Practitioners have included
Saadi of Shiraz ("
Gulistan of Sa'di"),
Bolesław Prus,
Anton Chekhov,
O. Henry,
Franz Kafka,
H. P. Lovecraft,
Yasunari Kawabata,
Ernest Hemingway,
Julio Cortázar,
Daniil Kharms,
Arthur C. Clarke,
Richard Brautigan,
Ray Bradbury,
Kurt Vonnegut Jr.,
Fredric Brown,
John Cage,
Philip K. Dick, and
Robert Sheckley. Hemingway also wrote 18 pieces of flash fiction that were included in his first short-story collection,
In Our Time (1925). While it is often alleged that (to win a bet) he also wrote the flash fiction "
For Sale, Baby Shoes, Never Worn", various iterations of the story date back to 1906, when Hemingway was only seven years old, rendering his authorship implausible. Also notable are the 62 "short-shorts" which comprise
Severance, the thematic collection by
Robert Olen Butler in which each story describes the remaining 90 seconds of conscious awareness within human heads which have been decapitated. Contemporary English-speaking writers well known for their published flash fiction include
Lydia Davis,
David Gaffney,
Robert Scotellaro, and
Nancy Stohlman,
Sherrie Flick,
Bruce Holland Rogers,
Steve Almond,
Barbara Henning,
Grant Faulkner. Spanish-speaking literature has many authors of microstories, including
Augusto Monterroso ("
El Dinosaurio") and
Luis Felipe Lomelí ("
El Emigrante"). Their microstories are some of the shortest ever written in that language. In Spain, authors of
microrrelatos (very short fictions) have included
Andrés Neuman,
Ramón Gómez de la Serna,
José Jiménez Lozano,
Javier Tomeo,
José María Merino,
Juan José Millás, and
Óscar Esquivias. In his collection
La mitad del diablo (Páginas de Espuma, 2006),
Juan Pedro Aparicio included the one-word story
Luis XIV, which in its entirety reads: "Yo" ("I"). In Argentina, notable contemporary contributors to the genre have included
Marco Denevi,
Luisa Valenzuela, and
Ana María Shua. The Italian writer
Italo Calvino consciously searched for a short narrative form, drawing inspiration from Argentine writers
Jorge Luis Borges and
Adolfo Bioy Casares and finding that Monterroso's was "the most perfect he could find"; "El dinosaurio", in turn, possibly inspired his "The Dinosaurs". German-language authors of
Kürzestgeschichten, influenced by brief narratives penned by
Bertolt Brecht and
Franz Kafka, have included
Peter Bichsel,
Heimito von Doderer,
Günter Kunert, and
Helmut Heißenbüttel. The
Arabic-speaking world has produced a number of microstory authors, including the
Nobel Prize-winning Egyptian author
Naguib Mahfouz, whose book
Echoes of an Autobiography is composed mainly of such stories. Other flash fiction writers in Arabic include
Zakaria Tamer,
Haidar Haidar, and
Laila al-Othman. In the Russian-speaking world, the best known flash fiction author is
Linor Goralik. In the southwestern
Indian state of
Kerala,
P. K. Parakkadavu is known for his many microstories in the
Malayalam language. Hungarian writer
István Örkény is known (beside other works) for his
One-Minute Stories. ==Journals==