The October 2015 edition of Long Story, Short Journal by Irish writer Claire Hennessy is a reminder of the importance, even now, of Virginia Woolf's dictum: "A woman must have money and a room of her own..." if she is to be an artist. 'Small Rebellions' is the portrait of a talented young woman struggling against the tide of duty, obligation, and everyday minutiae, which is dragging her away from her own work inch by inch. Also featured in this edition is Marianna Santikou's photo 'Missed Opportunity'. READ 'SMALL REBELLIONS'.
Interstate by Patrick Chapman
The September 2015 edition of Long Story, Short Journal is 'Interstate' by Irish writer / poet / screenwriter, Patrick Chapman. 'Interstate' is a fractured David-Lynchian fairytale which explores how trauma can trigger an inescapable loop of regret and rumination, rendering even time powerless to heal. This month's edition also features a photo by American photographer Patrick Warner. READ 'INTERSTATE'.
The Vanishing Act by Connla Stokes →
The Vanishing Act by Irish writer Connla Stokes is the August 2015 edition of Long Story, Short Journal. In this tale, the 'lonely voice' in short stories turns humorous, when the hero decides to fling himself head-first into isolation, in a bid to reconnect with his loved ones. The satirical portrait of a writer in a severe stage of avoidance will be familiar to many who long for both escape, and creative notoriety. Read The Vanishing Act.
Snapshots by Eileen Keane
"I feel disengaged from my life, as if it is a series of stills from a film, or moments captured in images that I offer to the earth. I spread them out there and examine them and rearrange them as if by doing so I might somehow find answers. The older ones seem faded and when I look at them it’s as if my head fills with noise, but when I focus on the ones that link to this place, the din fades and the mellifluous sound of the clarinet takes its place."
Long Story, Short Journal's July 2015 edition is a unique tale from Hennessy-award winning writer Eileen Keane. 'Snapshots' examines tensions that affinity for one's 'home-place' can create in a relationship, while offering 'snapshot' portraits of the endurance and strength that can be drawn from love. CLICK HERE TO READ 'Snapshots'.
Tiny Dancer by Lisa Lang
"From her window she watched the street. There were people in good coats – with no pilling, no unflattering bulk – walking with clear purpose, cyclists gliding by. It was late afternoon, night was falling, and the alien, blue-rinsed light settled on her like a kind of despair. She had a sense of being adrift on a vast, indifferent ocean. Whether she ate her dinner or not, went to sleep or stayed awake all night, or even stopped existing, who was to know?"
Long Story, Short Journal's June 2015 edition is 'Tiny Dancer' : an examination of the solitude required for artistry, detailed in a portrait of a young dancer who is living away from home for the first time. Author Lisa Lang is the recipient of The Australian/Vogel Literary Award for her début novel Utopian Man. CLICK HERE TO READ 'TINY DANCER'.
Limbos by Stuart Snelson
"Contemplating the amassed seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months of irretrievable time wasted in this way, he wondered how they might better be served. He imagined time’s off-cuts, almost insignificant in themselves, pieced together, a patchwork of time passed uneventfully. The awkward lulls between events, every finger tapping, foot pacing, clock watching moment stitched together: an assemblage of salvaged time."
Long Story, Short Journal's May 2015 edition is 'Limbos' : a tale of fathers, daughters, tattoos, and time. Stuart Snelson's tightly woven, poetic prose makes for enjoyable reading, heightening very familiar scenarios of anxieties and loss to experiences of transcendent beauty. CLICK HERE TO READ 'LIMBOS'.
In My Father's House by Jane Hammons
It is summer and in the shallow valley bordering the Lincoln National Forest where my father lives, the light fades slowly. His house is made from fake adobe bricks. They were not molded by native hands from the ancient clay of the earth; they were not fired individually in round earthen ovens. He bought them at Capitan Lumber and Hardware, but still they are the dusty color of real adobe. Smooth and irregular, their corners are rounded like the edges of the earth. Pap, my grandfather, helped him build this house so that he could move out of the trailer parked behind the Win-Place-Show Laundromat near Ruidoso Downs Racetrack. This is my first visit to the new house, the only home my father has owned since he and my mother divorced more than 20 years ago.
'In My Father's House' by Californian writer Jane Hammons is the April 2015 edition of Long Story, Short Journal. The story takes readers on a Greyhound Bus to the desert home of a family who lives beyond gypsum sands, bat-filled caverns and nuclear weapon testing grounds. Despite radiation, separation, and illness, this is a tale of love and thriving. READ 'IN MY FATHER'S HOUSE'.
Sheela-na-Gig by Susan Burke-Trehy
She settled into her seat near the back of the bus, grateful that her dishevelled appearance would discourage the other passengers from sitting close to her. She had, in the last few weeks taken to dressing in dungarees, fleeces and wellies. Added to this were a few well chosen gardening titles from the library and a straw basket so that she just about passed for an organic farmer-type, the kind that would not look out of place on a bus bound for West Cork. As she peered out of the grimy bus window, she allowed the last glimpses of Cork to slip out of sight, pushing away any feelings of regret or fear. All is as it should be, she whispered under her breath...
The March 2015 edition of Long Story, Short Journal leads readers into the darker heart of spring with emerging writer Susan Burke-Trehy's 'Sheela-na-Gig'; photo by Alan McCord. Rose Hawthorn is on the verge of a new life, returning to her childhood home to settle an old debt in a tale that merges a contemporary narrative of estrangement with an undercurrent of Irish mythology. CLICK HERE TO READ 'SHEELA-NA-GIG'.
Join the Long Story, Short publication team!
