tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post2234304863179077444..comments2024-03-18T09:09:59.625-04:00Comments on Janet Reid, Literary Agent: The Save Me From My Reading Flash Fiction contestJanet Reidhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00615380335938685231noreply@blogger.comBlogger35125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-85581394233516870972020-03-08T09:38:54.996-04:002020-03-08T09:38:54.996-04:00He bit into the flesh of the book like it was a ch...He bit into the flesh of the book like it was a chicken leg and the plot twisted so Shakespeare's verse was muffled by his profanities. Portia's pithy words caught between his pointed teeth. Antonio's melancholy stuck to his pink pitted tonsils. Stringy saliva gathered at the corners of his mouth as he softened the pages at a pace.<br />This is how it is now. Dawn raids. Book eaters. No burning, no banning just teeth sharpened to points that blunt us.<br />Marie McKayhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11405271051226910312noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-85302231409995031552020-03-08T08:31:39.126-04:002020-03-08T08:31:39.126-04:00She plopped down beside Norman and gave him a wink...She plopped down beside Norman and gave him a wink. “Whiskey, with a twist.”<br /><br />“What brings you in?” I asked.<br /><br />“Finally finished my first novel.” She lowered her voice. “I understand there’s a famous literary agent who hangs out here.”<br /><br />Definitely a plotter. “What’s it about?”<br /><br />“It’s fast-paced,” she assured me, launching into a log line so convoluted it made me dizzy. <br /><br />“Sounds like a real page turner.”<br /><br />Norman stood, threw down a few bucks, and walked out.<br /><br />“Was that him? Do you think he liked it?”<br /><br />I sighed. “If I were you, I wouldn’t wait for a response.”Just Janhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12546035917149403735noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-70826363776039490292020-03-08T08:14:17.292-04:002020-03-08T08:14:17.292-04:00Fog oozed across the pier like an ocean of milk su...Fog oozed across the pier like an ocean of milk suffering from severe personality disorder.<br /><br />"It'd hel<b>p lot</b>s if you'd dispose of the body," said Vanderbilt, peering at the se<b>mi-seen scene</b> with a <b>twist</b>ed, uncertain grin.<br /><br />"What <i>I'm</i> s'posed to do 'bout it?"<br /><br />"Listen, it's a pretty hi<b>p age</b> we're living in, but not hip enough for blatant murder."<br /><br />"He should'na had that cra<b>p ace</b> up his sleeve."<br /><br />"And you shouldn't have had that knife up yours."<br /><br />"Alright, I'll handle it—Vanderbilt?"<br /><br />"Yeah?"<br /><br />"Where's the body?"<br /><br />"Rien ne va plus," said the fog. "Guess it isn't your lucky night after all."Casual-Thttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04091757363609964963noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-24467710456591468482020-03-08T07:20:41.348-04:002020-03-08T07:20:41.348-04:00Bartelby paced the tunnel floor, a mise-en-scene f...Bartelby paced the tunnel floor, a mise-en-scene for many failed take-overs. A familiar sound squelched up the corridor. Agatha’s signature decoupaged Wellingtons hit the torchlight first. The Guy Fawkes image shellacked across her toe brazenly signaled who she was. <br />“This is twisted, Agatha! Don’t do it.”<br />“Oh, Barty. Always the Marplot.”<br />Agatha dropped her cargo. “Would you prefer I use dynamite?”<br />“No, but stockpiling the world’s TP, at a time like this?<br />“Genius isn’t it. She who controls the toilet paper controls the world. I wish I’d thought of it sooner.”<br />Agatha’s laugh echoed down the corridor. <br /> Johnellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08042379175433349768noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-16986565640039726792020-03-08T01:43:40.899-05:002020-03-08T01:43:40.899-05:00The promoter smiled. Feral. “And then?”
