Read Like A Writer

There are two ways to learn how to write fiction: by reading it and by writing it. Yes, you can learn lots about writing stories in workshops, in writing classes and writing groups, at writers' conferences. You can learn technique and process by reading the dozens of books like this one on fiction writing and by reading articles in writers' magazines. But the best teachers of fiction are the great works of fiction themselves. You can learn more about the structure of a short story by reading Anton Chekhov's 'Heartache' than you can in a semester of Creative Writing 101. If you read like a writer, that is, which means you have to read everything twice, at least. When you read a story or novel the first time, just let it happen. Enjoy the journey. When you've finished, you know where the story took you, and now you can go back and reread, and this time notice how the writer reached that destination. Notice the choices he made at each chapter, each sentence, each word. (Every word is a choice.) You see now how the transitions work, how a character gets across a room. All this time you're learning. You loved the central character in the story, and now you can see how the writer presented the character and rendered her worthy of your love and attention. The first reading is creative—you collaborate with the writer in making the story. The second reading is critical.


John Dufresne, from his book, The Lie That Tells A Truth: A Guide to Writing Fiction

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Tuesday, April 12, 2022

Sixes and Sevens by O. Henry

 

Sixes and Sevens by O. Henry

Sixes and Sevens 

 

by O. Henry

 

The first collection of humorous short stories from the author of The Four Million, his stories deal for the most part with ordinary people: clerks, policemen and waitresses and often use twist endings which turn on an ironic or coincidental circumstance in his stories. Most of his stories are set in his contemporary present, the early years of the 20th century. Many take place in New York.

 Contents

 I. THE LAST OF THE TROUBADOURS
 II. THE SLEUTHS
 III. WITCHES’ LOAVES
 IV. THE PRIDE OF THE CITIES
 V. HOLDING UP A TRAIN
 VI. ULYSSES AND THE DOGMAN
 VII. THE CHAMPION OF THE WEATHER
 VIII. MAKES THE WHOLE WORLD KIN
 IX. AT ARMS WITH MORPHEUS
 X. A GHOST OF A CHANCE
 XI. JIMMY HAYES AND MURIEL
 XII. THE DOOR OF UNREST
 XIII. THE DUPLICITY OF HARGRAVES
 XIV. LET ME FEEL YOUR PULSE
 XV. OCTOBER AND JUNE
 XVI. THE CHURCH WITH AN OVERSHOT-WHEEL
 XVII. NEW YORK BY CAMP FIRE LIGHT
 XVIII. THE ADVENTURES OF SHAMROCK JOLNES
 XIX. THE LADY HIGHER UP
 XX. THE GREATER CONEY
 XXI. LAW AND ORDER
 XXII. TRANSFORMATION OF MARTIN BURNEY
 XXIII. THE CALIPH AND THE CAD
 XXIV. THE DIAMOND OF KALI
 XXV. THE DAY WE CELEBRATE

About the Author 

O. Henry
William Sydney Porter, better known by his pen name O. Henry is an American writer, famous for his short stories. His tales romanticized the commonplace—in particular, the life of ordinary people in New York City. His stories often had surprise endings, a device that became identified with his name and cost him critical favour when its vogue had passed.

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The Mardi Gras Mystery by H. Bedford-Jones

 

The Mardi Gras Mystery by H. Bedford-Jones

The Mardi Gras Mystery 

 

by H. Bedford-Jones


Mardi Gras, Carnival, the season of parties and parades leading up to Lent. Not even the newly enacted Prohibition could dampen the spirits of the people of New Orleans. But one figure is on everyone’s mind, the Midnight Masquer, the mysterious bandit who appears at the stroke of midnight in the costume of an aviator to rob wealthy party goers of their jewels and money. Is he a criminal, or just a joker? The question is up in the air until, on the last night of carnival, things turn tragic and one of New Orleans leading citizens is murdered at the hand of the bandit. But was it the real Masquer or an imposter that pulled the fatal trigger? And, despite the fact that he was discovered moments later in an aviator’s suit, the son of the murdered man claims that he is innocent of the crime. Nothing is as it seems, as Henry Gramont’s Mardi Gras turns into a web of deceit, high stakes oil prospecting, and organized crime.

