Reading Report for November 2023 from Jeff Baker. (A New Feature of This Blog!)

Reading Report for November 2023

from Jeff Baker.

November 23, 2023 (Thanksgiving!)

This, the first of these monthly reading reports, is being written in my Brother’s guest room, early in the morning of Thanksgiving Day, November 23, 2023. I can’t think of a better day to start off on this as reading is something we should be thankful for, especially in this era when books are under assault.

I’ve been chronicling my writing progress in monthly reports and so I decided to do this, influenced by the You Tube vlogger Michael K. Vaughn whose entertaining recountings of his reading adventures (including a near-weekly “Reading Report”) are regular and highly entertaining features of his vlog. (And I’ll post a link to the videos at the end of this long-winded prologue to my own report.)

Another reason to do this is simply to motivate myself to read more. I’ve been doing a lot more writing (I have a lot more time to do it in!) and I need to read more. I became a writer because I’m a reader. I consider my pouring over anthologies of short stories during the late ‘80s and through the ‘90s as essential training for my writing career. I’m mainly talking about reading fiction and doing it for pleasure, but since when do I follow rules?

As I haven’t been taking notes and am away from my books I’ll just list the ones I can recall. If there’s a short-story or such I read other than these I don’t remember. I haven’t done a lot of reading in the last, hell, I’ll say month-and-a-half.

So here’s what I read, fiction-wise.

“Travels With Charley”/”The Portable John Steinbeck.” I’ve just been dipping into these the last few months, mainly because I’m working on a story for an anthology call in the style of Steinbeck. I hadn’t read a lot of him and my copy of “Charley” was given to me by my Dad in Grade School. I may have read some of it then, but I don’t recall. Steinbeck has a sort of mater-of-fact prose style. Like Twain he probably blends fact and fiction in his travelogue.

“The Gay Detective” by Lou Rand. Read it to review for Queer Sci-Fi but still counts as reading for pleasure.

And now two stories by Robert A. Heinlein.

First “The Man Who Traveled in Elephants,” a story recommended by a World Fantasy Convention panel on Heinlein’s Fantasy stories, one of the panelists called it “a favorite.” It’s a sweet and sentimental story, with prose reminiscent of Ray Bradbury. There’s even a carnival! I may have seen the ending coming but it was fun getting there!

It’s in a re-titled paperback called “6 X H,” (originally “The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag”) and has a couple of his stories I hadn’t read yet including one that first appeared in Weird Tales!

Second, a novel not a story. I’d started reading Heinlein’s “The Rolling Stones” several months ago and got sidetracked (Read: Drank a lot instead of reading.) The book is one of Heinlein’s “Juveniles,” what we would call a Y.A. book today. That WFC panel called those books some of Heinlein’s best work and I agree! I’m a third of the way through and it’s a blast! Oh, and I imagine the Grandmother as being played the way Ellen Corby played Grandma Walton.

I also started (and got sidetracked again!) reading “A Canadian Ghost in London,” the final story in James K. Moran’s fine collection “Fear Itself,” the story I hadn’t read yet. (The book is fun! Get it!)

Of course, I’ve been reading “Rise,” the new QSF anthology which includes a story of mine and a lot of other wonderful stories, all of them 300 words or less!

I also read one of the legendary Edward M. Cohen’s stories in Steve Berman’s anthology “Brute.” The book described as “Stories of dark desire, masculinity and rough trade.” Other authors in this NSFW tome include Tom Cardamone, Berman himself and Tennessee Williams (!)

Of course, I never miss the weekly story by Kaje Harper which is posted on her website or Facebook page, usually around Sunday.

I also read a couple of the stories in “Orchard of the Dead,” a new collection of translated stories by the Polish writer Stefan Grabinski (1887-1934.) He is compared to Poe or Lovecraft but he is so much more than that.

On my “to-be-read” pile is “The Abyss,” another translated collection, this by the Russian writer Leonid Andreyev (1871-1919.) I’d read his story “Lazarus” in a horror anthology about thirty years ago and I found this book online one night. He’s a writer who was actually influenced by Poe.

When I started typing this I didn’t think I had read much but I read more than I thought!

I also didn’t remember I’d brought a bunch of books with me,, so I was able to reference them!

So, that’s about it for now and I’ll keep you posted!

Happy reading!

Oh, I should mention the translators of the last two books: Anthony Siscone for the Grabinski and Hugh Aplin for the Andreyev.