Passionate about literature? Interested in building a quality home for outstanding and challenging fiction? The Long Story, Short Journal is currently looking for a Publicity Manager, an Editorial Assistant and an Art Editor. Interested individuals should forward a very brief CV outlining previous experience, whether academic, volunteer or professional, to longstoryshortjournal@gmail.com . Additional details can be found below regarding the application process for each individual position. As this journal does not receive funding, these are unpaid roles (as is the role of the Publisher/Editor in Chief); the workload is estimated to be a commitment of roughly 10 hours per month.
About Long Story, Short Journal
The Long Story, Short Journal was established in September 2012 by Jennifer Matthews, as a home for longer fiction which had difficulty finding publication in print journals where word-counts were restricted to 3000 or less. The journal features both emerging and professional writers from around the world (but includes a significant proportion of stories from Ireland, where the journal is based). The average monthly readership is solid and growing, with most stories getting upwards of 150 or 200 (real, non-robot, no bounce-back) readers. We’d like to grow the readership, and spread the love for the long short story.
Publicity Manager
The ideal candidate is passionate about spreading the word about great stories, and an avid reader of short stories themselves (being familiar with contemporary writers is a must). You should be a fluent Twitterer and at home on Facebook, as this role will include promoting current stories on social media multiple times weekly, and creating blog posts at Short Stops monthly to help get the word out about new stories. Additionally, the Editor in Chief and the Publicity Manager will liaise to create a strategy to increase the readership of Long Story, Short Journal, reaching out to other fiction resources on the web and beyond. The Publicity Manager will also link up with past contributing writers of the journal, spreading the word about their newest publications, awards and book launches as appropriate on social media. Candidates familiar with interpreting metrics would be most welcome, but this is not required. Along with your CV, please choose a previously published story from Long Story, Short Journal and include an example of one Facebook post and two Tweets you would have used to promote that story in a creative, attention-catching, but professional manner.
Editorial Assistant
The ideal candidate would be an individual who has at least once fantasised about defacing a sign with incorrect use of an apostrophe, and for whom the pitfalls of autocorrect are navigable. Proofreading stories in a timely manner and working to a deadline are central to this role. Stylistic editing issues will remain with the Editor-in-Chief, but suggestions which are in keeping with the author’s intentions will always be welcome. Additional duties include replying to general email queries on a weekly basis, and issuing acknowledgement of submissions on a daily basis during submission periods. When a candidate sends their CV, they will be given a sample text (2 – 3 paragraphs) for the purpose of making proofreading suggestions as part of the application process. Candidates should be aware that this is a journal for longer short stories—although most texts centre around 6000 or 7000 words, there is the potential for being asked to work with a piece which runs 15,000 words or more.
Art Editor
If you are an avid reader with a background in the visual arts (whether as a hobbyist or a professional), this position is ideal for you. The Art Editor will work under a strict deadline to source a photograph, and written permission to use the photograph, for each issue. Although this role will be largely independent, approval from the Editor-in-Chief will be required before permission to use the photo is sought. Additionally, the Art Editor will take on a one-off side-project of sourcing a new Squarespace template for the journal, to give the publication a new look. Along with your CV, please choose a previously published story from the archives of Long Story, Short Journal for which to suggest three alternative photographs from sites such as Flickr or DeviantArt. (This is only an exercise—please do not contact the photographer.) Send links to your photo suggestions on for your in the body of the application email. Applicants must love reading, and the photographs should echo elements within the stories. They aren’t illustrations, and needn’t ‘match’ the plot or characters, but must somehow reflect the tone or themes found within the story.
The Alexandra Role
Dear Ms. Neumann, I have already drafted this letter many times. I think, when I write it now, that I am no longer writing to you but to myself, or Alexandra. If I were a religious or a romantic man I might propose God, but you have usurped his claim to omniscience, and He could never forgive me better than you.
February's edition of Long Story, Short Journal is Sydney Weinberg's 'The Alexandra Role' with a photo by Jillian Lukiwski. 'The Alexandra Role' takes Barthes's death of the author for a walk around Nabokovian territory, in a narrative which is both witty and haunting. Romance has well and truly passed in this tale where the feminine has gone missing, and a replacement is being recruited. READ 'THE ALEXANDRA ROLE'.
An Optical Illusion
He should have had the decency to die while they were still married, Anna thought. He should have widowed her. There was dignity in that.
January 2015's edition of Long Story, Short Journal is Eimear Ryan's 'Optical Illusion', a tale of woman who must carefully navigate her ex-husband's funeral--a return to a once familiar setting, now made strange. Eimear Ryan is an up-and-coming Irish writer, featured alongside the likes of Pat McCabe, Mary Costello and Colin Barrett in Faber's Town and Country anthology of new Irish writing. CLICK HERE TO READ OPTICAL ILLUSION.
What Happened at Alamein
It's now three days since the other brought me my last meal. I know it's three days because I've checked through the door flap six times, once each morning and evening, but the tray I pushed out on Sunday night is still there. Or rather it isn't any more, I pulled it back in this morning. There were a few grains of rice still stuck to the plate, plastered to the unhealthy-looking gravy stain. I picked them off and chewed them slowly one by one, washing them down with water. At least I have an unlimited supply of tap water. One can survive for a long time on water.
December 2014's edition of Long Story, Short Journal is a Kafkaesque psychological puzzler: 'What Happened at Alamein', with a photo courtesy Curtis Poe. Readers are brought inside the attic hideaway of a recluse who has seemingly been abandoned by his minder, who is also his twin brother. Author Robert Grossmith has published one print novel 'The Empire of Lights' with Hamish Hamilton, as well as two e-novels. CLICK HERE TO READ 'WHAT HAPPENED AT ALAMEIN.'