Since our launch week, we've been wrapping up Rahawa Haile's Short Story of the Day project every Saturday. Now that the project is ended, she was nice enough to sit down with us and talk about it. Look for a new thing for us, coming this Saturday.
You’ve been working on this a year now.
-ish, yeah.
When did you start, exactly?
I started January 1st.
So you did start January 1st, so it’s almost a full year.
Yeah, it’s just that I’ve been slacking in December for various life reasons, and I haven’t been able to update daily, which I feel a lot of guilt about. But, life happens, and nobody’s paying me, so…?
In that time, how has your life changed?
So the reason I started posting stories was that I needed something to ground me, because I thought the upcoming year would be…I shouldn’t say full of turmoil, but maybe more catastrophic than I’ve experienced. It’s been kind of wonderful to actually have that, to actually have a thing that’s going to bring me joy, the kind of hunt that I know is going to yield results no matter what, and to not know where they’re going to come from has been an absolute delight.
It seems that you would have been, before this, would have been like “hey, oh my gosh, I just read this great story by this person,” and most of the writers you were covering were not very well known. A lot of smaller writers, a lot of writers of color, which was important to you. Can you talk a bit about that, and, like, this idea of being a voice of advocacy for things that you love?
It’s very difficult to get short story collections published. And it’s a special kind of person who subscribes to several literary magazines just for the fun of it, who isn’t also a writer, and is able to purchase as many books as they’d like.
So, I just started to see these smaller writers, especially women, and especially people of color, but other minorities as well, just kind of slip through the cracks. Because it’s so hard to publish a short story collection not tied to a novel, you know? And the people who do, and who often get praised, tend to be white men. I kind of touched on this in a previous interview, but it’s not just what gets seen, it’s who has access to MFA programs, you know, who can afford to incur that kind of debt, who can afford that kind of financial instability when they’re done with their program. If it seems as though there’s this entire literary system really meant to propel and celebrate white men, I assure you there is.
But those aren’t the only people writing. And in fact, they’re not always the most interesting people writing, despite whatever advantages they may have. I think, at a certain point, especially if you are a writer of color, you get tired of being told that the kind of narratives you encounter when you look for stories, are the only ones that exist. So, I wanted to have a way for people — for you know, allies, white allies, but also for minorities — to see themselves reflected every single day. That mattered a lot to me. And some people were more popular than others.
Of late, maybe the past four months, the stories have been constricted to the last five years, just because I haven’t had time to really delve into all the anthologies I would have liked to check out from the library, and hunt down books I had previously read that I wanted to screenshot but don’t own right now. That’s one of the things I was really trying to avoid, but I couldn’t. I just didn’t have the time.
I wanted people to see themselves reflected, but I also wanted the editors and agents who followed me on Twitter to have a daily reminder that there are so many people, who aren’t white men, writing brilliant words, and that perhaps they are worth pursuing. In fact, that’s how my agent found me.
Talk a little about that. So an agent found you through your story a day project…? That’s fantastic, congratulations! Can you talk about some of your own work and plans for the future?
Thank you! For the past few years I’ve had a really depressing day job that I’m quitting in February. Then, I’m hiking the Appalachian trail — or attempting to. I should rephrase that, I’m attempting to hike the Appalachian trail. It’s a self-preservation thing. There’s enough fear of failure as it is.
But then I plan to write full-time after that. I will be writing a lot more fiction in addition to journalism. The thing that has fallen away most while doing this project, and working a day job, and preparing for this hike is my own fiction. And I really miss it. I miss it the way one misses a loved one. I’m definitely looking forward to writing short stories again. That’s where my heart lies.
When you go on any kind of journey, and you come back home, home always looks a little bit different. How do you think, after reading so many short stories — maybe more than you were reading previously because of the deadline? — have you noticed any changes in approaching your own writing?
Yes. Great question, thank you. I’ve been asked by other people if I had a preexisting list of 365 short stories I wanted to share with the world. Like I just came home, and clicked tweet, and called it a day. But no, that one story that I shared came from going through, at minimum, twenty stories. Every single day. Granted, I wouldn’t necessarily get to the end of every potential story, but I would read enough to see if it was something I wanted to explore further. And that has been kind of a revelation to me.
