Challenge 312
Let’s Begin at the End...
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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?
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S. H. Linden’s “A Stacked Deck” ends in a bloodbath:
- Are the murders justified?
- Who kills Lord Rivington?
- Would it be poetic justice if Faust expired of his wounds?
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In John W. Steele’s “Birdman”:
- What role does hair and hair color play in the story?
- What are the stages by which Leonard becomes progressively delusional?
- Does anything suggest a cause for Leonard’s condition?
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What is the symbolic significance of the hamster Frankie at the end of Dylan Fox’s “The 14:08 from Liverpool Street”?
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Michael D. Brooks’ “The Water Cooler Conspiracy”:
- Are Sally and Rosie different characters or the same character?
- Do the characters’ grievances justify murder?
- Is the story a true story or a vignette?
- What ending might be added to play out the story as a tragedy?
- How might the same scenario be played as a comedy?
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If freedom consists in having choices and being able to make them, what freedom does the narrator have in Neil Crabtree’s “Assume”?
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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?
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Why might Stuart Sharp’s “Anti-Haiku” qualify as an exception to our editorial policy of not publishing minimalist poetry?
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