  Do the characters act like real people?  Does the reader get the feeling that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts?  Do you allow the reader to contribute to the creation of the story by letting the reader fill in the blanks?  Is the story a “visual” experience for the reader?

Whew!  That’s a lot.

An Amateur Does Her First Porn Video

And there’s plenty more.  But there is no way that the Old Soldier can explain in a little, short blog post what it has taken him over 50 years to figure out for himself.

So, let me give you five short tips to get your creative writing juices to flow.  I said your “creative writing” juices.  Let’s keep it clean.  No, this is not a family magazine, but how do you think families are made?

Ha ha ha ha.  The Old Soldier made a funny.  All right class.  Settle down.  Settle down.  Let’s continue.

1)  Each one of your major characters should have a different agenda.

2)  Your dialogue should characterize the speaker and at the same time efficiently move the story to its resolution.

3)  Explain as little as possible which means you have to get your characters inter-acting as soon as possible.

4)  Explaining (exposition) is summation; but description and dialogue are action.  Know the difference between exposition and action.

5)  Take out a free subscription or follow the Pittsburgh Flash Fiction Gazette and I’ll tell you some more.

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Occupy Pittsburgh

Occupy Pittsburgh (Photo credit: karathepirate)

Hello hello hello, all my brother and sister bloggers, readers, writers and my Flash Fiction Fanatics.  And a special shout-out to the students of the University of Pittsburgh.

I went for a walk earlier today.  It is beautiful outside, sunny in the 40s.  I walked down to the campus and picked up The Pitt News.  I would like to quote from an article about Occupy Pittsburgh that was on the front page of this student newspaper.

Jackie Smith, a sociology professor at Pitt involved with Occupy Pittsburgh, said that while the loss of camps might negatively affect the movement, she is hopeful for the future and thinks the eviction could be beneficial in the long run.

“The camp actually required a lot of energy and focus to defend.  This kept many people from thinking about the long-term vision of building a movement that can resonate with and connect to the needs of more diverse groups in our community.”

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This is the Old Soldier reporting from Pittsburgh.

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