I’ve heard fiction editors from literary magazines say what I’m about to say, but you learn a lot about how to write by reading other people’s writing. Especially people you respect, but also people who are doing good things that are just a hair shy of being great. It hits home when you see yourself and your writing tendencies and your shortcomings reflected that way. I feel as though I have a better grasp of how the things I’m not great at can be very effective in storytelling, and I will be actively working toward bettering those weaknesses in the near future. Probably after my hike — I have a hard time imagining bettering myself in any way that doesn’t involve running, or climbing stairs, or doing yoga, or squats, or anything that doesn’t strengthen my core before October. But yeah, I’ve gotten a much better grasp of what I don’t want to do, but also a better grasp of what I do that I can now see doesn’t work, repeatedly, in stories from all over the world, all different backgrounds, all different kinds of stories. Some things just aren’t enough.
One of those things for me is I’m not the biggest fan of dialog. I tend to write shorter pieces that don’t need a lot of it, but I can also recognize that those pieces could benefit from more than they currently have. And while reading many of these short stories this year — I gravitate towards flash fiction — but reading so many stories between 1,000 and 10,000 words, I’d see such a dependence on exposition that I'd think was detrimental. And I think it’s because it’s very hard to know how to get your characters to talk to one another when you haven’t really figured them out yet.
How much were you relying on internet journals, as opposed to print journals, and newer, smaller publications?
Here’s the thing about print journals not publishing many minority writers: It’s hard to turn to them when you’re looking for minority writers. But I would like to take a second to give a huge shout-out to Housing Works bookstore, which is a great organization, but they also have one of my favorite used anthology sections in New York, and also a backlog of literary magazines I was able to peruse in 2015. I discovered so many people who seemed like they were fairly big decades ago, who I guess popular culture has forgotten. So, that was great.
But at a certain point I had to come home and post a story, and all I had was the internet. When that happened, I started to look outside of America. I mean, historically there’s very much an “America is not the world” understanding within the short story tradition. One of the things I’ve mentioned to friends is that I don’t read enough works in translation. I don’t know what’s happening with the modern short story in most of South America. There was a Believer piece about these intense matches between writers that take place in Peruvian wrestling rings where they try to write the best short story they can in a few minutes…I don’t know if you saw that piece? It’s an intense piece.
But as far as what I actively pursue, and what people actively pursue, there’s only so much time. If I had to only depend on the internet…I often try to look outside of major metropolitan areas. Like, I don’t need another…you know, I’m happy to post New York short stories, but it starts to feel so insular. So yeah, I admit that one of the things I wish I had time to do better was to rely on a variety of sources. Originally it was a healthy mix of lit mags, and physical books and anthologies, and online magazines, and audio as well — a few podcasts here or there, and people reading their work…. You know, Conjunctions has a pretty decent archive of all of their issues, and there are many famous short story writers reading their pieces.
Another thing that just kind of blew my mind is the fact that many online journals don’t offer sample writing. No section that says ‘Hey! Here are some short stories we’ve published’. I don’t mean access to the entire journal, but seriously, no samples whatsoever. And I find that so confounding — I don’t understand how a tiny journal wants people to submit to it if they can’t read the kind of work the journal publishes.
I’ve always found that kind of difficult. When I was trying to write more for journals and get short stories published, which I’ve moved away from, but it was: you could invest in so many journals or go to libraries, but you could spend 40 or 50 hours looking through a single journal trying to understand what they want, which is time that is probably, for a young writer, better spent writing. It’s a really tricky proposition.
I think so. I think at a certain point you need to ask yourself who you’re writing for. Like, is the goal to get published so that you can say you were published somewhere, or is the goal to be read as widely as possible? I know that argument comes up a lot when people discuss whether writers should write for free, or should write for lower rates than they deserve. I can’t imagine working on a short story and not wanting it to be seen by as many people as possible, especially knowing that the monetary rewards are so minimal regardless of venue.
It seems like that the set piece is, whether or not you go to graduate school, to work through the journals, to get an agent’s attention, to try to get a novel deal. This is the path of so many writers, and I think there’s a huge swath of people who are interested only in short stories that don’t get as much attention, because they’re not as commercial potentially, or for whatever reason.