Here’s a link to Michael K. Vaughn’s You Tube videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rtcws4-WlMM

Here’s Kaje Harper’s blog: https://www.kajeharper.com/

And one to my Queer Sci Fi review of “The Gay Detective”: https://www.queerscifi.com/jeff-baker-boogieman-in-lavender-lou-rands-the-gay-detective/

——jeff

Posted in Books, Collection, James K. Moran, John Steinbeck, Kaje Harper, LGBT, Queer Sci Fi, Reading, Reading Report, Rise, Robert A. Heinlein, Short-Stories, Steve Berman, Thanksgiving | Leave a comment

“Turkeys Away!” And “Wild Turkey.” Stories for Thanksgiving, 2023. A Friday Flash Fics Extra by Jeff Baker. (November 23, 2023.)

Stories For Thanksgiving 2023

By Jeff Baker

AUTHOR’S NOTE: I meant to only write one story but my post on “Rainbow Snippets” got me thinking about this story https://authorjeffbaker.com/2022/11/18/baby-if-youve-ever-wondered-spending-thanksgiving-with-friday-flash-fics-november-18-2022/ and I decided to follow up on that family a year later in that big old house. Enjoy these vignettes, with a side of cranberry sauce! —-jeff

Turkeys Away!

By Jeff Baker

The table was set, the mashed potatoes steaming, the turkey and dressing glistening. Chris nudged his boyfriend Enrico sitting next to him and grinned. Across from them were Chris’ sister Susie and her husband Max with year-old James (who they called “Little Chris,” from his middle name) in his high chair at the end of the table. Chris and Susie’s Mom sat smiling at the other end of the table.

“I can almost feel your father here,” she said.

“Yeah,” Chris said.

There was a splat!

Little Chris had grabbed a slice of turkey and tossed it across the table.

“Okay,” Big Chris said grabbing the turkey platter. “Maybe I’d better serve this.”

Little Chris laughed and so did everybody else.

“Happy Thanksgiving!” Max said with an apologetic shrug.

—end—

Wild Turkey

by Jeff Baker

Pete and Zack had been driving the long-haul route for two days. They were zipping between small towns at the moment down the original stretch of Kansas highway which was basically a paved country road.

“Hey, isn’t today Thanksgiving?” Zack said.

“Yeah,” Pete said from behind the steering wheel. “That’s why I’m glad the radio’s off. Not much reception out here and I doubt we could get the football games.”

“Wouldn’t you want to be home?” Zack asked.

“Not this year.” Pete said. “Third wife bailed on me last spring. Maybe I’ll get out to second wife and my daughter after Christmas, but I don’t mind this.”

“You’re lucky,” Zack said. “I’ve been on my own since I was nineteen. No family to speak of and I’m twenty-six now.”

Pete smiled. “I’m forty-eight. My daughter is almost twenty-six.” They drove in silence a few more miles. “Listen, when we drop off the last load let’s find some restaurant and make our own Thanksgiving, okay?”

“Yeah, okay.” Zack said glumly. “Turkey with all the trimmings,” he sighed.

In another minute, they rounded a curve through rows of trees and bushes and suddenly eight wild turkeys stood in the road ahead of them. They suddenly took flight, not like eagles but they did soar into the sky towards the trees.

“Oh my gosh!” Zack said. “Lookit that! Turkeys!” He laughed. “Thanksgiving turkeys!” He laughed again and realized he felt better. Not as down as he had been.

“And as God as my witness,” Pete said with a smile, “I guess turkeys can fly!”

—end—

Happy Thanksgiving, from all of us at Friday Flash Fics!—–jeff

Posted in Fiction, Friday Flash Fics, Friday Flash Fictions, LGBT, Short-Stories, Thanksgiving | Leave a comment

Rainbow Snippets Paints the Meadows With Delight. Jeff Baker, November 18, 2023.

November 18, 2023

Every week we post six lines of a story of ours, a work-in-progress or from someone else’s work that we recommend that has LGBT characters on Rainbow Snippets, here; https://www.facebook.com/groups/RainbowSnippets/?multi_permalinks=24082521664724569&notif_id=1700355017635329&notif_t=group_activity&ref=notif

My snippet this week is from my story “Do Paint the Meadows With Delight,” which is an Honorary Mention in the Queer Sci Fi anthology “Rise.” https://www.otherworldsink.com/book/rise/ Oh, the title is from Shakespeare’s “Love’s Labors Lost.” It’s a special story for me, and I’ll say too much about it afterward.

