The idea for
100 Word Story originated when Faulkner read Paul Strohm's 100-word stories that were published in
Eleven Eleven Magazine. At the time, Faulkner was working on a long novel, and he became entranced by writing in such a succinct, compressed form. In a 2014 interview, Faulkner explained:"Writing these smaller pieces was a nice break, and since I could squeeze them into a somewhat-frenzied life as a working parent, they gave me a great sense of creative satisfaction ... I could actually finish something."In 2011, Faulkner and Mundell decided to create a journal that was exclusively dedicated to 100-word stories; this journal became
100 Word Story. Beret Olsen came on as photo editor in 2014. In 2015, Faulkner published a collection of his own 100-word stories,
Fissures. He has also contributed essays about flash fiction to
The New York Times, Poets & Writers, ''Writer's Digest,
and The Writer.'' Regarding the challenge of the form, Faulkner and Mundell are often asked if a story can be told in only 100 words; however, they have both argued that most of the stories they publish have the same
three-act structure of a conventional short story. Mundell described a good 100-word story as the following:" One-fourth character, one-fourth setting, one-fourth point of view, one-fourth plot. Fold all together gently, layering into a Pyrex dish. Heat it up in the oven or stow it in the freezer, depending on how you want it to taste. Then let it sit overnight. Test with a tablespoon. If it stands up, the story is ready. If not, wait another day. Serve on a paper plate."In another essay, Faulkner said that he learned that each line of a flash story carries a symbolic weight that moves the story forward; at the same time, gaps within and around the story speak as large as the text itself. == Publications ==