**Update: I have decided to extend this contest until October 15th in the hopes of garnering more entries. Any questions or comments, please share below!**
For this month's contest, I want you to experiment writing from different points of view within one piece. This is something many of my favorite authors do: Michael Ondaatje, William Faulkner, and Sandra Cisneros, just to name a few.
Here are the contest rules:
Compose a flash fiction piece of 300 - 1,000 words in length. The piece must adhere to the characteristics of flash fiction -- you must have a protagonist, a conflict, and a resolution. Here are some more guidelines:
- Your story must be written from the first person perspective, and from 2-5 distinct points of view. This is your most important rule -- any entries that do not follow this guideline will be disqualified. - Your narrators can be any combination of gender, age, race, etc. you like. Your choice! - The genre is flexible -- write in whatever style you feel comfortable, but remember to keep it PG. - The setting/time is also flexible -- feel free to play with time and location.
You have until October 15, 11:59 PM (EST) to enter. Write your entry as you would any other story on Protagonize, and then come back here and provide the link in a comment so that we can read it.
I will be announcing the winner on October 16th. The winning piece will feature the best use of varied perspective, so I invite you to experiment with voice.
Should you have any questions, post them in the comments below. Good luck! :D
Wow, this is amazing! I suddenly remembered about this group today, only to see that you just posted this next challenge. Sounds like fun, and I'll get working on it!
I know, I've been slacking with this group -- I'm in the midst of finishing up my thesis and will finally have time again to devote to our little group. I can't wait to see what you create! :-)
@Juliia Write your entry as you would any other story on Protagonize, and then come back here and provide the link in a comment so that we can read it. :-)
So I don't know that this fits the bill, since it's not really a bunch of characters in the same moment but quite a bit more linear (and it's about 12 words over)-- still, figured I'd post it up since I started it with writing for this in mind: http://www.protagonize.com/story/gone-horribly-awry
Honestly I could write an argument for all the reasons why this shouldn't meet the guidelines/should not win the contest, but I'll try to avoid self sabotaging for the moment. :D
@schuleg Apologies, sickness and work responsibilities have kept me away from Protag. Sad times! But I'm back, thank goodness, and I would love to read whatever you've got. :)
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For this month's contest, I want you to experiment writing from different points of view within one piece. This is something many of my favorite authors do: Michael Ondaatje, William Faulkner, and Sandra Cisneros, just to name a few.
Here are the contest rules:
Compose a flash fiction piece of 300 - 1,000 words in length. The piece must adhere to the characteristics of flash fiction -- you must have a protagonist, a conflict, and a resolution. Here are some more guidelines:
- Your story must be written from the first person perspective, and from 2-5 distinct points of view. This is your most important rule -- any entries that do not follow this guideline will be disqualified.
- Your narrators can be any combination of gender, age, race, etc. you like. Your choice!
- The genre is flexible -- write in whatever style you feel comfortable, but remember to keep it PG.
- The setting/time is also flexible -- feel free to play with time and location.
You have until October 15, 11:59 PM (EST) to enter. Write your entry as you would any other story on Protagonize, and then come back here and provide the link in a comment so that we can read it.
I will be announcing the winner on October 16th. The winning piece will feature the best use of varied perspective, so I invite you to experiment with voice.
Should you have any questions, post them in the comments below. Good luck! :D
Honestly I could write an argument for all the reasons why this shouldn't meet the guidelines/should not win the contest, but I'll try to avoid self sabotaging for the moment. :D