Meg Sefton

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Meg Sefton


Born
in Fort Worth, The United States
February 25, 1968

Website

Genre

Influences
Flannery O'Connor, Kellie Wells, Gina Ochsner, John Cheever, Gabriel G ...more


Meg's undergraduate and graduate programs focused on the study of American Literature and Literature of the British Commonwealth, education for adult learners, and creative writing. She lives in central Florida where she writes short stories and flash fiction. She loves especially work that is based on folklore and fairy tales. She is currently conceptualizing a longer work for young adult speculative literature. She enjoys the richness of her local arts community and being involved in and attending readings. She loves movies, cooking, music, the visual arts, and meeting out for a bite. Being engaged in writing and literature has saved her life.


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Meg Sefton isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.

A Good Karen is Hard to Find

John Cameron, Unsplash

A flash fiction for these tumultuous times. It contains elements of humor, raucousness, racism, classism and a smooth finishing note of redemption, published today on Medium. This is a friendship link, no paywall. I hope you are well. Yours, Margaret

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Published on November 15, 2024 12:31
Average rating: 4.54 · 26 ratings · 6 reviews · 6 distinct works
Demonic Household: See Owne...

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4.52 avg rating — 21 ratings2 editions
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Get Lit, Round 1: Flash Fic...

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4.67 avg rating — 9 ratings — published 2011
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The Strange Edge Magazine I...

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4.17 avg rating — 6 ratings — published 2015 — 2 editions
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Best New Writing 2011

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4.80 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 2010 — 3 editions
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Relief: A Quarterly Christi...

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2008
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black shatter stories and f...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2012
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More books by Meg Sefton…
Quotes by Meg Sefton  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Now, years later, he had been commissioned to fashion pictures with sugar water and dyes, a holiday mural. He had risen into something he could do, he had been recognized, and those years spent enduring his father's impatience seemed far away. He would do it for number 98,761,580, his love whose hand he held, cold as it was, who had lain beside him in the tunnels, in the filth. What had haunted him was the thought of her lovely body wasting away. It had torn at his eyes, his throat. It had taken away his faith.

He painted a band of sugar on the walls of the hotel, the mural reflecting the city back to itself - the deep green park, the holiday windows, lovers under golden angels, flowers spilling out of markets in December, a resurrected skyscraper, a choir of variegated faces singing in front of a red door of a dark church, the homeless - not swept away, not forgotten - their realities on their faces, hands, hair. It was not a Rockwell. There were a few artists, subcontractors, who kept trying to abscond with the project, to make it what it wasn't for the sake of something they likened to a good make-believe before bed.

-- 'A Potter's Field”
Meg Sefton, black shatter stories and fictions

“She was so plain. Would it kill you to wear skirts more, he had said to her. Would it really hurt you? He was thinking of how he would like to see her when she was alone with him. He knew she could dress when she had to, but this was what he was saying. He was saying something about their private life. He was saying something about his needs as a man.

He imagines America’s anger at this. It would be the women, mainly. Their eager faces had watched: Amelia boarding the plane for her first transatlantic flight; Amelia waving to the crowd in the ticker tape parade; Amelia leaving luncheons and concert halls. Some had been housewives and some, girls with dreams of loops and spins and dives, of hugging the curvature of the earth through a thin sheet of aluminum.

-- After Amelia”
Meg Sefton, black shatter stories and fictions



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