About the Author

Henry James O'Brien Bedford-Jones
Henry James O'Brien Bedford-Jones (April 29, 1887-May 6,1949) was a Canadian born author of stories and novels. After becoming an American citizen in 1908 he became a prolific writer for pulp magazines in a variety of genres including historical romances, westerns, science-fiction, and mysteries. Many of his works featured pirates. In all, he wrote over a hundred novels and earned the nickname "King of the Pulps."

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What are the Short Story Requirements?

 WHAT ARE THE SHORT STORY REQUIREMENTS?

 

Except from "Short Stories for English Courses" by Rosa Mary Redding Mikels


Critics have agreed that the short story must conform to certain conditions. First of all, the writer must strive to make one and only one impression. His time is too limited, his space is too confined, his risk of dividing the attention of the reader is too great, to admit of more than this one impression. He therefore selects some moment of action or some phase of character or some particular scene, and focuses attention upon that. Life not infrequently gives such brief, clear-cut impressions. At the railway station we see two young people hurry to a train as if fearful of being detained, and we get the impression of romantic adventure. We pass on the street corner two men talking, and from a chance sentence or two we form a strong impression of the character of one or both. Sometimes we travel through a scene so desolate and depressing or so lovely and uplifting that the effect is never forgotten. Such glimpses of life and scene are as vivid as the vignettes revealed by the search-light, when its arm slowly explores a mountain-side or the shore of a lake and brings objects for a brief moment into high light. To secure this single strong impression, the writer must decide which of the three essentials— plot, character, or setting—is to have first place.

As action appeals strongly to most people, and very adequately reveals character, the short-story writer may decide to make plot pre-eminent. He accordingly chooses his incidents carefully. Any that do not really aid in developing the story must be cast aside, no matter how interesting or attractive they may be in themselves. This does not mean that an incident which is detached from the train of events may not be used. But such an incident must have proper relations provided for it. Thus the writer may wish to use incidents that belong to two separate stories, because he knows that by relating them he can produce a single effect. Shakespeare does this in Macbeth. Finding in the lives of the historic Macbeth and the historic King Duff incidents that he wished to use, he combined them. But he saw to it that they had the right relation, that they fitted into the chain of cause and effect. The reader will insist, as the writer knows, that the story be logical, that incident 1 shall be the cause of incident 2, incident 2 of incident 3, and so on to the end. The triangle used by Freytag to illustrate the plot of a play may make this clear.

AC is the line of rising action along which the story climbs, incident by incident, to the point C; C is the turning point, the crisis, or the climax; CB is the line of falling action along which the story descends incident by incident to its logical resolution. Nothing may be left to luck or chance. In life the element of chance does sometimes seem to figure, but in the story it has no place. If the ending is not the logical outcome of events, the reader feels cheated. He does not want the situation to be too obvious, for he likes the thrill of suspense. But he wants the hints and foreshadowings to be sincere, so that he may safely draw his conclusions from them. This does not condemn, however, the "surprise" ending, so admirably used by O. Henry. The reader, in this case, admits that the writer has "played fair" throughout, and that the ending which has so surprised and tickled his fancy is as logical as that he had forecast.

To aid in securing the element of suspense, the author often makes use of what Carl H. Grabo, in his The Art of the Short Story, calls the "negative" or "hostile" incident. Incidents, as he points out, are of two kinds—positive and negative. The first openly help to untangle the situation; the second seem to delay the straightening out of the threads or even to make the tangle worse. He illustrates this by the story of Cinderella. The appearance of the fairy and her use of the magic wand are positive, or openly helpful incidents, in rescuing Cinderella from her lonely and neglected state. But her forgetfulness of the hour and her loss of the glass slipper are negative or hostile incidents. Nevertheless, we see how these are really blessings in disguise, since they cause the prince to seek and woo her.