They don’t sell! I mean, that’s why. You see people who are like “Oh, the internet has shortened people's attention spans, and these shorter stories should be so popular.” But, yeah, short story collections don’t really sell as well as novels, which is why they’re not purchased by editors as often as novels. I mean, you know, it helps to have certain stories appear in certain reputable mags. But, it’s difficult. I can’t ever see myself exclusively writing short stories. But I think they’re worthwhile nonetheless. And I think if one puts forward the kind of energy needed into making a good one, it deserves to be celebrated. And I also think that one of the things that happens is that many minorities, for one reason or another, can’t place their stories in bigger magazines, and they end up in smaller magazines that probably have websites, but no samples available!
I really appreciate the project. The reason I asked for permission to wrap-up on the weekends is because I thought it was really important, and I loved the attention you were bringing, and the exposure, to writers I’d never heard of. So, personally, I really appreciate it. Is there anything I should have asked, or something you’d like to talk about?
I would like to make a small apology. One of the things I’ve realized is that my most accessible minority in 2015 was the white woman. I used many stories by white women. It wasn’t until the end of the year that I realized just how many. I think, without going too deep into the reasons why that might be and the importance of intersectionality, it’s something that I wasn’t aiming to do, but something I ended up doing. And that reveals certain biases of my own, ones I should have been better at catching that I can fully recognize now.
You know, the whole reason I put this project together was yes, I want to celebrate minorities, and that includes women, but often I ended up celebrating white women because they were the nearest ripple in the minority pool. I can’t emphasize how much of that had to do with time constraints; there are so many more easily accessible great short stories written by white women than there are by people of color. But still — when I look at this project, this seems to be its greatest weakness. I’ve taken note of that — and I plan to think about it more when it comes to how I discuss short stories, what I look for in them, and the extent to which that is a product of training.
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She's archiving the entire project on Storify.
Since Rahawa is ending this project at the end of the year, this is the third-to-last posting of our wrap-up. Two more to go, and then we launch something new on Saturdays, starting January 10th.
Short Story of the Day #342
Leena Khron's "Lucilia Illustris" (1992)
https://t.co/Vj5G1k4vmt pic.twitter.com/lz3Oo9F6q4
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 12, 2015
Short Story of the Day #343
Lulu Miller's "Me and Jane"
Catapult (2015)
https://t.co/XqkTke6GbK pic.twitter.com/281azNzFJm
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 12, 2015
Short Story of the Day #344
On a red-eye back to New York City, my last for what I suspect will be a very long time.
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 14, 2015
Short Story of the Day #345
Chelsea Laine Wells's "We Are the Hallwalkers"
Hobart (2015)
https://t.co/pPJcrfwBRM pic.twitter.com/k0qqi4yE3Q
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 16, 2015
Short Story of the Day #346
Megan Louise Rowe's "Lampshades"
SmokeLong (2015)
https://t.co/8gVHTxETDW pic.twitter.com/Q7oMlFybJ5
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 16, 2015
Short Story of the Day #347
Aysegul Savas's "The Road to Alpullu"
Guernica (2015)
https://t.co/tKcMH1Qyhu pic.twitter.com/5MQJHbEuVY
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 16, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She's archiving the entire project on Storify.
Rahawa also wrote this week in the Millions about her year in reading.
Short Story of the Day #334
Kat Howard's "Those Are Pearls"
Guillotine (2015)
https://t.co/boLRrMdQTf pic.twitter.com/PBoToQ6pdS
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 6, 2015
Short Story of the Day #335
Jessica Gross's "Call Me Eliza"
Litro (2015)
https://t.co/rpjIsHeNb1 pic.twitter.com/3Q2ulAxRs3
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 6, 2015
Short Sorry of the Day: It's been hard to keep up with this project as the year winds down and hiking prep increases. Thank you for reading.
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 6, 2015
Short Story of the Day #336
Sofia Samatar's "Meet Me in Iram"
Guillotine (2015)
https://t.co/boLRrMdQTf pic.twitter.com/Mplweh7RVl
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 6, 2015
Short Story of the Day #337-340
Please just buy Danticat's Krik? Krak! already. It's as relevant as ever. https://t.co/cdsGGBb21r
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 10, 2015
This is Short Story of the Day #341. It is also 500 subtweets.
