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Bewildering Stories

Challenge 312

Let’s Begin at the End...


  1. In Bertrand Cayzac’s “Floozman and the Traveling Entertainers,” what might account for Floozman’s failure with the people in wheelchairs? What events in parts 1-5 might foreshadow the ending?

  2. S. H. Linden’s “A Stacked Deck” ends in a bloodbath:

    1. Are the murders justified?
    2. Who kills Lord Rivington?
    3. Would it be poetic justice if Faust expired of his wounds?
  3. In John W. Steele’s “Birdman”:

    1. What role does hair and hair color play in the story?
    2. What are the stages by which Leonard becomes progressively delusional?
    3. Does anything suggest a cause for Leonard’s condition?
  4. What is the symbolic significance of the hamster Frankie at the end of Dylan Fox’s “The 14:08 from Liverpool Street”?

  5. Michael D. Brooks’ “The Water Cooler Conspiracy”:

    1. Are Sally and Rosie different characters or the same character?
    2. Do the characters’ grievances justify murder?
    3. Is the story a true story or a vignette?
    4. What ending might be added to play out the story as a tragedy?
    5. How might the same scenario be played as a comedy?
  6. If freedom consists in having choices and being able to make them, what freedom does the narrator have in Neil Crabtree’s “Assume”?

  7. Explain the joke in Oonah V Joslin’s “Don’t Grow on Trees.” In what way might it be a social satire? Is it a vignette or a story?

  8. Why might Stuart Sharp’s “Anti-Haiku” qualify as an exception to our editorial policy of not publishing minimalist poetry?


Responses welcome!

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