Science Fiction Microstory Contest discussion
*JANUARY 2016 MICROSTORY CONTEST - COMMENTS ONLY


Anyway, great stories this month!
I like posting them here on GR better, and it is easy to read too. But wish we could like comments...
JR


I wrote a story-song, "What was snow?", a few years ago, for a local ecology group.
Let's enjoy the cool flakes while we can.

Gary Hanson


We've dug out our cars and driveway- but the street still had 28" + snow. They say later today.
Federal Government, Local Governments and all public schools in the MD, VA, and DC area are all closed today and schools are close tomorrow. The problem is not so much clearing as it is where to clear it to. We're enjoying the day with everyone home, except there are a couple family members who only get paid if they work, so they're getting a day off without pay.
Have everyone's vote except Kalifer. Sent him an email to remind him. As always, a very close race...



One of the other teams didn't do that and lo and behold 'the electrics' got wet and they were stuck in the water! I thought snow was just frozen flakes of water! But something different must be happening if you don't have that problem.
Any news on how homeless people and stray animals manage/are looked after, in such cold snowy conditions? Is there a special effort by government or charities to help them. (I saw on the TV that a panda at a New York (I think) zoo was having great fun rolling in the snow.)


1.) snow hasn't melted enough to find its own way in to vulnerable parts of an engine ... if there is a break in a seal somewhere, whereas liquid water already is fluid enough to get in,
and more importantly,
2.) the actual fact of driving, (ie having the engine going so that water gets sucked in where it shouldn't be) can happen with water. That is you can physically drive into water, BUT, with snow deep enough to possibly get sucked into the air intake etc you are actually prevented from driving before that happens (by not being able to get tyre traction, or by some other moving part of the engine freezing over?) ... and just by the frozenness of the snow forming a sort of seal in its own right, even sealing off something it shouldn't, like an air intake part?
Be interesting thought to actually know the real reason why snow and water affect engines differently (when depth of snow and water in and around engine are the same!) There must be some mechanic types here who would know?

Most modern cars are built so that the engine can get wet. The road spray from just rain can get up into the engine compartment and make things wet. With the Scrapheap Challenge, I'm guessing things aren't built quite so thoroughly, so water in the engine compartment is a problem. The only reason a properly insulated engine stalls in water is because it smothers from lack of oxygen for combustion or inability to exhaust CO which is why vehicles that are intended to drive through rivers have 'snorkels' so they can get oxygen and also release emissions.
As far as homeless people and animals, generally in the Washington DC area, there are warming shelters which are open during the worst cold. However, there are still a good number of homeless who refuse, for a variety of reasons, to go to any shelter so you will find 'camps' of homeless on top of heat exhaust grates and tucked in other various areas to stay warm. Volunteer and government agencies try their best to provide supplies for these people. I know of one man who is homeless that lives on the street year round. He uses bags of plastic bags stuffed in oversized clothes to keep warm outside at night and during the day he can usually be found inside public buildings like the library. The police and others who know of him keep a eye out for him, but as long as he doesn't do anything 'illegal' he's permitted to live as he sees fit. Homeless animals, if they can be caught, are taken to animal shelters. Sadly there are a number of 'high kill shelters' that will only keep animals for so long, but there are also quite a few 'rescue organizations' that try to get animals into forever homes.
Snow like we've had here (we had 28.5") is actually, really good insulation. Wild animals burrow into holes or thickets that when are covered in snow, are quite warm.

That's nice of the police to afford that man the respect to ''live as he sees fit'' but keep an eye out for him anyway. We hear (here on our news) so many bad stories about police in America 'bending the law' to suit themseIves ... so its nice to hear a story about police as good guys in the community.

