Description: This class will explore the components of fiction (e.g., voice, dialogue, plot) in a variety of short stories and observe how short story writing has evolved through literary history. Participants will use knowledge, writing exercises, and discussions from the class to write their own story or build on a project they already have. Instruction will include assigned readings from great writers (traditionally published and from online magazines), stimulating writing prompts, and encouraging discussions about celebrated short stories to help reflect on what makes meaningful and effective work.
Each week we will focus on a different element of fiction such as voice, dialogue, plot, character, and setting, through brief lectures and examples from short stories. Writing prompts will be given to help stimulate writing practice and craft new work. Participants will be given opportunities to share their work and receive brief feedback to help magnify their writing strengths and review what works for readers. Writers will walk away with a better sense of how each element of fiction can strengthen a story and what their own writing may be asking of them to better communicate their story. Whether you are brand new to fiction writing, need inspiration, or looking to polish up on fiction fundamentals, you are welcome to Introduction to Fiction: Components of Short Stories.
Nardine Taleb is a speech-language pathologist and a writer. She worked as a prose editor at Gordon Square Review for several issues. She is the author of warda, published in 2023 by Passengers Press. Her poetry and fiction stories have been published in award-winning online journals including Electric Literature, The Offing, The Rumpus, Rattle, Frontier Poetry, Tinderbox Poetry Journal, and others.