
Amazon.com Review
"There are now not enough commercial magazines regularly publishing  literary fiction to count on the fingers of a single hand," says Rust  Hills. So why bother writing literary short stories, or books about  doing so? Because, says Hills, a longtime fiction editor at Esquire,  "what young writers want to write, or ought to want to write, is  literature." In Writing in General and the Short Story in Particular,  Hills examines "the essential techniques of fiction and how they  function." The short story is a tricky form, with no margin for error:  "The successful contemporary short story," says Hills, "will demonstrate  a more harmonious relationship of all its aspects than will any other  literary art form, excepting perhaps lyric poetry." Many of the  fictional elements discussed in this book will not be new to most  fiction writers. We know that stories must have beginnings, middles, and  ends; we know about epiphany and suspense and stock characters. But  Hills claims that much of how we look at fiction derives from drama  theory and from the formulas of "slick fiction" (fiction that once  served the purpose mindless television now serves). Learned but not  pedantic, Hills addresses these elements strictly in terms of literary  short fiction. 
An interesting side note here is Hills's discussion of the shift in  support for American writers. "It is no longer the book publishers and  magazines," he says, "but rather the colleges and universities that ...  provide the major financial support for the great majority of American  writers today." Given that, we might find it odd that this book comes  from a man best known for his magazine editing. But we shouldn't.  "Teaching fiction writing and editing magazine fiction have ... the same  rather odd ultimate purpose in common: trying to get someone else to  produce a fine short story." One caveat emptor: our copy of this edition  fell quite apart upon our first, gentle reading of it. --Jane Steinberg
Review
“When [Hills] writes about writing, we should all pay close attention.” -- Richard Yates
“Admirable, wise, and comradely.” -- John Leggett
"Every aspiring fiction writer ought to read this." --WRITER'S DIGEST 
Writing in General and the Short Story in Particular: An Informal Textbook
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