Sudden Fiction (Continued) Explained

Sudden Fiction (Continued): 60 New Short Stories is a collection of short stories published in 1996. It was compiled and edited by Robert Shapard and James Thomas. It is a follow-up to Sudden Fiction International (1989) and Sudden Fiction - American Short-Short Stories.

Notable authors in Sudden Fiction (Continued) include William Maxwell, Margaret Atwood, Don DeLillo, Mark Richard, Molly Giles, Bruce Holland Rogers, Barry Peters, Andrew Lam, and Judy Troy.

Reception

Critical reception to the short story collection was positive. A reviewer from Publishers Weekly felt that the authors created fast-paced stories with "full, vivid characters and descriptions" while keeping the stories short.[1] Greg Johnson wrote in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that some of the short stories seemed gimmicky, but that Sudden Fiction (Continued) was a rich, vibrant collection otherwise.[2] Lisa Meyers from the Los Angeles Times thought that the short story collection succeeded because it offered a "variety of voices, themes, and narrative techniques."[3] Booklists Michele Leber liked the book's format, stating that it is "perfectly suited to the pace of modern life" since the short stories can be read in a few minutes time.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sudden Fiction (Continued): 60 New Short-Short Stories . . August 5, 2020.
  2. News: Johnson . Greg . When less is more --- occasionally: Short-short stories demonstrate constraints, virtues of form . . September 1, 1996 . . 10K.
  3. News: Meyers . Lisa . Tiny Kingdoms . . September 1, 1996 . . F6, F9.
  4. Web site: Leber . Michele . Sudden Fiction (Continued) . . August 5, 2020 . July 1996.