• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

American Short Fiction

Publishing exquisite fiction since 1991.

  • ISSUES
    • CURRENT ISSUE
    • BACK ISSUES
  • FICTION
  • MFA for All
  • EVENTS
    • THE STARS AT NIGHT
    • STORY SESSIONS
    • MORE EVENTS
  • STORE
  • SUBMIT
    • REGULAR SUBMISSIONS
    • THE HALIFAX RANCH PRIZE
    • AMERICAN SHORT(ER) FICTION PRIZE
    • THE INSIDER PRIZE
  • DONATE
  • ABOUT
  • NEWS
  • SUBSCRIBE

Nate Brown

Video Games, Trash TV, and Death Metal Music: An Interview with Jennifer duBois

by Stacey Swann | April 8, 2019

Video Games, Trash TV, and Death Metal Music: An Interview with Jennifer duBois

Jennifer duBois, author of the acclaimed novels Cartwheel and A Partial History of Lost Causes, has a new novel that was published last week: The Spectators. LitHub lists it as one of the “Most Anticipated Books of 2019,” and Booklist calls is “brilliantly conceived” and “utterly unforgettable.” An excerpt from The Spectators was published in Issue 63 of American Short Fiction. In this interview, we dig into the genesis of duBois’s latest novel, its structural challenges, and what nineties talk … [Read more...] about Video Games, Trash TV, and Death Metal Music: An Interview with Jennifer duBois

Filed Under: NOTEBOOK Tagged With: A Partial History of Lost Causes, AIDS, Cartwheel, Columbine, Jennifer duBois, Jerry Springer, Marilyn Manson, Nabokov, New York City, Novels, Rube-Goldberg, school shootings, talk shows, The Spectators, This American Life, writing

A Person Who Looks: An Interview with Lacy M. Johnson

by Kathryn Savage | February 20, 2019

A Person Who Looks: An Interview with Lacy M. Johnson

Houston-based Lacy M. Johnson’s recent essay collection, The Reckonings, grapples with vital questions: the concept of evil, police killings, the BP oil spill, and the complexity of speaking truth to power. Finalist for the 2018 National Book Critics Circle Award in the category criticism, Johnson’s essays move between the personal and the political with deftness and precision. This interview was conducted via email where we talked about Johnson’s curatorial project, the Houston Flood Museum, … [Read more...] about A Person Who Looks: An Interview with Lacy M. Johnson

Filed Under: NOTEBOOK, NOTEBOOK FEATURE Tagged With: Angela Pelster, Black Lives Matter, BP, Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Claudia Rankine, conservation, culture, Ella Shohat, empowerment, environmentalism, essays, etymology, Gulf Coast, Joseph Beuys, Kathryn Savage, Lacy M. Johnson, Love, Lydia Yuknavitch, meaning, metoo, Nonfiction, oil, panopticon, reading, Saidiya V. Hartman, society, systemic racism, terror, violence, women, writing

Editorial Outtake: American Pop by Snowden Wright

by Snowden Wright | February 7, 2019

Editorial Outtake: American Pop by Snowden Wright

Editorial Outtakes is a series in which we publish excerpts from recent books that you won’t find anywhere else because, prior the publication, these sections were cut. This installment of Editorial Outtakes features a deleted scene from American Pop, the new novel by Atlanta-based author Snowden Wright. Published by Harper Collins earlier this week, the novel follows the Forster family, a clan whose fortune is made via patriarch Harold's famous Panola Cola Company. With their roots planted in … [Read more...] about Editorial Outtake: American Pop by Snowden Wright

Filed Under: EDITORIAL OUTTAKES Tagged With: American Pop, Editorial Outtake, gilded age, historical fiction, Novel, second novels, Snowden Wright, tycoons

How to Make a Life for Ourselves: An Interview with Kevin Wilson

by Rachel Howell | January 31, 2019

How to Make a Life for Ourselves: An Interview with Kevin Wilson

In Issue 67, Kevin Wilson’s "The Lost Baby” haunts readers with the sudden, small-town disappearance of a couple’s infant child. The story, which also appears in Wilson’s newest collection, Baby, You’re Gonna Be Mine, is emblematic of Wilson’s superb and thrilling prose, his stories as compassionate as they are strange. Every one of his characters, from the grieving mothers to the flailing young men, are so deeply human, so reassuringly like us, we can’t help but root for them in spite of their … [Read more...] about How to Make a Life for Ourselves: An Interview with Kevin Wilson

Filed Under: NOTEBOOK Tagged With: Interview, Kevin Wilson, Rachel Howell, Short Stories, short story collection

Make a Year-end Contribution to ASF, and We’ll Send You Some of Our Favorite Things

by ASF Editors | December 15, 2018

Make a Year-end Contribution to ASF, and We’ll Send You Some of Our Favorite Things

As we continue our year-end giving campaign, we want to take this opportunity to look back with gratitude for all that our readers, authors, staff, and supporters have helped American Short Fiction accomplish. So far this year, we've published 21 writers in our gorgeously designed literary journals and online exclusives, paying our writers competitive rates for their work and promoting them at events in Austin and around the country. We've published dozens of author interviews, reviews, and … [Read more...] about Make a Year-end Contribution to ASF, and We’ll Send You Some of Our Favorite Things

Filed Under: NEWS, NOTEBOOK Tagged With: #GivingTuesday, Fundly, gifts, Giving, holidays, year-end campaign, year-end giving

Editorial Outtake: If You Leave Me

by Crystal Hana Kim | November 8, 2018

Editorial Outtake: If You Leave Me

Editorial Outtakes is a series in which we publish excerpts from recent books that you won’t find anywhere else because, prior the publication, these sections were cut. This installment of Editorial Outtakes features an original chapter from Crystal Hana Kim's debut novel If You Leave Me. A moving story of love during wartime, the novel's poses difficult questions about whether it's better to choose security over love and safety over freedom. Here, Kim shares her thoughts—and an example of a … [Read more...] about Editorial Outtake: If You Leave Me

Filed Under: EDITORIAL OUTTAKES, NOTEBOOK, NOTEBOOK FEATURE Tagged With: Crystal Hana Kim, Editorial Outtake, Fiction, If You Leave Me, Korea, Love, Novel, revision, romance, War

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Issue 81

Guest-edited by Fernando A. Flores, featuring new stories by Yvette DeChavez, Julián Delgado Lopera, Carribean Fragoza, Alejandro Heredia, Carmen Maria Machado, Ruben Reyes Jr., and Gerardo Sámano Córdova.

You can preview the issue here.

NEWS

Read the winners of the 2024 Insider Prize

Read the winners of the 2024 Insider Prize

By ASF Editors

“Memories are a nuisance,” Peter wrote to one of our writers after reading his short story, “but nonetheless they seem to make us who we are, as this story confirms.” This year’s submissions told many stories burdened with memory, but just as many stared bravely into the face of hope, satirized the state of politics, speculated on the future of the world, or else built entirely new worlds to inhabit. In short, the stories written on the inside reflected the stories we wrote this year on the outside. Stories of human toil and dreams and everything in between.
 

Sign up now for Send Us to Perfect Places with Kristen Arnett! Classes are $150 and registration closes May 4, 2025.

×

✨ The Stars at Night 2025: Celebrating Joy Williams, Emily Hunt Kivel, Carrie R. Moore, and Leila Green Little. Get your tickets today!✨

×