A Story In
100 Words
Literature in Tiny Bursts.
You are invited to the wonderful world of microfiction. Whether you’re a reader, a writer, or one of our future robot overlords, welcome! A Story In 100 Words is a community of literature enthusiasts no matter the length, but we have a special predilection for narratives exactly 100 words in length.
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The Shove Seen Round The World
My family sings and we eat ice cream cake, the crunchy bits dancing across my tongue. We shovel sugary forkfuls into our mouths, laughing and sharing kindred stories. We are warm. We are comfortable. We are sheltered.
I am enveloped in birthday cheer the exact moment when parts of our beloved country erupt in chaos.
Whistles for justice pierce the air before biting clouds of pepper spray surround the faces of protestors fighting for their neighbors. There is a shove, and all the world sees a cell phone raised in a clenched fist; a lifeless body sprawled in the street.
From Guest Contributor Brigitta Scheib
Ripped To Bits By Ghosts
I moved into my workshop, with a gas-ring and pair of chickens in a cage. I needed no assistants. I watched the sky from a hilltop laboratory, harnessing the lightning.
In reality I sleep under the stairs in my friends’ flat. He’s a motorcycle courier, she’s a receptionist. I work where I can, wherever the agency sends me, seven days a week. If I’m ill I rely on her noticing and bringing me soup or something. I have a notebook to record my dreams. Huge flights of geese turn furrows through the red November skies. Worlds can barely contain me.
From Guest Contributor Geoff Sawers
Family Tree
Robots Contest Entry:
I was born in the rain and dark. “Cure me or kill me,” I begged the doctors in attendance. But apparently only when silent was I able to be heard. I’d been assembled by someone who couldn’t be bothered to read the assembly instructions. Seventy years later, I look in the mirror and see bits and pieces of a stranger’s face – a long, fleshy nose, protuberant eyes, a domelike Shakespearean forehead. My now grown children stand well off to the side, uncertain whether to huddle or flee. As I tentatively approach, I clutch a rose, shoulder high like a dagger. From Guest Contributor Howie Good
Howie's books include the prose poetry collection THOUGHT CRIMES, scheduled to be published in fall 2022.
In The Stir Of A Hand
Robots Contest Entry
“Squeal! Crunch!”
“What’s that sound?” questioned Susan.
Tom ran into the kitchen to check. AngelCakes attempted to blend soup with the batter, including the tin can.
“Darn, instructions weren’t clear,” Tom fretted, making necessary adjustments.
With a replacement of ingredients, the smell of spicy tomato soup cake soon filled their house.
“Hmmm...crunchy!” Susan commented, spitting out bits of cake.
“Yuck!” Tom balked, taking a bite. “Should’ve written: Put egg into mixing bowl. Throw out shell.”
He made another note in the recipe.
“I’ll have our baking robot ready in time to make you a birthday cake, hon.”
Susan grimaced.
From Guest Contributor Krystyna Fedosejevs
Krystyna writes poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction regardless of the season, although she prefers spring.
On The Sweet Path
Ice cream? Al declined. It hurt his teeth.
“Good of him to do so,” acknowledged his school’s principal.
There were other reports of the afternoon sightings. About the SUV parked in front of their school. The dark sunglasses leaning out on a balding head. Words offering a sweet treat.
It happened two days in a row. Possibly three. No one paid close attention until bits of news dribbled out, spreading across the community.
Plans were drawn to nab the culprit.
He must’ve known for no longer was he seen.
Another school needed to heed to the call for ice cream.From Guest Contributor Krystyna Fedosejevs
Krystyna writes poetry, fiction and creative nonfiction regardless of the season. Although she prefers spring.
The Fourth Of July
Pig, of brick house fame, smelled something burning. Was it a weasel? Then he heard cursing coming from next door. Witch again! After countless warnings from the city, she’d refused to clean up the candy bits and cake that littered her yard, refused to cease and desist in the eating of children. But what if she was on fire? What about the Good Samaritan Law? A law that he and his two brothers scoffed at years before, when they thought taunting a wolf caught in a trap was amusing, almost as enjoyable as the fireworks on the Fourth of July.
From Guest Contributor Linda Lowe
Omelette
“You crack me up!” Benjamin cackled.
Kenneth looked his friend over as if to check for any cracks needing medical intervention.
“It’s time you learn,” Benjamin said. “How can you go through life without making an omelette?”
Kenneth reluctantly selected a recipe. He gathered all ingredients he could find and set out to cook.
Benjamin took a bite. “You call this an omelette?”
The cook wriggled uncomfortably. “I didn’t know we ran out of milk.”
“You could’ve used skim milk powder, mixed with water.”
Benjamin continued crunching, picking out bits from his portion.
“How much eggshell does this thing have?”
From Guest Contributor Krystyna Fedosejevs
Krystyna is a writer of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction. She resides in Edmonton, Canada.
Death’s Head
Retreating from Leningrad respect for the Soviets had grown amongst SS Totenkopf, elevated from Untermensch – ‘suhumans’ – to Bolsheviks.
After the bombardment from the eerily howling Katyushas – ‘Stalin’s organs’ – half of Franz’s platoon had been blown to bits, their blood staining the snow.
Silence.
Then line after line of T-34 tanks covered in infantrymen appeared over the frozen steppe.
The odds were impossible, yet none would surrender, warriors moulded by the code of blood, iron and unconquerable will.
Franz, 19, watching the approaching hordes, glanced at the Totenkopf – ‘Death’s Head’ – insignia on his lapel.
Yes, this was what he existed for.
From Guest Contributor Ian Fletcher
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