Neil Armstrong in North Somerset
And More Than 50 Other Short Tales for a Fast World
by Jack Lethbridge
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Pub Date 28 Nov 2017 | Archive Date 14 Dec 2017
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Description
A wonderful collection of ‘flash fiction’ - stories typically of less than two pages.
Including the Fish Flash Fiction prize-winning ‘Passing Over Paradise’ - described by judge Chris Stewart as a “satisfyingly artful conceit."
The visit of an astronaut to a Somerset pub, an Indian waiter struggling to live up to his review, a boy who is born without a heart, a man who waits for a taxi he knows will never come, a carpenter who seeks to profit from the fall of Troy. These are just some of the eccentric and poignant characters who inhabit these short, often very short, stories.
David Gaffney, a master of the genre, describes a flash story as “a nimble, nippy little thing that could turn on a sixpence and accelerate quickly away”. In this fine collection of ‘nimble nippy little things’, Jack Lethbridge offers us succinct but satisfying stories designed for those with fast lives, offering us something to consume and contemplate in those short quiet spaces in otherwise frantic lives - a coffee break at work perhaps, or in the dentist’s waiting room, sitting in a carwash, waiting for a pizza delivery.
As Jack says in the introductory story, “let me share my voices with you, these lives on the winds that I listen to while I wait. Keep me company for a while, and we can listen together.”
A Note From the Publisher
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9781788033794 |
PRICE | US$4.99 (USD) |
Featured Reviews
I've read short stories (because what would high school English be without them?) but had never read any flash fiction until this. These are short stories, just even shorter. Still, compared to the "micro fiction" on Twitter - stories in 160 characters or less - these are epic. I like the challenge of a narrative in this concise format. This short volume was hit and miss to me, more hit than miss, and the advantage of the format and my skippy short-term memory was that the misses didn't stay in mind for very long.