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 11, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She's archiving the entire project on Storify
Short Story of the Day #331
Back from the woods. My toes are frozen. My shoulders ache. Trees now. Stories tomorrow. pic.twitter.com/imoU7bKj0u
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 30, 2015
Short Story of the Day #332
Rachel Kushner's "Fifty-Seven"
New Yorker (2015)
https://t.co/JPh8xFVp9p pic.twitter.com/pfZbAuDUMv
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 1, 2015
Short Story of the Day #333
Kathy Fish's "Collection Day"
New South (2015)
https://t.co/VBttQQztDh pic.twitter.com/pXcuGZySeU
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 2, 2015
Short Story of the Day #334
I've listened to Kelela's Hallucinogen more than any album this year. At her concert now and melting with joy.
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) December 3, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She's archiving the entire project on Storify
Short Story of the Day #323
I walked 16 miles with a full pack yesterday, and my feet feel fine today. This is progress. I am progressing.
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 22, 2015
Short Story of the Day #324
Meron Hadero's "Mekonnen aka Mack aka Huey Freakin’ Newton"
https://t.co/TnEXQhLhpn pic.twitter.com/t3ftyuuyX3
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 23, 2015
Short Story of the Day #325 and 326
It was a garbage day full of garbage people and I need some quiet. Here's a cat. pic.twitter.com/3LSLwNXYCF
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 24, 2015
Short Story of the Day #327
Margaret Divish's "Cycle Class"
Scintilla
https://t.co/rdqCzp4Ump pic.twitter.com/xQwK08Ygq0
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 26, 2015
Short Story of the Day #328-330
The rain has started. Fifteen miles to go. pic.twitter.com/EiQhZY0xgH
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 28, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She's archiving the entire project on Storify
Short Story of the Day #314
Kristen Arnett's "How to Eat Chicken Wings"
Tin House (2015)
https://t.co/NRnKsXIbNm pic.twitter.com/WFERCuXmzW
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 15, 2015
Short Story of the Day #315
Meg Pokrass's "Foreign Accent Syndrome"
elimae (2009)
https://t.co/bLkK0LbWaE pic.twitter.com/qyfkDgK6ur
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 15, 2015
Short Story of the Day #316
Ian Williams's "Commitme| Co| Commitment"
Joyland (2015)
https://t.co/LxE9hpn3Wt pic.twitter.com/ZhQcdcjt2Y
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 15, 2015
Short Story of the Day #317
Ling Ma's "Los Angeles"
Granta (2015)
https://t.co/NtAMkf0n8w pic.twitter.com/r1PNqEtD9l
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 15, 2015
Short Story of the Day #318
Megan Giddings's "The New Audacious Line"
New South (2015)
https://t.co/EIyHsFH2Jy pic.twitter.com/ZgEYPSYW7m
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 17, 2015
Short Story of the Day #319
Deborah Eisenberg's "Your Duck is My Duck"
Fence (2011)
https://t.co/p8CsKlm9S9 pic.twitter.com/Mo0P68usxw
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 18, 2015
Short Story of the Day #320
Rebecca Schiff's "It Doesn’t Have to Be a Big Deal" (2013)
https://t.co/nYJgUGvZyp pic.twitter.com/oZB4RbRAfE
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 20, 2015
Short Story of the Day #321
Do not despair. This paw will see you through the night and into a less evil tomorrow. pic.twitter.com/1itm6Tc6Rh
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 20, 2015
Short Story of the Day #322
Kevin T.S. Tang's "Toren"
Guernica (2015)
https://t.co/EEl8jVgcSQ pic.twitter.com/gvMUpHbnKI
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 21, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She's archiving the entire project on Storify
This week, Rahawa appeared, reading some of her own stories, on the Catapult podcast. You should spend some time there, so that when you read these posts on Saturdays, you'll hear Rahawa's voice when you read her tweets.
Short Story of the Day #308-310
I spent these days recovering. I didn't have it in me to read shorts. I love you, but sometimes I need time.
