Anne’s Reviews > A Pocket Guide to Flash Fiction > Status Update
Anne
is on page 74 of 320
Am taking a one-on-one flash course with Randall. As a writer who uses notecards as I think through plot, I needed that Quinn Dalton essay on 209. Flash reminds me of Pitman shorthand --- whereby it's not just the scribbles, the the depth of pressure applied to the pencil on the paper as well, that conveys meaning. I haven't thought of Pitman in years. It's a lot like headline and cutline writing. No redundancy.
— May 17, 2015 06:52AM
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Anne’s Previous Updates
Anne
is on page 89 of 320
This book is very informative, explanatory. I find that, as I read it and think about the novel I'm writing, I am generating ideas left and right. Flash is a problem-solver in and of itself, and it is very journalistic in its use of language.
— Jun 03, 2015 01:59PM
Anne
is on page 74 of 320
Am taking a one-on-one flash course with Randall. As a writer who uses notecards as I think through plot, I needed that Quinn Dalton essay on 209. Flash reminds me of Pitman shorthand --- whereby it's not just the scribbles, but the depth of pressure applied to the pencil on the paper as well, that conveys meaning. I haven't thought of Pitman in years. It's a lot like headline and cutline writing. No redundancy.
— May 17, 2015 06:53AM
Anne
is on page 40 of 320
Up to Ch 3 already. Will be taking a one-on-one flash course with Randall -- just cracking the first couple chapters in advance of first class. It brought back methods of the Pitman shorthand --- whereby it's not just the scribbles, the the depth of pressure applied to the pencil on the paper as well, that conveys meaning. I haven't thought of Pitman in years. It's also a lot like headline writing -- no conjuncti
— May 16, 2015 04:04PM
