By Lindsey P. Brackett
Flash fiction is not like writing a novel. Good thing, since you
only have 1000 words in which to tell the story.
With flash fiction, the tactics of subplots, POV shifts, and
world building usually cannot happen effectively. When I teach flash fiction
classes, I encourage writers to commit to one point of view, one internal
and/or external conflict, and minimal secondary characters. Instead of the
whole photo album, drop your readers into a moment—a snapshot.
But unlike still photos, flash fiction is not stagnant. The
story must move and something must happen. Your protagonist must have an
obstacle to overcome and a sense of resolution at the end.
This moment can be as high stakes as diffusing a bomb to save
the love interest—or as simple as an older couple rediscovering each other
during a routine outing. When writing flash fiction—or truly any story for that
matter—start with your character and their conflict. What does this person want
or need? What is standing in their way?
Once, I wrote about an overwhelmed mother and her passive
husband. (I promise I only half-related to this character.) Because the
conflict had to be related to the assignment—ghost story, old well, horse
saddle—I set them on a crumbling farm with an old dry well. When the external
conflict arises, a child falls in the old well, the tension in their marriage
is heightened because he’s not there to help her.
I could build a whole novel from these characters, but if I did,
I would lose the great tension this story’s brevity held. The greatest conflict
is this one moment—how she (and the ghost of a horse) handled the situation.
This is not a story about a marriage’s demise or reconciliation. It is a story
about how a mother finds her strength.
When you write flash fiction, find the one conflict that will
empower, destroy, or awaken your character. Then use that one pinnacle moment
and show how they overcome.
You’ll leave your reader wondering—but satisfied—and ready for
more. Maybe they want more of that story, but hopefully, they definitely want more
of your writing.
You can read Lindsey’s award-winning ghost story, Listen When I Call, in the 2017 edition
of Southern Writers Magazine Best ShortStories.
Lindsey P. Brackett writes southern fiction infused with her rural Georgia upbringing
and Lowcountry roots. Her debut novel, Still Waters, inspired by family summers
at Edisto Beach, released in 2017. Called “a brilliant debut” with “exquisite
writing,” Still Waters received 4-stars from Romantic Times and
was named 2018 Selah Book of the Year. Connect with Lindsey and get her free
newsletter at lindseypbrackett.com
or on Instagram and Facebook: @lindseypbrackett.
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