Tag Archives: Geoffrey and Elizabeth Dean Foundation

How Long Should A Good Short Story Be?


Geoffedited

Are Australian short story writers an endangered species?

I found this review by Geoffrey Dean, an accomplished Tasmanian (Australian) writer quite interesting especially while editing some of my short stories for competitions recently.

I enjoy writing short stories, ranging from “Mondays Finish the Story” (Barbara W. Beacham) flash fictionΒ challenge of 100-150 words to stories I have written in 1500 to 3000 words in ourΒ Creative Writing Workshop with Isabel D’Avila Winter. In short story competitions, the limit to the number of words youΒ are required to write can really change a story, as I have found recently while reducing one of my 1500 word short stories to 1000 words for a competition. I have felt in the past week that I probably could have spent less time and written a better story, if I wroteΒ a completelyΒ new story. On the other hand, I found it much easier to increase the number of words of another short story from 800 words to the required number, 1000 words. The additional 00 words may have slowed the phase of the story, butΒ it is work-in-progress.

Submitting to literary magazines also calls for a fit. You have to write to specific requirements with type and paragraphing or head-lining, but the main challenge is the number of words toΒ fit a page or a column. Β SoΒ how can you fit into the system?Β Can you be less descriptive or reduce the number ofΒ characters without taking from your plot orΒ could you do without long passages ofΒ back-stories without killing the story?

In the following review, “Are Australian short story writers an endangered species?”, see how authorΒ Geoff Dean writes aboutΒ his process of creating a short story and his discussions on the steps that took him to the end where the answer about short stories and their lengthsΒ are quite clear. Β As Dean writes, one must always aim to write a good short story first and foremost before trying to fit the story “into the system”, i.e., the magazine page size or competition requirements…in other words, to hell with the system, I am going to write my story my way and eventually find a place for it.

“Are Australian short story writers an endangered species?”

Geoffrey Dean has published 80 short stories. The Tasmanian Writers’ Centre (TWC) in conjunction withΒ Island MagazineΒ and theΒ Geoff and Elizabeth Dean Foundation have just launched the Geoffrey Dean Short Story Competition which is now open toΒ Australian writers.

Born in Hobart, Tasmania in 1928, Geoffrey Dean (Geoff) had his first short story published in the mid-1950s. Scores of his stories have appeared in eight collections of his work (Mysteries, myths, and miracles; Under the Mountain; The Literary Lunch; Strangers Country and other stories; Cold Dean Monday and other Australian stories; Summerbird and other stories; Over the Fence; and the Hadlee Stories), as well as magazines, anthologies and collections in Australia, the UK, USA, Norway and China. He won many literary prizes and awards, including the State of Victoria Short Story Award and the Arafura Literary award. His story, The Town that Died was made into a TV drama and broadcast by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 1986. Geoff died in August, 2011.

Geoff

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