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 8, 2015
Short Story of the Day #311
Kiik Araki-Kawaguchi's "a marriage"
Portland Review (2014)
https://t.co/hy4n2w7Tec pic.twitter.com/kchfscm3fY
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 10, 2015
Short Story of the Day #312
Su-Yee Lin's "Westward, Ever Westward"
Okey Panky (2015)
https://t.co/qP56X81Q4L pic.twitter.com/6U4i4GUgrQ
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 11, 2015
Short Story of the Day #313
Alexandra Kleeman's "Hylomorphosis"
Conjunctions (2012)
https://t.co/MvKlSnzfmK pic.twitter.com/9DOTzje5mH
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 12, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She's archiving the entire project on Storify
Short Story of the Day #302
J. F. Powers's "Death of a Favorite
New Yorker (1950) pic.twitter.com/mKDtbsePjT
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 2, 2015
Short Story of the Day #303
J. F. Powers's "Defection of a Favorite"
New Yorker (1951) pic.twitter.com/ZYaIqqdsbL
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 2, 2015
Short Story of the Day #304
Lee Matalone's "Now We Must Speak in the Past Tense" (2015)
https://t.co/j3pxru3qOH pic.twitter.com/AYn3Ddb40V
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 3, 2015
Short Story of the Day #305
Sylwia Siedlecka's "Water Butterfly"
Guernica (2015)
https://t.co/guTPXrEyWr pic.twitter.com/AV6fVO6mLa
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 5, 2015
Short Story of the Day #306
Dani Sandal's "Compass"
Monkeybicycle (2012)
https://t.co/wMjRySwmas pic.twitter.com/y6uueLDFwP
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 5, 2015
Short Story of the Day #307
Maria Pinto's "Obituary"
https://t.co/fo9gbFD5yl
The Vignette Review (2015) pic.twitter.com/sIFUc4gQXu
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) November 6, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She's archiving the entire project on Storify
Short Story of the Day #296
I went for a walk and brought you back mountains. My legs I left behind. pic.twitter.com/MWzPRR0enh
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 25, 2015
Short Story of the Day #296
Elaine Chiew's "Aquarium"
SmokeLong (2015)
https://t.co/M80XsvrcLq pic.twitter.com/DsPbsJ5Yaa
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 26, 2015
Short Story of the Day #298
Joy Williams's "Chicken Hill"
New Yorker (2015)
https://t.co/Uu0KTOUkD0 pic.twitter.com/dDsKF5mLuq
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 27, 2015
Short Story of the Day #299
Lesley Nneka Arimah "What It Means When a Man Falls From the Sky
https://t.co/PEOWntJ1rT pic.twitter.com/YYarQvfupi
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 29, 2015
Short Story of the Day #300
Happy to announce I've signed with a literary agent who found me through short story of the day! Yayyyyyyy! 🎉
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 30, 2015
Short Story of the Day #301
Ottessa Moshfegh's "I Spent Some Time"
Unsaid (2012) pic.twitter.com/Qr69OB2OJw
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 30, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She's archiving the entire project on Storify
Short Story of the Day #289
Some gathered to watch the sky. pic.twitter.com/kOOYEeM8y8
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 18, 2015
Short Story of the Day #290
I'm on a red-eye back to NYC. Strangers spoke to me in Tigrinya every day in Oakland. I am weighing my options.
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 19, 2015
Short Story of the Day #291
Mary South's "Vogue la Galère"
The Collagist (2015)
https://t.co/e42Mw4ycjO pic.twitter.com/hiU8wEI59j
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 21, 2015
Short Story of the Day #292
Vincent Chu's "The Longhorns"
The Collapsar (2014)
https://t.co/LlE4D66klg pic.twitter.com/yFuTSo10aO
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 21, 2015
Short Story of the Day #293
Sarah Blackman's "Eena Eena Eena"
Fugue (2006) pg 137
https://t.co/JCECvdjknj pic.twitter.com/NHyBhsBOfx
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 22, 2015
Short Story of the Day #294
Meredith Alling's "Blue Diamonds"
Corium (2015)
https://t.co/ff3YBTaEPE pic.twitter.com/hHMDo5viE9
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 23, 2015
Short Story of the Day #295
Bonnie Jo Campbell's "My Bliss"
PANK (2015)
https://t.co/BpmjXJQK9A pic.twitter.com/8WCU2AGGPE
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 24, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She's archiving the entire project on Storify
Short Story of the Day #282
"Wait but what if instead of stereotypes you wrote the women in your novel like people?" pic.twitter.com/UQiLXxMyGZ
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 11, 2015
Short Story of the Day #283
Kawika Guillermo's "The Hole"
Birkensnake (2013)
http://t.co/LRbHbCeZWT pic.twitter.com/rmVqxEE65q
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 11, 2015
Short Story of the Day #284
Nicole Smith's "The Broken Pattern"
Meridian (2014)
http://t.co/u0aZxa2AKq pic.twitter.com/UQbAi57Ho7
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 13, 2015
Short Story of the Day #285
Meredith Turits's "You Told Me I Looked Good"
Hobart (2015)
http://t.co/tXgfVUCsO0 pic.twitter.com/BtcnAbouW9
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 14, 2015
Short Story of the Day #286
Reem Abu-Baker's "Common Usage"
Timber (2014)
http://t.co/kh8n5erJFi pic.twitter.com/5xduT6CprZ
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 15, 2015
Short Story of the Day #287
Heather O'Neill's "Swan Lake for Beginners"
http://t.co/PKFJMIntRY pic.twitter.com/1N6FD5SpR1
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 15, 2015
Short Story of the day #288
I am on vacation. I saw the Pacific for the first time. I'm incredibly happy to finally know both of our oceans.
