What Is Flash Fiction? A Guide to Very Short Stories
Flash fiction packs a complete story into under 1,000 words. Learn what it is, why writers love it, and how to write your own.
Defining Flash Fiction
Flash fiction is a form of extremely short storytelling, typically under 1,000 words. Despite its brevity, flash fiction contains all the essential elements of a story: character, conflict, and resolution.
The term covers several sub-forms:
- Flash fiction: Generally 500–1,000 words
- Sudden fiction: Up to 750 words
- Micro fiction: Under 300 words
- Drabble: Exactly 100 words
- Six-word stories: The most extreme form, popularised by the (possibly apocryphal) Hemingway example: "For sale: baby shoes, never worn."
Why Writers Love Flash Fiction
Flash fiction is having a renaissance. Here's why writers are drawn to it:
It builds discipline. When every word counts, you learn to cut ruthlessly. This skill transfers to all your writing.
It's achievable. You can draft a piece of flash fiction in an hour or less. For writers with busy lives, that's enormously freeing.
It rewards boldness. There's no room for slow builds. Flash fiction demands you take risks — with structure, voice, or subject matter.
It's widely published. Many literary magazines, journals, and online platforms (including StorySloth) actively seek flash fiction. It's a great way to build a publication record.
How Flash Fiction Differs from Short Stories
The difference isn't just length — it's approach.
Scope: A short story can explore a theme from multiple angles. Flash fiction has room for one angle, one moment, one idea.
Character: In a short story, you develop characters through action and dialogue over multiple scenes. In flash fiction, character is conveyed through a single telling detail or choice.
Structure: Short stories have rising action, climax, and denouement. Flash fiction often starts in the middle of the action and ends at the moment of change — no warm-up, no cool-down.
Ending: Flash fiction endings tend to be more abrupt and resonant. The reader should feel the impact after the story is over, not during it.
How to Write Flash Fiction
Start at the crisis point. There's no space for setup. Drop the reader into the moment that matters.
Use one point of view. Multiple perspectives are luxuries you can't afford. Pick one character and commit.
Imply rather than explain. Let the reader fill in gaps. A well-placed detail can suggest an entire backstory without stating it.
Cut the opening. Write your draft, then delete the first paragraph. More often than not, the story is stronger without it.
End on resonance. The final line should change how the reader interprets everything that came before. It doesn't need to be a twist — it needs to land.
Read it aloud. In flash fiction, rhythm and sound matter almost as much as meaning. If a sentence doesn't flow, rewrite it.
Common Flash Fiction Structures
The single scene: One continuous moment — a conversation, a decision, an observation. The most common and most accessible structure.
The list: A series of items, rules, or instructions that gradually reveal a narrative. Think "Things Found in a Time Traveller's Pockets."
The reversal: The story sets up an expectation, then subverts it in the final lines.
The lyric: More concerned with language and imagery than plot. Closer to prose poetry, but still tells a story.
The frame: Opens and closes with the same image or line, but the meaning has shifted by the end.
Getting Published
Flash fiction is one of the most accessible forms to publish. Options include:
- Online platforms: StorySloth accepts flash fiction across all genres. Submit for free, get human-reviewed, and earn from reader engagement.
- Literary magazines: Many journals run flash-specific issues or sections. Check Submittable and The Grinder for open calls.
- Competitions: Flash fiction contests are common and often have lower entry fees than longer forms.
- Social media: Some writers build audiences by sharing flash fiction on platforms like Bluesky or Substack.
Flash fiction is a wonderful place to start your publishing journey. The turnaround is fast, the stakes feel lower, and you learn a tremendous amount about craft in the process.
Frequently Asked Questions
Flash fiction is generally under 1,000 words. Sub-categories include micro fiction (under 300 words) and drabbles (exactly 100 words).
Flash fiction is a form, not a genre. You can write flash fiction in any genre — horror, romance, literary fiction, sci-fi, or anything else.
Yes, but use it sparingly. Every line of dialogue in flash fiction should reveal character or advance the story. Cut any dialogue that exists purely for realism.
StorySloth, literary magazines, writing competitions, and platforms like Submittable. Flash fiction is widely published and many outlets actively seek it.
It's shorter, but not necessarily easier. The extreme brevity means every word must be precisely chosen. Many writers find flash fiction more technically demanding than longer forms.
Related Guides
Ready to put this into practice?
Publish your short story on StorySloth — free, human-reviewed, and your work reaches readers immediately.