Julie Duffy > Julie's Quotes

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  • #1
    Irving Howe
    “Let's press ahead a little further by sketching out a few variations among short shorts:

    ONE THRUST OF INCIDENT. (Examples: Paz,
    Mishima, Shalamov, Babel, W. C. Williams.) In these short shorts the time span is extremely brief, a few hours, maybe even a few minutes: Life is grasped in symbolic compression. One might say that these short shorts constitute epiphanies (climactic moments of high grace or realization) that have been tom out of their contexts. You have to supply the contexts yourself, since if the contexts were there, they'd no longer be short shorts.

    LIFE ROLLED UP. (Examples: Tolstoy's 'Alyosha the Pot,' Verga's 'The Wolf,' D. H. Lawrence's 'A Sick Collier.') In these you get the illusion of sustained narrative, since they deal with lives over an extended period of time; but actually these lives are so compressed into typicality and paradigm, the result seems very much like a single incident. Verga's 'Wolf' cannot but repeat her passions, Tolstoy's Alyosha his passivity. Themes of obsession work especially well in this kind of short short.

    SNAP-SHOT OR SINGLE FRAME. (Examples: Garda Marquez, Boll, Katherine Anne Porter.) In these we have no depicted event or incident, only an interior monologue or flow of memory. A voice speaks, as it were, into the air. A mind is revealed in cross-section - and the cut is rapid. One would guess that this is the hardest kind of short short to write: There are many pitfalls such as tiresome repetition, being locked into a single voice, etc.

    LIKE A FABLE. (Examples: Kafka, Keller, von Kleist, Tolstoy's 'Three Hermits.') Through its very concision, this kind of short short moves past realism. We are prodded into the fabulous, the strange, the spooky. To write this kind of fable-like short short, the writer needs a supreme self-confidence: The net of illusion can be cast only once. When we read such fable-like miniatures, we are prompted to speculate about significance, teased into shadowy parallels or semi allegories. There are also, however, some fables so beautifully complete (for instance Kafka's 'First Sorrow') that we find ourselves entirely content with the portrayed surface and may even take a certain pleasure in refusing interpretation.

    ("Introduction")”
    Irving Howe, Short Shorts

  • #2
    James Scott Bell
    “If you up your skill and take more chances, your odds of success increase.”
    James Scott Bell, How to Make a Living As a Writer

  • #3
    James Scott Bell
    “Someone with less talent who works hard often outperforms the gifted.”
    James Scott Bell, How to Make a Living As a Writer

  • #4
    Seth Godin
    “the proven truth about creativity: it’s the result of desire—the desire to find a new truth, solve an old problem, or serve someone else.”
    Seth Godin, The Practice: Shipping Creative Work

  • #5
    Seth Godin
    “It’s insulting to call a professional talented. She’s skilled, first and foremost. Many people have talent, but only a few care enough to show up fully, to earn their skill. Skill is rarer than talent. Skill is earned. Skill is available to anyone who cares enough.”
    Seth Godin, The Practice: Shipping Creative Work

  • #6
    Curtis Sittenfeld
    “A sense of humor is always a bonus. As with dinner companions, so it is with short stories.”
    Curtis Sittenfeld, The Best American Short Stories 2020

  • #7
    Curtis Sittenfeld
    “A dystopian story must not merely be dystopian; it must also be a story. Premise can only get you so far.”
    Curtis Sittenfeld, The Best American Short Stories 2020

  • #8
    Neil Gaiman
    “We who make stories know that we tell lies for a living. But they are good lies that say true things, and we owe it to our readers to build them as best we can. Because somewhere out there is someone who needs that story. Someone who will grow up with a different landscape, who without that story will be a different person. And who with that story may have hope, or wisdom, or kindness, or comfort. And that is why we write.”
    Neil Gaiman, The Graveyard Book



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