As you recall, we’ve started a new feature on this blog called No Small Tales. The idea is to publish one short story a month by and up-and-coming author. In case you missed it, our first installment can be found here, with a second coming next week.
You won’t see many stories with more than 3,000 words on No Small Tales, or with fewer than 1,000. We just feel that’s a nice length for the average short story. But as you can imagine, there are entire Web sites devoted to other short story formats, which, it turns out, have pretty cool names and ideologies.

As the name perhaps implies, these stories are short, easily read in one sitting. They’re generally between 250 and 1,000 words; though I’ve seen some sites offer slightly longer selections and still call them flash fiction (though they’ll often refer to the slightly longer versions as sudden fiction.)
Here are a few sites that keep the offerings to fewer than 1,000 words:
EveryDayFiction.com has no minimum word count, but 1,000 max
365Tomorrows.com These guys are mainly publishing science flash fiction, with a 600 word max
Even shorter than flash fiction, a drabble tries to tell a story in exactly 100 words, with a proper beginning, middle, and end. Here are a couple good sites worth checking out:
100Words.com, is an offshoot of the original drabble site, 100words.net started by Jeff Koyen and Roy Batchelor.
Flashshot sticks mostly to science fiction, fantasy, horror, and mystery genres. Unlike 100words, these stories can be fewer than 100 words, so long as they don’t go over.
Slightly longer than the drabble, but shorter than flash fiction, we have nano fiction, sometimes called micro fiction, usually weighing in at about 500 words.
A good site for nano fiction is, surprise, surprise, NanoFiction.org. They publish stories of no more than 300 words.
Also check out Rumble.sy2.com.
For those interested in horror, there’s MicroHorror.com, which humorously bends the limit up to 666 words.
A form of nano/flash fiction, the 55er contains only 55 words, as the name implies. Some Web sites limit the content and form a little more.
For some examples of the 55er, check out 55Fiction.com and 55-fiction.org.
This genre is pretty self-explanatory. OneSentence.org tends to do non-fiction, but for some real short authentic one sentence fiction, check out OnlineFlashFiction.com.
this was an awesome post! thank you
posted by kat on 2-5-2009 at 10:58 am
Thanks for the link to Flash Fiction Online!
I’d also like to highlight the Drabblecast, a weekly flash fiction podcast that often publishes drabbles (surprise!) as well as longer stories. Norm Sherman’s production is awesome. I can’t publish a link, so just Google “drabblecast” and it’s the first entry.
posted by Jake Freivald on 2-5-2009 at 11:13 am
Yea 55 word stories these are called poems! Some form of contemporary poetry.
posted by Mike on 2-5-2009 at 11:25 am
I actually took a creative writing class in microfiction a few years ago. I tend to be (putting it nicely) a rambling writer. If nothing else, it was great to learn how to strip out all but the most vital information in a piece. I still ramble, but love to challenge myself to a micro piece every now and then!
posted by JenPo on 2-5-2009 at 1:45 pm
The Bulwer-Lytton Fiction contest beats the one sentence stories any day…
posted by SIL Julie on 2-5-2009 at 3:32 pm
Thanks for this!
posted by Tricia on 2-5-2009 at 8:50 pm
Thanks for the mention. It’s good to know there are people out there making the Web a better and more linked up place :-)
posted by Rob Hopcott on 2-6-2009 at 4:21 am
Thanks for the genre description mate.
posted by Naresh on 2-6-2009 at 9:19 pm
Thanks for the mention of 365tomorrows. To JenPo’s comment about Flash Fiction teaching you how to trim out all but the most vital, that’s absolutely true. It not only helps develop a clear, concise writing style, but also develops merciless editing abilities, both skills that you can apply to writing of any length.
posted by Stephen R. Smith on 2-7-2009 at 12:02 am
Cousin Casey and I have gone to FanFiction.net, and boy, oh, boy! We found a lot of drabbles there!
posted by Jen Pen on 2-7-2009 at 9:01 am
There is also six-word stories on www sixwordstories net.
posted by Dilyan on 2-22-2009 at 3:23 pm