A nice little find this evening... back in November 2006, Wired Magazine published the results of an appeal for some very short SF stories - six word stories to be precise.
The challenge to sci-fi, fantasy, and horror writers from the realms of books, TV, movies, and games was inspired by Ernest Hemingway, who once wrote a story in just six words ("For sale: baby shoes, never worn."). He is said to have called it his best work.
Dozens of writers put their words to paper and while Arthur C. Clarke refused to trim his ("God said, 'Cancel Program GENESIS.' The universe ceased to exist."), the the rest obliged with some concise masterpieces, including Alan Moore ("Machine. Unexpectedly, I’d invented a time"), William Shatner ("Failed SAT. Lost scholarship. Invented rocket."), Frank Miller ("With bloody hands, I say good-bye."), Charles Stross ("Osama’s time machine: President Gore concerned.") and Orson Scott Card ("The baby’s blood type? Human, mostly.").
(Netfind courtesy of Michael Norwitz: ""Human infertility? Gengineering! Results tasty, too.")
• Read all the six word stories here on the Wired site.. and perhaps post your own here...
In Review: You Get What You Want, an anthology by David Robertson (et al)
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You Get What You Get, the latest title from Fred Egg Comics, the latest
anthology of short comic strips, all written by David Robertson, drawn by a
wide va...
1 hour ago
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