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 17, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She’s archiving the entire project on Storify
Short Story of the Day #275
Shara Concepción's "Eulogy for the Piraguero"
PANK (2015)
http://t.co/ovHoQM7pu0 pic.twitter.com/ejYMnz2hGc
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 4, 2015
Short Story of the Day #276
Ravi Mangla's "Horsie"
Sleepingfish (2008)
http://t.co/hjHNcckWls pic.twitter.com/rQioltE0Jl
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 5, 2015
Short Story of the Day #277
Jessica Alexander's "A Series of Unsustainable Arrangements"
http://t.co/C3FMA4q3qj pic.twitter.com/rRRr9iNOze
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 6, 2015
Short Story of the Day #278
Ann Eleven's "Robot Family"
The Toast (2014)
http://t.co/ccbU03XBks pic.twitter.com/xlPyhMx8XM
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 7, 2015
Short Story of the Day #279
My phone died and I bought a new one and my wallet is dry and no longer reaches the Pacific but ☁️ photos soon.
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 8, 2015
Short Story of the Day #280
Meg Pokrass's "Iris"
Newfound (2015)
http://t.co/06WCIGUtNj pic.twitter.com/tKQflUABRp
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 9, 2015
Short Story of the Day #281
Lisa Foad's "Lost Dogs"
The Night Is a Mouth (2009)
http://t.co/mbBBlr39nu pic.twitter.com/ak3nhz7jGp
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 10, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She’s archiving the entire project on Storify
Short Story of the Day #268
❤️ I am an Eritrean wedding. I do not have a story, but here are the wedding swords. ❤️ pic.twitter.com/bXeo4g0cSt
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 27, 2015
Short Story of the Day #269
Emily Darrell's "On Becoming a Bird"
SmokeLong (2009)
http://t.co/tPYChxI8vW pic.twitter.com/W8CaGTGM64
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 27, 2015
There will be no short story of the day today. This is it. #270. I am taking a recovery day. Goodbye for now.
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 28, 2015
Short Story of the Day #271
Angela Carter's "The Erl-King"
The Bloody Chamber (1979) pic.twitter.com/NJJAaLj2Gf
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 30, 2015
Short Story of the Day #272
Amber Sparks's "The Fever Librarian"
The Unfinished World and Other Stories (2016) pic.twitter.com/0g0wFjNsWV
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 1, 2015
Short Story of the Day #273
Vanessa Vitiello Urquhart's "Ellen Says No"
The Butter (2015)
http://t.co/qKpnoeWhKR pic.twitter.com/i5y2NGpluB
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 1, 2015
Short Story of the Day #274
Party above and the air wants you to watch it whip and you are watching, oh yes. You are watching the darkness.
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) October 3, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She’s archiving the entire project on Storify
Short Story of the Day #262
Amelia Gray's "These Are the Fables"
Hobart (2012)
http://t.co/fjKtzIpct4 pic.twitter.com/wPzCPxdOit
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 19, 2015
Short Story of the Day #263
💫✨There is a place for weird and wondrous fiction. There is a place for me. (And you.)✨💫 pic.twitter.com/dtQp8StDsA
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 20, 2015
Short Story of the Day #264
Kathryn Kruse's "Downlands"
SPECS (2011)
http://t.co/opO1QT5Zh1 pic.twitter.com/85xJa2B76h
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 22, 2015
Short Story of the Day #265
Tania Hershman's "The Party"
Room (2014)
http://t.co/E2PHAsuKJP pic.twitter.com/Vtm1nqZEoJ
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 22, 2015
Short Story of the Day #266
Patty Yumi Cottrell's "Variations of Thomas and Viola" (2013)
http://t.co/9XvQLdJC2n pic.twitter.com/L0e7hHh7bS
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 24, 2015
Short Story of the Day #267
Tomorrow I fly to Miami and Monday I come back, but in that time I will have found a way to free myself forever.
