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American Short Fiction

Publishing exquisite fiction since 1991.

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violence

Killers

by Susan Steinberg | July 31, 2019

Killers

the water is deeper than it looks; and we’re not the worst swimmers, but it’s dark; we tend not to swim at night; no, we tend not to swim at night with guys; we all knew of the girl who drowned; she sank like a stone, they said; she was showing off that night, they said; the guys all said; tonight, it’s guys we meet at the boathouse; they’re here for the end of summer; they’re beautiful in a polished way; but we’re beautiful in that polished way; we look out across the water; we whisper … [Read more...] about Killers

Filed Under: NOTEBOOK, WEB EXCLUSIVES Tagged With: Boys, Fiction, Flash Fiction, Girls, Graywolf, Online Fiction, Sex, short fiction, Short Stories, Susan Steinberg, violence, Web Exclusive

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

Dinosaurs, the Alphabet, and Ten Things to Consider Prior to Submitting a Story for Publication

by Nate Brown | August 1, 2018

Dinosaurs, the Alphabet, and Ten Things to Consider Prior to Submitting a Story for Publication

I. To Begin, a Note about Pleasure A few years ago, the late James Salter was honored at the annual F. Scott Fitzgerald Festival with a prize in Fitzgerald’s name. During his keynote address at the award ceremony, Salter said something that was stupefying in its simplicity: reading, he said, was among the very greatest pleasures in his life. Perhaps that’s not a surprising sentiment for a writer so notably interested in pleasure, especially the pleasures of food, drink, travel, language, and … [Read more...] about Dinosaurs, the Alphabet, and Ten Things to Consider Prior to Submitting a Story for Publication

Filed Under: NOTEBOOK Tagged With: acceptance, adjectives, ajectives, Alice Munro, Angela Flournoy, apes, Barracoon, Barrelhouse magazine, Boston, Conversations and Connections conference, Cormac McCarthy, cultural appropriation, Denis Johnson, dialect, dinosaurs, editing, ellipses, empathy, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Fitzgerald Festival, Fuckhead, James Baldiwn, James Baldwin, James Salter, Jenny Zhang, John Gardner, Kaitlyn Greenidge, Kossola, Lionel Shriver, Mary Gaitskill, Muse and the Marketplace, Narcissus, Nate Brown, Paul Auster, pleasure, publishing, racism, reading, rejection, Rickey Laurentiis, semiotics, Sex, Short Stories, Solmaz Sharif, story submission, Sublevel magazine, Ted Thompson, Tim Barris, Toni Morrison, violence, writing, Zora Neale Hurston

Something to Rage Against: An Interview with James Han Mattson

by Nate Brown | February 27, 2018

Something to Rage Against: An Interview with James Han Mattson

In his beautiful debut novel, The Lost Prayers of Ricky Graves, James Han Mattson explores the fallout from an act of violence that will seem all too familiar to American readers. Using multiple first-person narrators, Mattson deftly orbits the book's central tragedy, allowing readers a broad view of the event that does much more than explore a killer's motivations. Mattson's characters struggle to make sense of what's taken place in their town, and through multiple voices, multiple lines of … [Read more...] about Something to Rage Against: An Interview with James Han Mattson

Filed Under: NOTEBOOK, NOTEBOOK FEATURE Tagged With: Fiction, James Han Mattson, multiple points of view, narrators, Novel, Ricky Graves, violence

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.
 

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