“Our hero...The promoter smiled. Feral. “And then?”<br /><br />“Our hero flees with the Speck. But...plot twist! Monkeys steal the Speck. Give it to an eagle which loses the Speck in a clover field. Hero finds it, but other animals pounce. Tie him up. Threaten to destroy the Speck.”<br /><br />“Then he gets them to hear a what?”<br /><br />“A who.”<br /><br />Feral laughs. “Feels like Abbott and Costello.”<br /><br />“It’s a page turner. For a children’s book.”<br /><br />“Yeah, fast paced. Ted, it’s ‘54. Commies everywhere. Make the eagle a vulture, giv’im a Ruskie name like Vlad, and I’ll see citizens hear about Horton hearing his Who.”<br />C. Dan Castrohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15648247329883078385noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-5636959610393320732020-03-08T01:31:03.435-05:002020-03-08T01:31:03.435-05:00Frain, creature of habit, hit the jukebox for Frid...Frain, creature of habit, hit the jukebox for Friday night inspiration. The Jackson 4 record dropped. Jammed. He shook and twisted the machine. No music. No inspiration.<br /><br />He’d try again Saturday.<br /><br />When he woke, none of his four senses seemed to function. He flushed his flash.<br /><br />Sunday arrived with the same result. He stared into space. <br /><br />“Hey, V.” He showed his wife his entry, nary a splotch on the page. “I plead the fourth. Nothing’s working.”<br /><br />“She gave you fewer constraints, yet it’s harder?”<br /><br />“Nobody understands writers.” <br /><br />V gave him a high-four, pinky lost years earlier in a motorcycle accident.<br /><br />John Davis Frainhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18020019400599228492noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-31345438362100849692020-03-08T01:16:31.420-05:002020-03-08T01:16:31.420-05:00
“Let travel through space and time.
Plot our way ...<br />“Let travel through space and time.<br />Plot our way through the universe.”<br />The young guy sang my lyrics to me.<br />“You’re a legend. Can I get an autograph?” He ripped a page from his notebook.<br />It’s rare nowadays to be recognized as a geriatric rock star.<br />Rarer still to get an album sale. Tours? Forget about it.<br />“How about a picture instead?” I suggested.<br />To most kids his age, I’d just be another old man on the street.<br />I’m flattered he noticed me.<br />The twisted thing was he’d never suspect me when he later realized his wallet was missing.Mallory Lovehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16282261391938135052noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-67285260367273825032020-03-07T23:23:46.833-05:002020-03-07T23:23:46.833-05:00Hang the painting in the shadows behind the table....Hang the painting in the shadows behind the table. <br /><br />Set the props on the table like plot points on a page, twisting the eye through the composition. Vase, bottle of Merlot, newspaper. <br /><br />Position one hand on the base of the wine glass, the other on the newsprint page. Smile up at him, but don’t expect a reaction. <br /><br />Three paces back, frame the mise-en-scène with the viewfinder. <i>Click.</i> Shake out the polaroid, admiring it while it develops. A souvenir. <br /><br />His hand slips. <i>Clunk.</i> He never should have fired you. Linda Shantzhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12802634921051188131noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-41407734199292465242020-03-07T22:36:14.137-05:002020-03-07T22:36:14.137-05:00Marcel Marceau
His face with grace would plot his...Marcel Marceau<br /><br />His face with grace would plot his pace<br />His silence twist the page<br />From stage to screen<br />An actor's feen<br />Marceau, Mise en scene!Sunnygoetzehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11959742238807980642noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-50867254930096958152020-03-07T20:42:41.427-05:002020-03-07T20:42:41.427-05:00“Pace?”
My eyes rolled in time with the thud of m...“Pace?” <br />My eyes rolled in time with the thud of music. Oblivious human groupies swaying behind me. Cause strobe-lights and Michael Bolton? Not exactly…going the distance. <br />Leaning over the bar, I cupped my mouth. “No, Paige. Like page.”<br />“Really?”<br />“Really.”<br />Smiling the bartender, not a merit scholarship lot, whose muscles were more suited to spandex and iron than vermouth, gave my martini over. <br />“Twist?”<br />“No, thanks.” Gripping glass, I took my—very—needed drink. Slugging it down, I pulled my silver pistol and took aim. <br />Because as for the undead lead singer of this cover band? <br /> Forever would be enough. <br />Cipherhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16810774836899333560noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-73536898069422713052020-03-07T19:53:55.098-05:002020-03-07T19:53:55.098-05:00"I'm leaving."