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 25, 2015
Short Story of the Day #267
Tantra Bensko's "Virus on Fire"
Everyday Genius (2015)
http://t.co/Lt6txNlrZt pic.twitter.com/IvCjEjbTBB
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 25, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She’s archiving the entire project on Storify
Short Story of the Day #255
Lisa Donovan's "Our Book of Failures"
Conjunctions (2015)
http://t.co/HEmEq6IkEX pic.twitter.com/wirBZDbWHi
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 13, 2015
Short Story of the Day #256
Sarah Pinsker's "And We Were Left Darkling"
Lightspeed (2015)
http://t.co/8Okv6JlQy7 pic.twitter.com/CXfQ7wFiNp
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 13, 2015
Short Story of the Day #257
Nao-cola Yamazaki's "A False Genealogy"
Catapult (2015)
https://t.co/zVpLd9OIuQ pic.twitter.com/Hy4oLyoNWy
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 14, 2015
Short Story of the Day #258
These past two weeks have been difficult for more reasons than I can say. But. pic.twitter.com/v9VyFxsoas
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 16, 2015
Short Story of the Day #259
Courtney Maum's "The Bashful Yeti Tree Sculpture, Guarder of the Pond"
Hobart (2012) pic.twitter.com/UA4YualaU9
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 17, 2015
Short Story of the Day #260
Gina Ochsner's "Song of the Selkie"
Fantastic Women (Tin House, 2011)
<3 @HousingWorksBks pic.twitter.com/6IwlaMT6LR
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 18, 2015
Short Story of the Day #261
Jessica Alexander's "Bring Me Something"
Alice Blue Review (2014)
http://t.co/mFDsJhr2Ev pic.twitter.com/deEd1BQhOd
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 19, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. She's archiving the entire project on Storify
Short Story of the Day #248
Samantha Hunt's "The Removers"
Tin House (2015) pic.twitter.com/ochvoEHcdn
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 6, 2015
Short Story of the Day #249
Marie-Helene Bertino's "Great, Wondrous"
Safe as Houses (2012)
http://t.co/E7XXJAuRXH pic.twitter.com/KeqUFJyyhM
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 7, 2015
Short Story of the Day #250
Nicolette Wong's "Last Night On Oil Street"
fwriction (2011)
http://t.co/2CWiqqkPQa pic.twitter.com/HscDP6d5KK
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 7, 2015
Short Story of the Day #251
Marcela Fuentes's "Hour of the Lizard Man"
Wigleaf (2015)
http://t.co/YE7H6Hwxxy pic.twitter.com/xNcS26g9BY
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 9, 2015
Short Story of the Day #252
Melanie Pappadis Faranello's "Don't Forget to Say Hello" (2015)
http://t.co/NY8DDeJhbt pic.twitter.com/GQsI0YD0wq
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 10, 2015
Short Story of the Day #253
Ursula Villarreal-Moura's "Short Answers"
Dogzplot (2015)
http://t.co/tBAIy0fw3y pic.twitter.com/nmwUltjHtQ
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 11, 2015
Short Story of the Day #254
Lenore Weiss's "256 Shades"
Carbon Culture (2014) pic.twitter.com/4B1VsVd792
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 12, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week.
Short Story of the Day #241
Samir al-Sharif's "To Make A Living"
Snow in Amman (2015) pic.twitter.com/FaiEmfm8PO
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 29, 2015
Short Story of the Day #242
You're all watching the VMAs and I want you to have a good time and I forgot to post a story so put a word here:
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 31, 2015
Short Story of the Day #243
Joshua Ferris's "The Dinner Party"
New Yorker (2008)
http://t.co/djknaPTSTL pic.twitter.com/Vp1QvWJghD
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 31, 2015
Short Story of the Day #244
Jennifer Maritza McCauley's "Summer Love, On Sidewalks" (2015)
http://t.co/fM12ngKnqK pic.twitter.com/RTTUJeCZcA
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 2, 2015
Short Story of the Day #245
Vincent Scarpa's "Conservation"
Sundog Lit (2014)
http://t.co/AoitAEhMno pic.twitter.com/LsUim99yBQ
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 3, 2015
Short Story of the Day #246
Kashana Cauley's "The Electric City"
The Common (2015)
http://t.co/ygo9l9Em1v pic.twitter.com/5gyoBw3Rel
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 4, 2015
Short Story of the Day #247 pic.twitter.com/3KJSt5mpiG
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) September 5, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week. This week includes a special appearnce by Rahawa's cat, FutureCat.
