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What's the difference between "flash fiction" and a "short-short story"?

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By Brandi Reissenweber
Published: August 25, 2011
Brandi Reissenweber
Brandi Reissenweber
Q: What’s the difference between flash fiction and a short-short story?

A:
Both “flash fiction” and “short-short story” refer to a very short work of fiction. They are often used interchangeably. There are other labels for this kind of story, including sudden fiction, micro fiction and postcard fiction. The length of the very short story is variable. Some editors set a word limit appropriate to their needs and goals. Vestal Review looks for stories that are 500 words or less while Glimmer Train defines a very short fiction as one that doesn’t exceed 3,000 words. The most common range for a very short story tends to fall between 750 and 1,500 words.

Some might argue that a certain label does carry more specific length requirements. Postcard fiction, for instance, should fit on the back of a postcard. But even this is hazy. Does this mean the dinky little discount postcard (3.5 by 5 inches) I picked up at an infrequently visited cheese shop in rural Wisconsin or the larger ones (6 by 4.5 inches) advertisers like to use to fill my mailbox? What about big, loopy script versus scaled-down type?

So, what’s a writer to do? Get back to basics. Write the stories that matter to you with the word count they demand—no more and no less. Then, figure out where they might fit. And perhaps scour some journal submission guidelines and give yourself a challenge. What happens when you set out to write a complete story in under 300 words?
Brandi Reissenweber teaches fiction writing and reading fiction at Gotham Writers' Workshop and authored the chapter on characterization in Gotham's Writing Fiction: The Practical Guide. Her work has been published in numerous journals, including Phoebe, North Dakota Quarterly and Rattapallax. She was a James C. McCreight Fiction Fellow at the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing and has taught fiction at New York University, University of Wisconsin and University of Chicago. Currently, she is a visiting professor at Illinois Wesleyan University.

Send your questions on the craft of creative writing to writingquestions@writermag.com. All of Brandi's other Ask The Writer columns are available to registered users.
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5 stars
SONNY DINGER JR from LOUISIANA said:
Hi Brandi,
I never did think about writing a story on a postcard,Lol,
But I do know they were used for prospecting by some businesses.
So, I guess whatever works.
Thank you for listening,
Sonny
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