Marac would be returning soon after her two weeks away from the house they called “Love Cottage.” Two weeks of what she described as “a boring gaggle of Sorcerers and acolytes of the Dal Lords, learning nothing but talking a lot.”

Auris stayed home, maintained the house and the garden. Not that the garden looked maintained.

The garden looked like winter.

It was a small strip of ground right next to the house but it was still theirs.

My late husband Darryl Thompson moved in with me in November of 2010. He was usually nearby (sometimes snuggled up to me) while I was writing. And this story was one of the last I wrote with him right there. But I feel he’s still with me and the loving, romantic couples I sometimes write about come from us. Next week, a Thanksgiving leftover.—–jeff

Posted in Anthologies, Fantasy, LGBT, Queer Sci Fi, Rainbow Snippets, Rise, Romance | 6 Comments

Progress Report from Jeff Baker for October/November 2023 from Jeff Baker. (November 17, 2023.)

November 17, 2023

I went to the World Fantasy Convention in Kansas City at the end of October. Went to a bunch of panels, including one on Heinlein’s fantasy stories with a guy who had met Heinlein. Went to a bunch of readings, including one at about ten in the morning with only two or three audience members in attendance (that happens at early-morning readings, I guess) but they had a blast and so did the small audience. Also, I wrote and read a little in my hotel room.

Kept busy writing the flash fictions and a chunk of the project due at the end of December. Got a story for a flash anthology call I heard about at the World Fantasy Convention written up and sent off; this one using a series I started for the weekly flash fictions a few years ago. A lot of this being done at the downtown Public Library.

And I pulled out my notebook and wrote out a song parody, something I used to do all the time but since I don’t perform anymore I don’t do more than once a year or so, Maybe I’ll send it to somebody.

I haven’t done as much reading this month, other than for the writing. I’m thinking of doing a regular “Reading Report” and posting it here, too. (Michael Vaughn does a video version and puts it on You Tube—highly recommended.)

AND I got my copy of “Rise,” the Queer Sci-Fi Flash Fiction Contest anthology that has one of my stories in it. Quite a boost!

That’s about it for now!

——jeff baker

November 17, 2023, Hugoton, Kansas

Posted in Progress Reports, Writing | Leave a comment

Dumpster Dive with Friday Flash Fics from Jeff Baker. November 17, 2023.

Dumpster Dive

by Jeff Baker

(A Bryce Going Story)

I was hungry. I was tired. I was cold. It was right around Thanksgiving, my first one out on the streets since my Mom had bailed on me and I’d hit the road.

I’d been very lucky. I looked like I was about twenty and I’d managed to find a few jobs where I was paid under the table and nobody questioned that my name was Bryce Going or suspected that I was really a Gay teenager on the run. But none of that stopped the awful feeling in my gut. I hadn’t eaten anything other than a candy bar in two days. This little town didn’t have a shelter or anything. And it was Thanksgiving, 1975. At least tomorrow was. The cute decorations of turkeys in the window seemed to be mocking me.

I pulled my jacket tight around me as I walked down the small main street. There was a trash barrel right there. Sign on it telling people not to litter. I hated what I was thinking.

I glanced around. Nobody there, most of the little shops had closed early.

I glanced in the barrel and reached in, felt around through the newspaper, the empty pop and beer cans and felt a lump. I pulled out a wrapped-up half-eaten something with the logo of a burger place on the wrapper. I glanced around again. I was the only person on the street.

I unwrapped it. Yeah, a burger. Someone had taken a bite out of it then discarded it but it was still a burger.

The idea almost made me sick but I didn’t care. I bit into it. It was cold but it tasted like the best thing ever.

I’d intended to eat around the part with the bite in it, I didn’t want to catch any diseases.

I didn’t care. I ate every inch of it. Savored every bite. Licked my lips, pulled a piece of cheese off the wrapper and gobbled it too.

It felt like the best meal I’d had in days.

I rummaged through the trash can. No more burgers. I looked around and kept walking.

I kept remembering an older guy I’d been in a shelter with a few months ago. He told me that I should check out restaurant dumpsters “They have the best food.” The idea almost made me sick then. Not now.

