Bonsai: Best small stories from Aotearoa New Zealand

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Bonsai: Best small stories from Aotearoa New Zealand
Authors and Contributors      Edited by Michelle Elvy
Edited by Frankie McMillan
Edited by James Norcliffe
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:296
Dimensions(mm): Height 215,Width 165
Category/GenreProse - non-fiction
ISBN/Barcode 9781927145982
ClassificationsDewey:NZ820.8
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Canterbury University Press
Imprint Canterbury University Press
Publication Date 1 December 2018
Publication Country New Zealand

Description

Bonsai brings together a pioneering collection of flash fiction and associated forms (prose poetry and haibun) from 165 writers in Aotearoa New Zealand, along with intriguing essays on this genre. In 200 stories of no more than 300 words, where the translucent boundaries between prose and poetry are often transgressed, we discover a vast array of human experience. Here, children race snails, learn to fly, and look for Antarctica in a drain pipe, while Schroedinger's cat dreams of life and death, a dog licks away a woman's tears, and a peacock guards its human family. Family tensions spill over, babies are born and parents die. There are perfect moments in miniature as dew falls on a spider's web and strangers make eye contact. Composed with precision in a form where every word counts, these carefully chiselled works are provocative, tender and endlessly surprising.

Author Biography

Michelle Elvy is a writer and editor of flash fiction whose recent work appears in `New Micro Fiction' (WW Norton, 2018). Among her many editing roles she is editor at `Flash Frontier'. Frankie McMillan has been called `our maestro of flash fiction'. Her book `My Mother and the Hungarians, and other small fictions' (CUP, 2016) was long-listed for the Ockham Book Awards. James Norcliffe is a poet, editor and writer for children. He is editor at `Flash Frontier' and has published nine collections of poetry, including `Dark Days at the Oxygen Cafe' (VUP, 2016).