SeoulMan
Member
I'm starting my own Short Story of the Week threads, per this thread:
http://www.bookandreader.com/forums/website-feedback-help-suggestions/16684-short-story-week.html
You can join me or not. (I suspect I may be the only one in this thread next week. LOL!)
The first short story is "A Good Man is Hard to Find" by Flannery O'Connor. It will begin next Monday, 7/7/08.
Note: I am not trying to compete with the BOTM. I respect the BOTM. That's why I'm starting the second week of the month, instead of the more active first week where the traffic seems to flow toward the BOTM. I'm just trying to regenerate interest in the short story genre. It is surprising to me that most people are not drawn to short stories. I mean, they are short, which should attract interest from the short attention span crowd. Also, because of their brevity, they can be read in one sitting. Furthermore, the best short stories are quite well-written and have a depth that novelists can only dream about. It's a form that deserves more attention. Besides, with today's short attention span citizens, I'm surprised short stories haven't taken off as much as the longer novel.
http://www.bookandreader.com/forums/website-feedback-help-suggestions/16684-short-story-week.html
You can join me or not. (I suspect I may be the only one in this thread next week. LOL!)
The first short story is "A Good Man is Hard to Find" by Flannery O'Connor. It will begin next Monday, 7/7/08.
Note: I am not trying to compete with the BOTM. I respect the BOTM. That's why I'm starting the second week of the month, instead of the more active first week where the traffic seems to flow toward the BOTM. I'm just trying to regenerate interest in the short story genre. It is surprising to me that most people are not drawn to short stories. I mean, they are short, which should attract interest from the short attention span crowd. Also, because of their brevity, they can be read in one sitting. Furthermore, the best short stories are quite well-written and have a depth that novelists can only dream about. It's a form that deserves more attention. Besides, with today's short attention span citizens, I'm surprised short stories haven't taken off as much as the longer novel.