I walked to the edge of town. There was a Russian restaurant. Made sense. Little town probably had a bunch of immigrants. It was dark, their lights were off. No cars parked anywhere near. I walked over. The back parking lot was a combination of gravel, sand, dirt and potholes. I about tripped on one. The dumpster was at the far corner of the lot, by some bushes, partly in the shadow of the decorative spire of the building. The only light was from a streetlamp in front.

I looked around, double-checking. Nobody. The dumpster was about chest high. I could see a hole in the side at the bottom where part of it had rusted away. I leaned on it and it wobbled a little. Probably set on a big pothole. I pushed the lid open. It smelled. Like trash and food. It was about a third full of garbage and leavings from other people’s meals, people who hadn’t had to worry about where their next meals were coming from. That was all to one side of the dumpster and it wasn’t really much. I felt around and grabbed what felt like a chunk of ham or turkey.

Something grabbed my wrist.

I jerked back, or tried to. The dumpster wobbled. Something rose out of the trash, partly covered in food. It had muscular arms and a face and it grabbed my other wrist. It almost looked like an old man but its beard was long and green like seaweed. Its skin was covered with scales like a dirty green fish. I pulled and struggled. It grinned showing sharp green teeth. I was going nowhere.

“You are mine now, boy!” it said in a gurgling voice.

“Who the hell are you? Let me go!” I managed to say.

“I am Vodyanoy! I traveled here when they came from the Old Country. I dwell in the waters. You will make fine company!”

It began to pull me into the dumpster. I stared down. In the dim light I could make out that the Vodyanoy’s legs trailed off and became water, blending with the murky liquid at the bottom of the dumpster. And that the dumpster was tilted slightly.

I had one shot.

I threw my weight towards the side of the dumpster with the rusty hole. It managed to rock back and forth and the water sloshed around, some of it flowing out of the dumpster onto the ground. As it did, the Vodyanoy’s grip tightened and he began chanting in what I guessed was Russian. But his weight wasn’t helping him. I kept rocking the dumpster and the water kept flowing out and the demon-thing opened his mouth for a gurgling yell and fell apart, becoming dirty green water which flowed out onto the ground.

No longer being held, I fell to the ground. Glad the dumpster hadn’t rocked on my foot. I rolled away from it, sprang to my feet and ran, not looking back.

It would be a cold, lonely Thanksgiving but I was just glad to be alive. I checked a few more trash cans and found a few scraps of food and amazingly, an unopened bottle of water somebody tossed. I would make my way to the next town and get another job and if they paid me in food I don’t remember. And it wouldn’t be my last encounter with some kind of water spirit. If I had any sense I would have steered clear of water except the kind you find in bottles.

—end—

Wishing all my readers a wonderful Thanksgiving with a prayer for those who have no place to go. I’m posting a prompt pic but it’s for December 1st as we’ll be taking a Thanksgiving break! —–jeff

Posted in Bryce Going, Fantasy, Fiction, Friday Flash Fics, Friday Flash Fictions, Halloween, Horror, LGBT, Short-Stories, Thanksgiving | 2 Comments

Flash Fiction Draw Challenge November 2023—-The Results!!!!

Flash Fiction Draw Challenge November 2023; The Results! November 12th, 2023.

Hi, again! Mike here, also known as “Jeff Baker.”

This time I’m actually posting the stories just a little early!

The draws for the November 2023 FFDC were:

A Historical Fiction

Set in a Railroad Car

Involving an Antique Cola Bottle

E. H. Timms wrote “Deposited Dreams.” https://thinkingthinking123.blogspot.com/2023/11/flash-fic-challenge-deposited-dreams.html

And I wrote “The One Who Yawns” https://authorjeffbaker.com/2023/11/07/the-one-who-yawns-flash-fiction-draw-challenge-story-for-november-2023-as-by-mike-mayak-november-7-2023/

Remember, it’s never too late to write a story of your own, post it in the comments and join in the fun!

We’ll be back with more draws and stories on December 4th, 2023! ——mike

Posted in E. H. Timms, Fiction, Historical Fiction, Monthly Flash Fiction Draw Challenge, Short-Stories | Leave a comment

Thanksgiving With Rainbow Snippets; “Baby If You’ve Ever Wondered” by Jeff Baker. November 11, 2023.