Her "farewell,&..."I'm leaving."<br /><br />Her "farewell," delivered after-the-fact—via text—confirmed what I'd long known. That in Darcy's Theater Of The Absurd, my role was little more than the mise-en-scene. Verily, Darcy had turned the page on our relationship somewhere between her byline and the (overly) <i>dramatis personæ</i>, with countless props from her private performances meeting shattered demises against a wall or the sidewalk below, while she recited her life from its hackneyed script.<br /><br />"I need more."<br /><br />"I have no space."<br /><br />Of course, plotlines should wrap with a twist, though in this case, twenty.<br /><br />Specifically, the lug nuts on her brand-new Porsche.Michael Seesehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03694187657718931214noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-56079916089727203882020-03-07T19:36:18.496-05:002020-03-07T19:36:18.496-05:00"Once upon a time there was a dastardly pirat..."Once upon a time there was a dastardly pirate captain--"<br /><br />"Daddy, what's dar-ser-dee?"<br /><br />He scratches his beard. "Uh, handsome and brave."<br /><br />Daisy snuggles up to him.<br /><br />"And the Queen of Misery--"<br /><br />"Mise-en-scene?"<br /><br />"Made everyone sad."<br /><br />Daisy nods. She knows.<br /><br />"...Took his daughter. So he plotted to rescue her - and Page, her dog."<br /><br />A furry head appears over the edge of the bunk. Daisy strokes it and smiles. This is her favourite bit.<br /><br />"Then--"<br /><br />The door bangs. "Captain! Ships ahoy!"<br /><br />He rises, paces to a porthole, unfolds his telescope.<br /><br />The Queen's navy.<br /><br />Blast.<br /><br />Daisy's mother.<br /><br />Always the twist in his tale.<br />NLiuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00184714542401822508noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-11970989547199521152020-03-07T17:18:13.356-05:002020-03-07T17:18:13.356-05:00The scene hadn’t been laid in fair Verona. I’d set...The scene hadn’t been laid in fair Verona. I’d set my own mise-en-scene in the City of Angels. I paced the floor, my brain felt more twisted than the drama planted in the plot. I scrutinized my latest passage, pen between my teeth. Vague as a cheater’s promise to be faithful. I sighed and opened to a page of Flea’s <i> Acid For The Children</i>. The imagery of his words snapped a Polaroid of his tumultuous life there in the ‘70s. Eureka! The glorious feeling of sudden inspiration seemed to spurt out of me like water from a fountain.Amandahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00693827408620811568noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-28626785001515412542020-03-07T16:50:49.249-05:002020-03-07T16:50:49.249-05:00There, in the midst of her perfect mise-en-scene, ...There, in the midst of her perfect mise-en-scene, stood the Plott Hound from Hell with a mouth full of velvet waistcoat, dripping stagnant pond water on her precious Persian. Lady Cuppage screamed with all the outrage of a wheezy old concertina and threw the pot wisteria at him. It landed miserably close to her own feet.<br /><br />The hound dropped the velvet while focusing on his real prize, the carapace of a tortoise. He watched the Lady as she slowly realized where she had seen the waistcoat last.<br /><br />Her son wasn't nearly as interesting as the tortoise shell.<br /><br />Tiggergrammahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11475861252641953524noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-83085545089248886012020-03-07T16:37:23.762-05:002020-03-07T16:37:23.762-05:00Jack paced before the cemetery plot in the fading ...Jack paced before the cemetery plot in the fading sunlight. The musky earth scent blended with wisteria that cascaded over a wrought iron fence.<br /><br />“The final page—her suicide.” His stomach twisted in familiar dread. “How does she die?” He glanced about, suppressing a shaky laugh.<br /><br />His macabre mise-en-scene of inspiration was nothing more than a serene garden of tranquility. With an empty hole.<br /><br />Backing away, defeated, he didn’t hear the stray dog slaloming the graves.<br /><br />Bam!<br /><br />Apologetic licks on his cheek woke him. Eureka! She doesn’t kill herself...she adopts a dog. Heartbreak perfectly thwarted. <br /><br />“Good doggy.”Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-87103835934736627762020-03-07T15:30:55.457-05:002020-03-07T15:30:55.457-05:00They’re silent when I finish. Finally, Tolkien spe...They’re silent when I finish. Finally, Tolkien speaks. “It’s not bad. Just… take more space. The more words, the better.”<br /> <br />Odd. Heaven shouldn’t have criticism. “It’s… a short story.”<br /> <br />“Exactly. Short on plot and allegory.” Lewis, nodding solemnly. “Though I liked that twist with the lion on page nine.”<br /> <br />“There’s not…” This can’t be Hell. I didn’t do enough for that, did I? “I think you misread – ”<br /> <br />“Atrocious ending too,” says Christie. “I’ve no idea who murdered whom.”<br /> <br />“What?”<br /> <br />“Exactly.” Tolkien pats my shoulder. “Just rewrite, add fifty pages, and we’ll talk tomorrow.”<br /><br />Oh. Purgatory. Fair enough. <br />Katelyn Y.https://www.blogger.com/profile/11799540731260167610noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-70002593661308671202020-03-07T15:14:50.779-05:002020-03-07T15:14:50.779-05:00Digging for Grandpa required a treasure map. Lucki...Digging for Grandpa required a treasure map. Luckily, Grandma left one.<br /><br />“Twisted,” said Desiree.<br /><br />“That’s Grammy.” I peered at the page. “Always with a sense of humor.”<br /><br />We wound through thickets, splashed through streams, shovels in hand.<br /><br />“Fitting payback for a lifetime of philandering,” she said. “But how did she know it would--?”<br /><br />“He had a pacemaker put in. Next week, he went missing. Here we are.”<br /><br />The mise-en-scene described in Grammy’s will: a rotten garter, a set of scarlet pumps, a wisp of gauze shrouding the shallow mound. <br /><br />Desiree wouldn’t stop laughing.<br /><br />“What’s so funny?”<br /><br />“Sex marks the plot.”Timothy Lowehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07514224628760035696noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-30978418444892346552020-03-07T14:47:53.025-05:002020-03-07T14:47:53.025-05:00We seemed to be happy when we were poor. Then the ...We seemed to be happy when we were poor. Then the <b>plot twist</b>ed and my business took off. The <b>pace</b> of our life changed as I had to spend a lot of nights away.<br /><br />I thought her jealous as her acrimony turned the <b>page</b> on our relationship. Then I started to notice the lies. Calling her out on them caused her to lose control. She came at me with a frying pan and I kicked her legs out from under her.<br /><br />“Then, officer, she hit her head on the edge of the table”Craig Fhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07157301156577795781noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-41440397410831939662020-03-07T14:41:58.796-05:002020-03-07T14:41:58.796-05:00The page showed his route, plotted and paced out. ...The <b>page</b> showed his route, <b>plot</b>ted and <b>pace</b>d out. The aisles beckoned, his trolley was empty, his guts roiled. Speed was of the essence. The doors parted and he shot inside, the mob at his heels, <b>twist</b>ing after him as he hurtled ahead. They all wanted the same thing. 2 ply or 4 ply, they didn’t care, they needed loo rolls and they needed them bad – and so did he. On cue, his stomach groaned, the laxative took effect and his bowels let go. Everyone backed away. Walking awkwardly, he filled his trolley and left without any trouble. Mission accomplished. Steph Ellishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02353775819602714643noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-69265032740005921442020-03-07T12:29:03.899-05:002020-03-07T12:29:03.899-05:00One. Two. Three paces. I set the chair down. Looks...One. Two. Three paces. I set the chair down. Looks about right. And the end table goes next to the chair.<br /><br />I grab a magazine from our room and turn to a page about hiking. After all, that was her favorite alibi. I fold it open and put it on the table. <br /><br />The empty lime box is still on the mantle. I throw a few logs on the fireplace and kindle some embers, enough to turn cardboard to ashes.<br /><br />Wipe small splotches from the poker. <br /><br />A quick twist of the rug, and we’re done.<br /><br />Four hours, then call missing persons.Colin Smithhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03292997431935215499noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-15011619575729504652020-03-07T11:08:25.221-05:002020-03-07T11:08:25.221-05:00
Her words hit him like a poleaxe to the gut.
