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Flash Fiction Online August 2010

Date of Publication: Aug 1,2010
Editor: Suzanne W. Vincent
In This Issue:
  • The Numbers Game by Michael Aaron
  • The Winner’s Loss by Elliott Flower
  • The Invisible Man by Bruce Holland Rogers
  • Renaissance by Bruce Holland Rogers
  • Playing with Dice by Jake Freivald
  • By the Numbers: The Prose Sonnet by Bruce Holland Rogers
suzanne

Suzanne Vincent

Suzanne Vincent is the editor-in-chief of Flash Fiction Online. That’s what people think anyway. Actually, she’s really a pretty ordinary middle-aged woman packing a few extra pounds and a few more gray hairs than she’s comfortable with. As a writer, she leans toward the fantasy spectrum, though much of what she writes is difficult to classify. Slipstream? Isn’t that where we stick stories when we just can’t figure out where else they go? Suzanne’s first professional publication was right here at FFO, published before she joined the staff: “I Speak the Master’s Will,” — a story she’s still very proud of. While she doesn’t actually have time to blog anymore, she once did. You can still read her ancient posts on writing at The Slushpile Avalanche. Suzanne keeps a house full of kids (3), a husband (1), and pets (too many to number) in Utah, USA. Yes, she’s a Mormon. No, there isn’t another wife. Mormons haven’t actually practiced polygamy since the 1890s. Too bad. She’d love to have another woman around to wash dishes and do laundry.

bruce—holland-rogers

Bruce Holland Rogers

Bruce Holland Rogers has a home base in Eugene, Oregon, the tie-dye capital of the world. He writes all types of fiction: SF, fantasy, literary, mysteries, experimental, and work that’s hard to label.

For six years, Bruce wrote a column about the spiritual and psychological challenges of full-time fiction writing for Speculations magazine. Many of those columns have been collected in a book, Word Work: Surviving and Thriving as a Writer (an alternate selection of the Writers Digest Book Club). He is a motivational speaker and trains workers and managers in creativity and practical problem solving.

He has taught creative writing at the University of Colorado and the University of Illinois. Bruce has also taught non-credit courses for the University of Colorado, Carroll College, the University of Wisconsin, and the private Flatiron Fiction Workshop. He is a member of the permanent faculty at the Whidbey Writers Workshop MFA program, a low-residency program that stands alone and is not affiliated with a college or university. It is the first and so far only program of its kind. Currently he is teaching creative writing and literature at Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest, Hungary, on a Fulbright grant.

 

Read More From This Author:
  • How We Met
  • Tea Party Rules: The Story Contract
  • Make It A Good Lie – Versimilitude
  • Naming the Baby: Titles (Part II of II)
  • Naming the Baby: Titles (Part I of II)
  • The King Is Dead: Long Live the King!
  • Again Again Again: Repetition
  • Love is Strange
  • By the Numbers: The Prose Sonnet
  • Renaissance
  • The Invisible Man
  • Let Me Repeat That: The Prose Villanelle
  • Border Crossing
  • Metamorphoses and Compassion
  • Sea Anemones
  • Small Rebellions: Prose Poems
  • Consolidated Flash and the Collective Narrator
  • We Stand Up
michael—-aaron

Michael Aaron

Michael Aaron can be found on his bike, doing hill reps in the north of England. It’s easier than writing.

Read More From This Author:
  • CAPS LOCK and the Ellipsis of Doom
  • The Numbers Game

Elliott Flower

Elliott Flower (1863-1920) wrote novels and short stories in the early 20th century. He was published in Lippincott’s, Ladies’ Home Journal, Atlantic Monthly, Collier’s, The Saturday Evening Post, Town Talk, Canada West, and Reader Magazine, among many others. His most famous novels were apparently The Spoilsman and Policeman Flynn. He also wrote criticism and editorial tips, as in “When Characters Are Real” in The Editor, a journal for literary workers.

Read More From This Author:
  • The Winner’s Loss
jake—-freivald_staff

Jake Frievald

Flash Fiction Online’s Founding Editor Jake Freivald lives in New Jersey in a house teeming with life: a wife, nine kids (yes, all from said wife, no twins), two dogs, two cats, and twenty fish.
Lack of qualifications never stopped Jake from taking a job, so when he saw the need for a professional flash-only ‘zine he created Flash Fiction Online. He was astounded when a team of volunteers rallied around the project, and he would like to shut up now so you can read about them.

Read More From This Author:
  • Changing of the Guard
  • Better Late Than Never
  • In This Issue
  • In This Issue
  • April Fools
  • On the March
  • Our February Issue
  • A New Year
  • In This Issue (November 2010)
  • Slouching Toward Halloween
  • An Alumni Issue
  • Playing with Dice

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