Northland Writers In Flash Fiction Finals

Michael Botur

Northlanders have achieved highly in this year’s National Flash Fiction Day competition, which celebrates one of the shortest forms of creative writing.

13-year-old Jana Heise, who was raised in Whangarei, won the NFFD Youth Award on June 22. Her story was performed, with those of other Northland and national finalists, at a workshop and open mic event on June 24 in Kawakawa. This was put on by Bay of Islands resident Kathy Derrick, who is a National Flash Fiction Day Committee city chair.

Former Whangarei writer Lola Elvy was in the youth top ten shortlists and Michael Botur was longlisted three times. Lola’s mother Michelle Elvy, who lived in Opua and Whangarei from 2008 to 2014, is one of the editors of the Bonsai anthology. This will be published in August by Canterbury University Press. That collection includes at least six Northland flash fiction writers.

Flash fiction is a form of storytelling with a strict 300-word limit. National Flash Fiction Day is celebrated each year on the shortest day. This year’s competition attracted around 500 entries.

Northland has just three percent of the country’s population but achieves disproportionately well at flash fiction. Flash fiction took off nationwide after Ms Elvy and friends published the first edition of Flash Frontier magazine in 2012. Highest-placed Northland writer and top ten NFFD finalists Vivian Thonger of Kerikeri said when she arrived in Northland four years ago Whangarei was “a flash-fiction writing hotspot where people at all levels of experience could learn and hone their short-form writing skills.”

Thonger said flash fiction can be addictive. “It doesn’t take long to write a piece, yet it’s a delicate game trying to fit meaning and tension into 300 words or fewer. It’s a kick getting published, and it feels less painful when you’re rejected; you bounce back and try again quickly, or have several pieces on the go at once.”

“Many of us have a collection of vignettes, of unforgettable moments, stuck in our heads; flash is a way to bring those snippets to life as a feeling evoked, or a brief encounter leaping off the page, real or imagined, like a frisson of truth or recognition passing between you and the reader.”

Other organisers of the Kawakawa event included Whangarei author Martin Porter, a National Flash Fiction Competition Committee member. Kathy Derrick is also judging the Whangarei Libraries Flash Fiction competition 2018, which is having its prizegiving on June 27.

Vivian Thonger’s Bay of Islands Writers Group is looking for more members. Contact vthonger@gmail.com to join.

 

 

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