Photo by Ben Mack on Pexels.com

Every week we post six lines of a story of ours, a work-in-progress or from someone else’s work we recommend that has LGBT characters on Rainbow Snippets here https://www.facebook.com/groups/963484217054974

An early-Thanksgiving snippet or snippets this week, this from “Baby, If You’ve Ever Wondered,” one of my favorite holiday stories to write. https://authorjeffbaker.com/2022/11/18/baby-if-youve-ever-wondered-spending-thanksgiving-with-friday-flash-fics-november-18-2022/ It’s simply Chris (Gay or Bi) talking to his little nephew who is awake as Chris checks on the turkey early in the morning, trying not to wake anybody in the house.

You know, I remember your Granddad showing me how to do this. He used to cook the turkey overnight, just like this, I remember when I was a little kid. You woulda liked him, I think. Yeah, when I was a kid we ate around this table a lot. It’s still kinda scuffed up in a few places. And you’ll like your Uncle Enrico when I get him out here.

Awwww! Can’t leave it there!

He had to work on Thanksgiving. I’m just glad your Grandma and your folks are okay with it. Wow. I haven’t been back to this house in over a year. Live too far away. This house is about a hundred-and-twenty years old, I’m twenty seven and you’re about…oh, seven months? Something like that.

My Dad showed me how to do the turkey but I haven’t done one in a while. And there are a couple of houses in my family like the one I mention here!

Next week, something not as Thanksgiving-Themed. (Meaning I’m not sure what!) —-jeff

Posted in Fiction, LGBT, Rainbow Snippets, Thanksgiving | 4 Comments

The Horn Blows at Midnight for Friday Flash Fics by Jeff Baker. November 10th, 2023.

The Horn Blows at Midnight

by Jeff Baker

There’s nothing like small-town High School football. And our team usually played nothing like small-town football. We didn’t have the worst record in the state but some people were surprised to hear we even had a team.

The D’Artagnan High School Knights games did bring out the town, there wasn’t a lot to do on Friday night in Western Kansas but our cheer should have been “better luck next time.” That’s probably why they let my younger brother Scotty Turner on the team, even if he usually just warmed the bench. Me? I was a year older than Scotty and had been on the bench all the time, okay up in the bleachers. I was a tuba player in the school band and we usually did better than the team. Not that William Gaines Turner Junior was planning on a musical career. Nope. Community College, Economics, that was the idea.

Anyway, right before Halloween and our Homecoming game we were playing the Millington Dragons and my buddy Mickey Mayak nudges me and says since our director wasn’t paying a lot of attention (flirting with one of the pretty teachers in the front row) we should start something. So, Mickey kicks Mark Lebsack, sitting in front of us with his trombone, and tells him what’s going on. In another minute, word has spread through the whole band and we kick into a march and the crowd cheers.

And somehow, Scotty thought that was a signal for him to run onto the field. This was during a play and I guess it meant they had too many players out there and the referees blew their whistles and the coaches for both teams started yelling and Scotty stood there with a “Wha’d I do?” look on his face.

Me and Mickey were laughing and the director looked pissed.

The gist of it all was they had to run the play again. Scotty stayed on the bench but since Millington stupidly was doing the exact same thing they did before we grabbed the ball and Martin MacFly (No kidding! That was really his name!) ran for a touchdown for our side! Maybe that gave us some momentum because we won the game, just barely. It didn’t mean a lot in the grand scheme of things but it meant our record for the season was 3 and 0 and not 2 and 0. And MacFly got the nickname “Flypaper,” for holding onto the ball (he’d dropped it on the very first play of the game.)

When it was all said and done my Dad had us stop in at Casey’s for a couple slices of pizza. There were a couple of employees carrying a couple of stacks of pizza out to a customer’s car and a woman with her bicycle leaning against the wall selling tacos. Yep. Small-town football. Gotta love it.

Somebody said later the school paper had wanted to run a story calling it “Marching Band Wins Football Game” but the Journalism teacher nixed it. And Mickey and I got a stern lecture from the director next Monday at band practice.

But my Brother Scotty got the last laugh. He went off to college, fell in love with this girl and married her. Yeah, the Coach’s daughter.

So now, every other Thanksgiving or Christmas, I have to hear “Hey, Billy! You remember your Brother’s bonehead play that saved the game?”

—end—

NOTE: And that’s me reflected in the bell of the tuba! —-jeff

Posted in Fiction, Football, Friday Flash Fics, Friday Flash Fictions, Kansas, Short-Stories, Sports Story | Leave a comment

“The One Who Yawns.” Flash Fiction Draw Challenge Story For November 2023, as by Mike Mayak. (November 7, 2023.)