The novelist may introduce many characters, because he has time and space to care for them. Not so the short-story writer: he must employ only one main character and a few supporting characters. However, when the plot is the main thing, the characters need not be remarkable in any way. Indeed, as Brander Matthews has said, the heroine may be "a woman," the hero "a man," not any woman or any man in particular. Thus, in The Lady or the Tiger? the author leaves the princess without definite traits of character, because his problem is not "what this particular woman would do, but what A woman would do." Sometimes, after reading a story of thrilling plot, we find that we do not readily recall the appearance or the names of the characters; we recall only what happened to them. This is true of the women of James Fenimore Cooper's stories. They have no substantiality, but move like veiled figures through the most exciting adventures.

Setting may or may not be an important factor in the story of incident. What is meant by setting? It is an inclusive term. Time, place, local conditions, and sometimes descriptions of nature and of people are parts of it. When these are well cared for, we get an effect called "atmosphere." We know the effect the atmosphere has upon objects. Any one who has observed distant mountains knows that, while they remain practically unchanged, they never look the same on two successive days. Sometimes they stand out hard and clear, sometimes they are soft and alluring, sometimes they look unreal and almost melt into the sky behind them. So the atmosphere of a story may envelop people and events and produce a subtle effect upon the reader. Sometimes the plot material is such as to require little setting. The incidents might have happened anywhere. We hardly notice the absence of setting in our hurry to see what happens. This is true of many of the stories we enjoyed when we were children. For instance, in The Three Bears the incidents took place, of course, in the woods, but our imagination really supplied the setting. Most stories, however, whatever their character, use setting as carefully and as effectively as possible. Time and place are often given with exactness. Thus Brnoet Harte says: "As Mr. John Oakhurst, gambler, stepped into the main street of Poker Flat on the morning of the twenty-third of November, 1850, he was conscious of a change in its moral atmosphere since the preceding night." This definite mention of time and place gives an air of reality of the story. As to descriptions, the writer sifts them in, for he knows that few will bother to read whole paragraphs of description. He often uses local color, by which we mean the employment of epithets, phrases, and other expressions that impart a "feeling" for the place. This use of local color must not be confused with that intended to produce what is called an "impressionistic" effect. In the latter case the writer subordinates everything to this effect of scene. This use of local color is discussed elsewhere.

Perhaps the writer wishes to make character the dominant element. Then he subordinates plot and setting to this purpose and makes them contribute to it. In selecting the character he wishes to reveal he has wide choice. "Human nature is the same, wherever you find it," we are fond of saying. So he may choose a character that is quite common, some one he knows; and, having made much of some one trait and ignored or subordinated others, bring him before us at some moment of decision or in some strange, perhaps hostile, environment. Or the author may take some character quite out of the ordinary: the village miser, the recluse, or a person with a peculiar mental or moral twist. But, whatever his choice, it is not enough that the character be actually drawn from real life. Indeed, such fidelity to what literally exists may be a hinderance to the writer. The original character may have done strange things and suffered strange things that cannot be accounted for. But, in the story, inconsistencies must be removed, and the conduct of the characters must be logical. Life seems inconsistent to all of us at times, but it is probably less so than it seems. People puzzle us by their apparent inconsistencies, when to themselves their actions seem perfectly logical. But, as Mr. Grabo points out, "In life we expect inconsistencies; in a story we depend upon their elimination." The law of cause and effect, which we found so indispensable in the story of plot, we find of equal importance in the story of character. There must be no sudden and unaccountable changes in the behavior or sentiments of the people in the story. On the contrary, there must be reason in all they say and do. Another demand of the character story is that the characters be lifelike. In the plot story, or in the impressionistic story, we may accept the flat figures on the canvas; our interest is elsewhere. But in the character story we must have real people whose motives and conduct we discuss pro and con with as much interest as if we knew them in the flesh. A character of this convincing type is Hamlet. About him controversy has always raged. It is impossible to think of him as other than a real man. Whenever the writer finds that the characters in his story have caused the reader to wax eloquent over their conduct, he may rest easy: he has made his people lifelike.

Setting in the character story is important, for it is in this that the chief actor moves and has his being. His environment is continually causing him to speak and act. The incidents selected, even though some of them may seem trivial in themselves, must reveal depth after depth in his soul. Whatever the means by which the author reveals the character—whether by setting, conduct, analysis, dialogue, or soliloquy—his task is a hard one. In Markheim we have practically all of these used, with the result that the character is unmistakable and convincing.

