Mina Witteman – author | editor | teacher of creative writing

Posts tagged “Short Story

Gone Writing – Day 12

Posted on January 13, 2016

Besides writing longer novels, I write short stories. For the young but also for adults. My adult short stories are flash fiction pieces, often no more than a few lines or 250 words at the most. I love writing flash fiction. It forces me to be concise, sharp, snappy. It forces me to be harsh and merciless. Not necessarily topic- or story-wise, although my flash fiction often turns out a tad gruesome, but harsh and merciless when it comes to trimming the word count. I mostly write the flash fiction in English and there’s no fluffing up with a limited vocabulary. It pushes me to not skirt the core of the story but to go straight for the kill.   Sometimes a flash fiction story germinates and grows into a novel, like…

Daily Distraction: A Little Cheese Mouse

Posted on November 15, 2014

This is one of the too cute illustrations by illustrator Linda de Haan for my short story ‘Het kaasmuisje’ (‘The Little Cheese Mouse’), which was published this week in Het grote voorleesboek voor rond de 5 jaar (The Big Read-Aloud Book for 5-year-olds).   When Daan and his friends Samir and Carmen discover a teeny-weeny and very scared mouse at the After School Care, they think up a plan to keep the mouse safe from Miss Aicha – everyone knows adults don’t like mice! – but also from Meow, the fierce cat that stalks around at the care center. Will they succeed and find a way to let the mouse return to his den and his scrumptious chunks of cheese?

Daily Distraction: Young Authors Fiction Festival

Posted on June 11, 2014

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For a few years now, I have been a judge at the Young Authors Fiction Festival, a writing contest open to all students ages 5 to 18 in the greater Paris area who write in English. An initiative of the Red Wheelbarrow Bookstore in Paris and the French chapter of the Society of Children’s Book Writers & Illustrators, the Young Authors Fiction Festival is now organized by the American Library in Paris, in collaboration with Time Traveler Tours.

This year, I judged the 3ème/9th grade entries and I applaud these young authors for their braveness. As a writer, I know it takes guts to write a story and send it out into the world. But to have to write the story in less than 1,000 words with a captivating beginning, a gripping middle and a fresh and surprising end is more than brave. It’s an extraordinary accomplishment. Where a novel in its length is fairly forgiving and gives you ample time to set the scene and ease your reader into the story, the short story is like parking a Cadillac Eldorado on a Paris street. You have no room to wriggle, you have to get straight down to the core of the story, strip it to its bare essentials. The winners of this year’s YAFF are nothing but masters of the word. They show us established writers that fierce competition is on its way. We’d better sharpen our pens and beware!

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