Short Stories: December 14, 2022 Issue [#11699]
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 This week: by: Artificial Intelligence
  Edited by: Annette Author IconMail Icon
                             More Newsletters By This Editor  Open in new Window.

Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

“So many people can now write competent stories that the short story is in danger of dying of competence.” ― Flannery O'Connor


Word from our sponsor



Letter from the editor

by: Artificial Intelligence


For most of human history, stories were one of the few things that separated humans from the rest of creation.
Stories, fables, fairy tales were passed down from one generation to the next. Each generation who got to be the storytellers changed those stories up to fit the morals and societal needs of their time.

One such example are Grimm's Fairy Tales. The Brothers Grimm were the first to collect, compile, and write up the European tales that were told to children as bed time stories for centuries. The oldest story collections are brutal and full of peril that is no longer considered appropriate for children's fiction. The proof of that is how Disney, another company that took those old tales and made them into movies, bowdlerized those tales to be innocent and cute instead of threatening and dark. Newer collections of Grimm's Fairy Tales also leave out another part that is no longer comfortable. Some of those tales were extremely anti-Semitic - but those aren't the ones our children are told anymore. Humans made the decision to leave those stories out.

Grimm's Fairy Tales are only one example of large collections of folktales that were told, written down, adapted, changed up, and made more shiny over the generations. Every culture has tales to explain the natural world, behaviors, gender roles, and stories to remember history. Stories are a human need.

Now, we have entered the age of automatically generated stories. It started out with almost harmless phrase generators that would simply mix up verbs and nouns to make basic statements. It grew with the automatic generation of writing prompts. Now, there is software that will not just help a human to organize a book. There is software that will write the whole story or book from just a few keywords.

Why is that a problem?

Simple. When you became a reader, you started interacting with fiction and non-fiction on your own terms. The written word was no longer filtered through the voice, cadence, tone of someone telling the story. Instead of being influenced by a parent or teacher, you could now be influenced by an author who lives half-way around the world or who lived in a different century. That author was human. It was a human, with all the nuances and faults who was speaking to you.

Artificial intelligence writing books for children, youth, and adults has arrived. Those stories and books get published and people read them. Feelings, emotions, thoughts are now coming out of a can. Machines are now empowered to also omit uncomfortable truths and shape the human experience and knowledgebase.


Are you going to let a robot tell you how to think, love, and live?


Editor's Picks

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What a Character! : Official WDC Contest Open in new Window. (E)
Create a memorable character using the given prompt for huge prizes!
#1679316 by Writing.Com Support Author IconMail Icon

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FORUM
SENIOR CENTER FORUM Open in new Window. (ASR)
The Place for Seniors!
#427318 by Kitti the Red-Nosed Feline Author IconMail Icon

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Magic Words Contest  Open in new Window. (13+)
A fantasy short story contest. Fantastic Prizes. Closed
#1871010 by A E Willcox Author IconMail Icon

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Twenty-three in Eleven  Open in new Window. (13+)
I Write in 2023
#2284057 by Annette Author IconMail Icon

 Chaotic Love Open in new Window. (13+)
Mark tries to organize his husband's life
#2286468 by Aurora Elwood Author IconMail Icon

 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#2286459 by Not Available.

 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#2286445 by Not Available.

 Fiction Factory Open in new Window. (E)
A future where novels and stories are written by machines. A Young man yearns for change.
#2286438 by Damon Nomad Author IconMail Icon

 Fiery Bargain Open in new Window. (13+)
Finan strikes a unique bargain in exchange for warmth on a cold winter's night.
#2286434 by Aiva Raine Author IconMail Icon

 
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Aflame Open in new Window. (13+)
A figure cowers in the dark of night, while another cozys by the fire, what will happen?
#2286425 by Bottle O’ Nyquil Author IconMail Icon

 
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Ask & Answer

I received these replies to my last Short Stories newsletter "Very Short Short StoriesOpen in new Window. that asked: Can you tell a whole story in just a few words?

Elisa: Snowman Stik Author Icon wrote: I'm pretty sure I could prove Bradbury wrong and write 52+ bad (really horrendous) short short stories in a row. I probably won't do it, though, because short short stories remind me of memes. The older I get, the more I LOATHE memes.

You could try to prove Bradbury wrong, but then you'd find that one elementary school teacher who doesn't know that you're not in second grade and she would be gushing over your writing. There is also an art to write horrendous stories.

QueenNormaJean snow?forgetit.. Author Icon wrote: Thank you for featuring my micro-fiction. It truly is a challenge to write short short stories.

It truly is a challenge to make a short text into a complete story.

Beholden Author Icon wrote: Thank you very much for including my Microscopic Stories amongst your Editor's Picks.

You're welcome.

Elfin Dragon-finally published Author Icon wrote: Though Flash Fiction can be a bit tough for me, I can indeed tell a story in just a few words. I think as poets we have an advantage in this type of storytelling. We're used to conveying an idea in a few words.

Poetry and story telling in a few words intersect. I can see that.

Sumojo Author Icon wrote: Hi, Annette, thank you for including some entries for the 100 word Drabble activity.
Micro-fiction can be a tricky thing to do. Great practice though for getting to the nitty gritty of the story without any superfluous words.
Good explanation of the genre.

I found the micro-fiction challenge fascinating too.

There was one more reply to my previous Short Stories newsletter "Just A GlanceOpen in new Window. that asked: Do you enjoy reading stories where you are dropped into the plot and expected to accept it the way you find it?

Elfin Dragon-finally published Author Icon wrote: I'm one of those people that when I see a book that interests me I want to read it right away. But... then I see it's number three in a series. *Shock* To me it doesn't matter if the books can be read as individual tales, I have to find that first book so I can get a sense of what the characters are all about. I want to know how they ended up in the third book. But that's just me.

Not just you. I don't read third books either without having read the preceding books. That is why I absolutely loathe it when I find a book that looks enticing and it doesn't announce that it is from a series- or which volume in a series.

*Bullet* *Bullet* *Bullet* Don't Be Shy! Write Into This Newsletter! *Bullet* *Bullet* *Bullet*

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