Stories of scenes are neither so numerous nor so easy to produce successfully as those of plot and character. But sometimes a place so profoundly impresses a writer that its demands may not be disregarded. Robert Louis Stevenson strongly felt the influence of certain places. "Certain dank gardens cry aloud for murder; certain old houses demand to be haunted; certain coasts are set apart for shipwreck. Other spots seem to abide their destiny, suggestive and impenetrable." Perhaps all of us have seen some place of which we have exclaimed: "It is like a story!" When, then, scene is to furnish the dominant interest, plot and character become relatively insignificant and shadowy. "The pressure of the atmosphere," says Brander Matthews, holds our attention. The Fall of the House of Usher, by Edgar Allan Poe, is a story of this kind. It is the scene that affects us with dread and horror; we have no peace until we see the house swallowed up by the tarn, and have fled out of sight of the tarn itself. The plot is extremely slight, and the Lady Madeline and her unhappy brother hardly more than shadows.

It must not be supposed from the foregoing explanation that the three essentials of the short story are ever really divorced. They are happily blended in many of our finest stories. Nevertheless, analysis of any one of these will show that in the mind of the writer one purpose was pre-eminent. On this point Robert Louis Stevenson thus speaks: "There are, so far as I know, three ways and three only of writing a story. You may take a plot and fit characters to it, or you may take a character and choose incidents and situations to develop it, or, lastly, you may take a certain atmosphere and get actions and persons to express and realize it." When to this clear conception of his limitations and privileges the author adds an imagination that clearly visualizes events and the "verbal magic" by which good style is secured, he produces the short story that is a masterpiece.

Short Stories for English Courses by Rosa Mary Redding Mikels

SHORT STORIES   FOR   ENGLISH COURSES  EDITED  WITH INTRODUCTION AND NOTES  BY   ROSA M. R. MIKELS  SHORTRIDGE HIGH SCHOOL, INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

SHORT STORIES   FOR   ENGLISH COURSES

 EDITED  WITH INTRODUCTION AND NOTES 

BY   ROSA M. R. MIKELS 

SHORTRIDGE HIGH SCHOOL, INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

 

CONTENTS 

PREFACE  
INTRODUCTION  

  • REQUIREMENTS OF THE SHORT STORY  
  • HOW THIS BOOK MAY BE USED   
  • THE FIRST CHRISTMAS-TREE Henry van Dyke   
  • A FRENCH TAR-BABY Joel Chandler Harris   
  • SONNY'S CHRISTENIN' Ruth McEnery Stuart   
  • CHRISTMAS NIGHT WITH SATAN John Fox, Jr.   
  • A NEST-EGG James Whitcomb Riley   
  • WEE WILLIE WINKIE Rudyard Kipling   
  • THE GOLD BUG Edgar Allan Poe   
  • THE RANSOM OF RED CHIEF O. Henry  
  • THE FRESHMAN FULL-BACK Ralph D. Paine   
  • GALLEGHER Richard Harding Davis   
  • THE JUMPING FROG Mark Twain   
  • THE LADY OR THE TIGER? Frank R. Stockton   
  • THE OUTCASTS OF POKER FLAT Francis Bret Harte  
  • THE REVOLT OF MOTHER Mary E. Wilkins Freeman   
  • MARSE CHAN Thomas Nelson Page  
  • "POSSON JONE'" George W. Cable   
  • OUR AROMATIC UNCLE Henry Cuyler Bunner   
  • QUALITY John Galsworthy  
  • THE TRIUMPH OF NIGHT Edith Wharton 
  •  A MESSENGER Mary Raymond Shipman Andrews   
  • MARKHEIM Robert Louis Stevenson. 


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LibriVox’s Short Story Collection Vol. 016 (Audio Book)

 

LibriVox’s Short Story Collection Vol. 016 (Audio Book)

LibriVox’s Short Story Collection Vol. 016 (Audio Book)

 

LibriVox’s Short Story Collection 016: a collection of 10 short works of fiction in the public domain read by a variety of LibriVox members.