Photo by Felix Mittermeier on Pexels.com

The One Who Yawns

by Mike Mayak

AUTHOR’S NOTE: The draws for the November 2023 Flash Fiction Draw Challenge were: Historical Fiction, set in a Railroad Car involving an Antique Cola Bottle.

I realize that the term used for First Nations People in this story is out of fashion today, but it is what my narrator would probably have used about one hundred and fifteen years ago. I offer my apologies. —-mike

It was the middle of the night. The train car was rocking back and forth. I was starting to breathe easier; we were halfway there. The old man, wrapped in a blanket with ancient designs sat in the seat facing me. I was just glad there weren’t that many people in this railroad car and that most people couldn’t tell one old Indian from another.

What we were doing was a mercy. “The One Who Yawns,” to translate his name, was being held prisoner by the government and was no danger to anybody. He told me the Spirits had let him know that his time was short.

And maybe the spirits had told me the same thing.

There was a loyal old man in his tribe who felt moved by the spirits to pretend to be The One Who Yawns and take his place so The One Who Yawns could go home.

It wasn’t that difficult to swap one old man for the other. As I said, most White people weren’t going to bother looking too close. Not in 1906. So I was taking him to his home to die in the ways of his people.

I reached into my coat pocket. I had forgotten about the small bottle I had gotten from the ice chest on my way back to my seat. I handed the bottle to the man who (for the duration of the trip) was calling himself “Fire on the Prairie.” I pried open the lid and indicated that he should drink.

“It’s something new,” I said. “It’s really good. It’s fizzy.”

Suspiciously, The One Who Yawns smelled it, sipped it and then took another sip. He gave me a slight smile.

We rode on in silence.

Just before dawn we stopped at a little town and stepped off the train. As the train pulled away two more Indians walked up, much younger than I was. They explained that they had brought horses and that The One Who Yawns was going to ride with them. Home.

The One Who Yawns nodded at me slightly. “Thanks,” he said quietly. Then he handed me the empty cola bottle and gave me the biggest smile I had seen in a long while.

Then they rode off.

My own friends, with a horse, would arrive several hours later. I couldn’t go back to Fort Sill, so I planned to hit the Oregon Territory. Which is where I was when I heard that the man the world thought was The One Who Yawns had died a prisoner of war and had been buried at the cemetery there.

Last I heard of the real The One Who Yawns, he had outlived his double and was awaiting the call of The Great Spirit.

Maybe that same spirit allowed me to live to be 103 years old, to tell you the story I’ve kept to myself for over sixty years and explain why I have an empty soda bottle set on the mantle, in a place of honor.

—end—

AUTHOR’S ADDENDA: Oh, and The One Who Yawns was a real person. He is believed to have died in 1909 and to be buried in Ft. Sill, OK. —–mike

Posted in Alternate History, Fiction, Historical Fiction, Mike Mayak, Monthly Flash Fiction Draw Challenge, Short-Stories, Western | Leave a comment

History! Railroad Cars! Old Soda Bottles?!? Flash Fiction Draw Challenge Draws for November 6th, 2023. —–Mike Mayak

First, here’s the prompts for the November 2023 Flash Fiction Draw Challenge. Then my usual long-winded explanation:

Historical Fiction

Involving an Antique Cola Bottle

Set in a Railway Car.

Now, on to the details.

Hi! I’m Mike Mayak, I also write as Jeff Baker and I’m the current moderator for the monthly Flash Fiction Draw Challenge, which was started by ‘Nathan Burgoine a few years ago and carried on by Cait Gordon and Jeffrey Ricker. It’s a monthly writing challenge mainly for stress-free fun that anyone can play.

Here’s how it works: the first Monday of every month I draw three cards; a heart, a diamond and a club. These correspond to a list naming a genre, a setting and an object that must appear in the story. Participants write up a flash fiction story, 1,000 words or less, post it to their website and link it here in the comments. I’ll post the results (and hopefully have one of my own written!) the week of November 13th, 2023.

As I’m no good making videos I did the drawing offstage and the results were the Eight of Hearts (Historical Fiction), the Six of Diamonds (A Railway Car) and the Queen of Clubs (an antique cola bottle.). So we will write a historical fiction, set in a railway car involving an antique cola bottle.

So, get to writing and I’ll post the results next week!

Thanks for playing, and I’ll see you next week!

And have fun!

——mike

Posted in Monthly Flash Fiction Draw Challenge | 2 Comments