Finalists:
Star's Bridge by J.J. Alleson
The Bridge to Nowhere by Sharon Kraftchak
Votes needed from:
Chris Nance
Jack McDaniel
Jeremy Lichtman
Marianne Petrino
Jot Russell
Timothy Paul
Star's Bridge by J.J. Alleson
The Bridge to Nowhere by Sharon Kraftchak
Votes needed from:
Chris Nance
Jack McDaniel
Jeremy Lichtman
Marianne Petrino
Jot Russell
Timothy Paul

First, nearly all the stories were well written and did what they set out to do. A few, otherwise excellent, simply had no (or barely-sketched and nonevocative) characterization, so that one could see the story nicely develop and play out but without a connection to make one care. I'll not mention these, except to say mine this month was probably among them, and I think the authors of other such tales this month probably have suspected this lack in their pieces here.
Second, two stories this month could drive one up a wall. These were Jot's and Carrie's.
Carrie's is beautifully written, evocative, full of feeling and elegant lines, a tale of loving concern amid despair---until, beginning about 3/4 way in, one still has no clue what the young woman's despair may concern, and looks for it in vain. Maybe I missed its content, and I'm sure Carrie didn't mean the tale as one of "adolescent angst," but it seems to lack content entirely for the despair.
Jot's story had me totally caught up, right up to the last few lines. Then, following a description of the two characters' hands and the loosened grasp, suddenly--like a deux ex machina--the guy is holding onto a cable and climbs back up to her and happy ending ensues. Well, but hey--did that cable just appear? With no hints earlier from the author that it might? And does the guy know all along there's this cable (and perhaps is even holding it)? And meanwhile are we supposed to be feeling for the poor guy and the poor couple--suspended with them on the suspenseful edge, all the time that the author (along with perhaps the guy character) knows very well there's no danger to the guy? That's playing falsely with the reader's expectations/emotions. Not to mention that, if the guy knows the cable's there, he too is playing falsely. . . with the woman's feelings. I don't know if this flaw occurred because the author's fairly new to writing stories, or what, but it ruined what could have been a good story. Perhaps the last section should have been more worked, and if that went over word-count, pieces should have been taken out instead from earlier sections.
A couple of other stories this month also suffer from rushed-ending flaws. Sure, we've all been too busy this month--but sure, too, it affected the ending paragraphs and thus the quality of two or three other stories (at least), unfortunately.

Again, thank you for taking the time to provide some feedback.

Anyhow, thanks. I usually only public-critique here stories I very much like, but still one worries about hurting feelings. I appreciate very much your response.


I can't agree Paula (and Carrie) with Paula's interpretation that there was no content for the despair of the woman in Carrie's story.
She tells Sid (I must admit I would have liked him to have had a more exotic name, seeing that he came from 'another world'!) that she was broken inside <= that's the despair!
A little later on he says,
I can not reverse what they did to you; I cannot undo how they hurt you.
“Who’s going to want me now? Now that I’m so broken inside?” (she replies) She repeats the despair - the broken insideness - and its left to our imagination (which is a good thing!) to decide is it a physical abuse (eg a rape) or an emotional abuse (eg an intelligent young woman restricted by the conventions of a small minded township if that was where her upbringing occurred.)
and her vulnerability was laid bare for him to see, [and that] despite her loathing of the world she truly did…had…wanted a family. (If it was a gang rape - there is a reference to "they hurt you" - it could explain why she can't have children irrespective of Sid's angel-like anatomy (apparently without normal male attributes, which we know about from when she "looked at his crotch empathetically" and mentioned their "incompatibility" in that regard, implied.)
He broaches the idea of a whole other 'mature relationship' when he says
There are lots of couples that can’t have children. etc
But, and this is the brilliant point as far as I can see, he is not just broaching the idea (in her and hence in the astute reader who is filling in the gaps, as the reader of a good story should be given room to do!) of a physical alternative to a mature adult relationship resulting in children! ... because,
at another (deeper) level Sid is also saying it is a good thing to not be 'traditionally' mature (= fit in, walk the straight line most people in this world have been trained to do) when faced with the very serious "(mature) situation" of whether or not to be 'true' ... to truly be a different sort of mature ... in an often mean-as-sin world that regards 'a degree of meanness' as maturity!!!
Really! How else will the world be able to perpetually subtly correct its tendency to otherwise spiral into its 'worse self' UNLESS artists/authors/brave life-changers of one sort or another challenge 'readers'/ audiences/open-minds to question the nature of maturity ... normality? Yes you have to learn as an author and hone your craft BUT don't let anyone 'teach' you, (mis)guide you towards, how to grow into, how to learn to be, less (than true to what you perceive).