She...<br />Her words hit him like a poleaxe to the gut.<br /><br />She has the nerve to stand there in all her pageantry and look so smug. How could she mention my sickness in front of everyone? Why? I’m seeing a therapist… you money-grubbing cheese eater. Damn, now you’re bringing up my health. <br /><br />But he, Walter Mitty, stood there and took it. Turn the page, be the better person.<br /><br />Even more twisted, now she’s going on about my death…plotting it in front of all these people. <br /><br />The minister turned, smiled, and said, “I now pronounce you, man and wife.”<br />french sojournhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14262858704848580714noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-1436425277470189192020-03-07T11:01:37.240-05:002020-03-07T11:01:37.240-05:00His knickers were twisted, the pain acute. The nee...His knickers were twisted, the pain acute. The need for a pacemaker loomed. <br /><br />Blame it on a torrid seduction, a languid wave towards stacked pages in desperate need of ingenuity. “Joey’s young, but follows directions well,” promised his lover.<br /><br />New town. Opening night. Chaos ruled the stage, set pieces piled atop one another.<br /><br />The play was doomed. He plotted several means of death—curtains down, lights out—for Enrique’s last-minute replacement.<br /><br />A murmur swept through the theatre as Joey, brown lunch sack in hand, rushed in. “Here’s your miso soup!”<br /><br />Note: never use jargon with a video gamer.<br />Jenn Griffinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17759889537054572399noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-17051408854165419982020-03-07T10:52:22.514-05:002020-03-07T10:52:22.514-05:00I lie awake and plot our end. I slip from bed and ...I lie awake and <b>plot</b> our end. I slip from bed and <b>pace</b> the corridors in search of clarity.<br /><br />I could lift the mask and cover your face. Would you struggle? Is there enough of you left to <b>twist</b> and thrash as the oxygen drops? Would it trigger alerts and <b>page</b>rs before I was done? And what then of me?<br /><br />Perhaps a razor instead? Your wrists, then mine and we ooze away in some agonising, bloody <b><i>mise-en-scene</i></b>?<br /><br />Returning to the room I am no wiser. A coward still, my promise stays broken. I kiss your hand and beg forgiveness again.Kate Outhwaitehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07113777860190965126noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-77594780932411472592020-03-07T10:39:53.727-05:002020-03-07T10:39:53.727-05:00Always known there’s a space.
And a door.
Betw...Always known there’s a s<b>pace</b>.<br /> <br />And a door. <br /><br />Between There and Here, I mean. <br /><br />Momma said, “Careful, baby – what’s There’s where it belongs. Got no business Here. Not anymore.”<br /><br />Did my best to mind, but turns out it’s me that’s bridging. <br /><br /><b>Plot</b>ted to open it a crack - barely enough to slip a <b>page</b> – to see the light poke through. Figured, <i>There must be a whole lot brighter’n Here</i>.<br /> <br />Turns out it don’t abide partway. That door flew wide and wasn’t no light There. I ‘tribute it to folks being all <b>twist</b>ed up and mostly dark inside. <br /><br />Shoulda minded Momma.Lora Senfhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14550409759041007831noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-17040756.post-85111179167669787972020-03-07T10:35:37.258-05:002020-03-07T10:35:37.258-05:00Twisting with horrible slowness, I regretted signi...Twisting with horrible slowness, I regretted signing up. My least favorite sim games – and, in fact, adventures of any kind – were set in space. But time had been running out to participate, and I hadn’t dared to browse the selections on the next page. <br /><br />In mere minutes, I was adrift far from ship or planet. Clearly this was not part of the main plot. <br /><br />I raised admin on my suit’s radio.<br /><br />“Hey, I’ve obviously lost. Why aren’t you booting me out of the game?”<br /><br />“Don’t you players ever read the waiver before you sign it? This is not a simulation.”Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com