Genre(s): Short Stories

Language: English

Group: Short Story Collection

 

CONTENTS

  1. 2BR02B by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., read by Mark Nelson - 00:19:15 
  2. The Artist of the Beautiful by Nathaniel Hawthorne, read by Brad Powers -
    00:55:23 
  3. The Clicking of Cuthbert by P. G. Wodehouse, read by John Axe - 00:34:20 
  4. A Cosmopolite in a Café by O. Henry, read by Julian Jamison, Justin Barrett,
    Michael Yard, Shurtagal, & Ezwa - 00:15:37
  5. The Dead Mother by Unknown, read by Peter Yearsley - 00:02:40 
  6. The Half Brothers by Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell, read by Lucy Burgoyne - 00:38:09 
  7. Head and Shoulders by F. Scott Fitzgerald, read by Daniel Carleton - 00:53:25 
  8. The Tale of Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter, read by Shurtagal - 00:05:52 
  9. The Street That Wasn't There by Clifford D. Simak and Carl Richard Jacobi, read by Peter Yearsley - 00:36:0 
  10. What Men Live By by Leo Tolstoy, read by Cherisa DeBolt - 00:56:47

LibriVox’s Short Story Collection Vol. 015 (Audio Book)

 

LibriVox’s Short Story Collection Vol. 015 (Audio Book)

LibriVox’s Short Story Collection Vol. 015 (Audio Book)

 

LibriVox’s Short Story Collection 015: a collection of 10 short works of fiction in the public domain read by a variety of LibriVox members.

Genre(s): Short Stories

Language: English

Group: Short Story Collection

 

CONTENTS

  1. The Angel of the Odd by Edgar Allan Poe, read by Arouet - 00:21:57 
  2. Aunt Cynthia’s Persian Cat by L. M. Montgomery, read by Missie - 00:22:49
  3. The Bottle Imp by Robert Louis Stevenson, read by Dan Graves - 01:00:58 
  4. Die Sphinx by Edgar Allan Poe, read in German by Christoph Duda - 00:12:54 
  5. A Fight with a Cannon by Victor Hugo, read by Arouet - 00:20:24 
  6. The Hurrying of Ludovic by L. M. Montgomery, read by Clarica - 00:19:30
  7. Melinda’s Humorous Story by May McHenry, read by Betsie Bush - 00:19:28
  8. The Red Etin by Andrew Lang, read by Marianne Alexander - 00:12:36
  9. The Stick-in-the-Muds by Rupert Hughes, read by Debra Lynn - 00:44:53 
  10. The Weddin’ by Jenny Betts Hartswick, read by Lucy Burgoyne - 00:12:16

LibriVox’s Short Story Collection Vol. 014 (Audio Book)

 

LibriVox’s Short Story Collection Vol. 014 (Audio Book)

LibriVox’s Short Story Collection Vol. 014 (Audio Book)

 

LibriVox’s Short Story Collection 014: a collection of 10 short works of fiction in the public domain read by a variety of LibriVox members.

Genre(s): Short Stories

Language: English

Group: Short Story Collection

 

CONTENTS

  1. The Four-Fifteen Express by Amelia B. Edwards, read by Paul Allerton - 00:59:13
  2. The History of England by Jane Austen, read by Kiki Baessel - 00:21:14 
  3. Kew Gardens by Virginia Woolf, read by Elizabeth Klett - 00:17:26 
  4. The Mark on the Wall by Virginia Woolf, read by Elizabeth Klett - 00:22:10 
  5. A Few Maxims for the Instruction of the Over-Educated by Oscar Wilde, read by Tim Bulkeley - 00:03:41 
  6. Ningyo-no-Haka by Lafcadio Hearn, read by David Barnes - 00:08:54 
  7. Peach Blossom Shangri La by Tao Yuanming, read by Paul Sze - 00:05:02 
  8. The Story of the Faithful Cat by Algernon Betram Freeman-Mitford, read by Clarica - 00:03:23 
  9. Trusty John from Andrew Lang’s Blue Fairy Book, read by Clarica - 00:15:57 
  10. The Wrong Black Bag by Angelo Lewis, read by Lucy Burgoyne - 00:30:17