I've noticed you sometimes do try to keep too tight a rein on my comments in this forum (unfairly using words like 'disrespectful', as you have in the past, to describe what I say) And I think that your sentence here (which you addressed to me)
"I don't see where it's necessary to object to what can make a fine story into a major story."
does continue that habit.
With all due respect, Paula, I would like to say that I simply disagreed with what you said ... as opposed to what you interpreted my comments as doing; 'objecting to Carrie's learning from your opinion' as to how to transform her story, from being a "fine story" into being "a major story."
I was not 'objecting' to a fellow writer learning something! I simply had a whole other interpretation of Carrie's story; its strengths and its weaknesses and how it did what good art should (namely, to question where the status quo has slid to and thus ask does it need to be 'slid back' to 'being true' to some higher - even other worldly - value system?) and to (in my opinion) 'be careful to not loose that' (to someone else's opinion) and I expressed that. (If I can give a specific example of our interpretations 'simply differing' ... I think that for a character in a story to say "I'm broken inside" is not at all cliched. It is what a character, un-used to expressing her feelings and searching for how to express them, would be likely to say! If, on the other hand, the author/narrator had said, within the prose description of the character, "she was broken inside" then that would have been a cliched, hackneyed expression. BUT a character CAN say what an author cannot!)
Whether/how another writer listens to/takes on board or not, my opinion and/or anyone else's opinion is ultimately none of my business. I simply put it forward as what I think.

No- Not useful- write your own objective feed-back that may be contradicting previous given opinion. But none of this, 'no you're wrong, (my 'friend'), he didn't say that' crap- please. Private mail your flame war material if you have to do something.
Writing critique is hard enough without fearing that you will become a target for simply being generous enough to spend time trying to be constructive. No wonder most of us don't bother to give constructive feed-back in public- and the rest of us have to read through all the hot-air- bollocks to that.

Meanwhile, talking about characterisation, it is one of the hardest things to do successfully in 750 words. It's hard not to have either characters with no emotional resonance on the one hand (they just do stuff), or the lay-it-on-with-a trowel streaming-tears-and-terminal-illness/murdered-by-villains-base-injustice TV-movie-type-in-your-face schmaltz on the other.
I was trying to do something a bit experimental where a 2nd main character - Princess Diana - is unnamed and there only by allusion, but is crucial to both the setting and the storyline. And the depiction of the future.
But I guess it didn't work, lol :-)

Andy, your stories normally are crystal clear; this one, though, seemed less so--and yet Diana was clear. Perhaps too much of history and referents/references for the story? (But I'm not sure.)

This will probably sound very pretentious, but I was trying to create a more literary fiction type of mini-story - one of the key characteristic of LitFic is to point beyond itself to shared cultural references, and sometimes also to have some implied social commentary. But hopefully with one conflicted character in the middle to hold it together and identify with.
Sci FI for me is a great vehicle for extrapolating from the present to the near future - I think this royal story even qualifies as "hard" SF as pretty much everything mentioned is doable or almost-doable now.
But then - maybe it should just be more fun. "For goodness sake, man - it's just a story!!"

I simply disagreed with an opinion expressed. If you note 'message 80', by Marianne, a disagreement 'with an already expressed opinion' is also stated in that messsage. But her disagreeing with what someone else had said was not remarked upon!
Sure, if its problematic then lets ALL agree to not use the word "disagree" in our critiques ... but let's apply that standard across the board without any targeted discrimination against any one person's 'disagreeing' with an opinion whilst letting another's go through to the keeper..

@Heather – I appreciate the points you made too, two differing interpretations of a story helps understand different viewpoints from a reader standpoint.
@Andy – I think you are favor more clever than I since I completely missed the points you pointed out. I know what you mean by not wanting to “dumb it down” or be too obvious. It’s a fine line to walk. The smarty pants will say “what? Can you be more obvious?” while if not explaining the rest of us will {insert puppy head to the side “huh?” here}> :)
And for the record, I think debate is healthy, it is hard to give feedback for fear someone might take it the wrong way and get mightily offended. However, I can’t freaking learn UNLESS YOU POINT OUT WHAT I FLUBBED.
So have at it. :)

Disagreement in threads may prove valuable to an author and certainly makes for interesting conversation. Decorum is key, but I also invoke Mark Twain.
Paula> Jot's story had me totally caught up, right up to the last few lines. Then, following a description of the two characters' hands and the loosened grasp, suddenly--like a deux ex machina--the guy is holding onto a cable and climbs back up to her and happy ending ensues. Well, but hey--did that cable just appear? With no hints earlier from the author that it might? And does the guy know all along there's this cable (and perhaps is even holding it)? And meanwhile are we supposed to be feeling for the poor guy and the poor couple--suspended with them on the suspenseful edge, all the time that the author (along with perhaps the guy character) knows very well there's no danger to the guy? That's playing falsely with the reader's expectations/emotions. Not to mention that, if the guy knows the cable's there, he too is playing falsely. . . with the woman's feelings. I don't know if this flaw occurred because the author's fairly new to writing stories, or what, but it ruined what could have been a good story. Perhaps the last section should have been more worked, and if that went over word-count, pieces should have been taken out instead from earlier sections.
Thanks for the critique and I wouldn't say it is wrong in any way. I struggled with the ending, hoping to pull off something meaningful. As for the cable, it was already hanging off the edge, so there is a little wave of the hand to have the reader believe that he was able to catch hold of it as he fell. Not likely, but it's a typical story ending. I think that is why I didn't like the story as much. Felt it was too predictable. I always try to provide a new perspective in a story, but felt this one fell short a little.
Thanks for the critique and I wouldn't say it is wrong in any way. I struggled with the ending, hoping to pull off something meaningful. As for the cable, it was already hanging off the edge, so there is a little wave of the hand to have the reader believe that he was able to catch hold of it as he fell. Not likely, but it's a typical story ending. I think that is why I didn't like the story as much. Felt it was too predictable. I always try to provide a new perspective in a story, but felt this one fell short a little.

There's lots to learn from all sorts of experiences: from having things 'pointed out' - with or without decorum (just different things to learn from both sources) to, being exposed to such things as the sense of humour, for example, of another culture.
Marianne, what is 'invoking Mark Twain'? Was he into 'directness', as opposed to say 'decorum'? (Actually, from watching the Chinese TV show "If You Are The One" its noticeable how the Chinese manage to be both very direct in what they say AND very polite in how they say it, at the same time. A famous example from that show {which is a dating show where potential partners have a chance to choose each other} was when one woman when expressing her priority that her future partner must be wealthy expressed it as "I'd rather cry in a BMW than smile on a bicycle.")

Check out more quotes by Twain : http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/aut...

This group could be destroyed in a day with the brutal honesty you like to see. Most of us actually don't want to see every dot and dash of our work debated in-front of planet Earth.
The whole idea of the voting is to show us how our work compares.

Carrie - on your comment: not 'more clever', if as a writer I haven't communicated what I mean to!
However, Richard and I have had this debate a few times about how easy it should be for the reader just to drink in a story, or whether it's OK to task the reader to work a bit to interpret a story that is more layered (or obscure!)
I'm reading William Gibson's The Peripheral at the moment - and that is hard work at times as he writes as if he is in the future and leaves you to interpret what some future words and word usages mean. And he bobs about all over the place with very short chapters and a large cast of characters. But it's an inventive and rewarding read for sure, if a little hard to get into it at first.
Your story, Carrie, was evocative and interesting but not quite in my top little group I fear. Why? At first I wasn't sure if the lead character was being self-indulgent and self-absorbed, though that was clarified halfway through - there's a real hurt. But I had had time to go off her a bit, I guess.
I also struggled with the concept of her, a human, "literally dangling her legs in space".
But I thought the story was touching from the point of view of the alien creature whose devotion is overlooked, and it had a kind of message in that too about the nature of love which was well conveyed.


@Andy – I struggled with the legs off the edge of the world thing too. I had this vision in my head, and I just couldn’t quite explain it without going down a speculative rabbit hole. I figured the more hard sci fi folks would roll their eyes at my lack of scientific explanation for how that was even possible!
So far this Saturday, we have 25 to 27 inches of snow. We may get more than 30. My 8-year-old daughter loooooves the snow, but she doesn't have to shovel it. I'll have fun with that later today.
I didn't have time to submit a story, but I hope to do another vote/critique for this month's contest.