Short Story of the Day #234
Cyn Vargas's "Myrna's Dad"
Collection: On the Way (2015)
http://t.co/l1Gozk8Nb0 pic.twitter.com/0dV7shtEON
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 22, 2015
Short Story of the Day #235
Kristine Ong Muslim's "The Longest Night"
Fiction Southeast (2014)
http://t.co/VwFylhlMJP pic.twitter.com/BlnwnkkQb3
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 24, 2015
Short Story of the Day #236
Inderjeet Mani's "Translating Kun"
Apple Valley Review (2013)
http://t.co/1AsOzn9XTl pic.twitter.com/opAUo68Pk7
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 24, 2015
Short Story of the Day #237
Lauren Foss Goodman's "Frank and the Shark"
Sou'wester (2012)
http://t.co/UMoIhkij3N pic.twitter.com/THlZy4IRDE
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 26, 2015
Short Story of the Day #238
I've been out and about since 6:00 am and didn't get to post a story, but here is love. pic.twitter.com/yLS0pj6l9j
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 27, 2015
Short Story of the Day #239
Eliza Smith's "Crocodile"
Necessary Fiction (2013)
http://t.co/9m9HFKmmvK pic.twitter.com/asuqCqpzDp
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 28, 2015
Short Story of the Day #240
Tina Makereti's "Monster"
Overland (2015)
https://t.co/VwGrsCWrOq pic.twitter.com/PBMi8lql6i
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 29, 2015
Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week.
Short Story of the Day #227
Celeste Pottier's "Sorry and a Haircut"
New Delta Review (2011)
http://t.co/r08xKDeuv6 pic.twitter.com/mnRNDKphre
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 15, 2015
Short Story of the Day #228
Emily Schultz's "Women Making Love with Monsters"
Fanzine (2010)
http://t.co/2Fey0sGt2w pic.twitter.com/9QKrBx0AaB
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 16, 2015
Short Story of the Day #229
Fortunato Salazar "Sasquatch Meets Nessie"
New World Writing(2015)
http://t.co/UCrKxGBXMa pic.twitter.com/368O8KZxpN
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 18, 2015
Short Story of the Day #230
Wendy S. Walters's "Norway"
Iowa Review (2012)
http://t.co/FRcfluKqVK—-fall-2012/norway pic.twitter.com/bhKHvocpqf
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 19, 2015
Short Story of the Day #231
Meghan Pipe's "Eight Rings"
Word Riot (2015)
http://t.co/Xp0mmJ6Xkr pic.twitter.com/qDwt6UpAdg
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 20, 2015
Short Story of the Day #232
Clouds so close you ask when they were last tested. pic.twitter.com/fZrwXxTw8S
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 21, 2015
Short Story of the Day #233
Elena Megalos's "Facts About Japan"
Arroyo Literary Review (2014)
https://t.co/4fLgc4I4Pk pic.twitter.com/inTFjTutBV
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 22, 2015
(Every day, friend of the SRoB Rahawa Haile tweets a short story. She gave us permission to collect them every week.)
Short Story of the Day #220
Dawn S. Davies's "Punkin"
Literary Orphans (2015)
http://t.co/5kYnICaH8q pic.twitter.com/1vJsZSfZt9
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 8, 2015
Short Story of the Day #221
Olivia Wolfgang-Smith's "Greatest Hits"
Gulf Stream (2015)
http://t.co/qbvNQgqrlH pic.twitter.com/xYYWsv0nFD
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 9, 2015
Short Story of the Day #222
Quinn Gancedo's "Dog Weather" (scroll down)
3:AM Magazine (2015)
http://t.co/OKWlMheJxu pic.twitter.com/XZF15o376G
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 11, 2015
Short Story of the Day #223
Susan Lin's "Peple Are People Who Have Misplaced Their Belly Buttons"
Mad Hatters' Review pic.twitter.com/t5y2dQuzmk
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 12, 2015
Short Story of the Day #224
Ravi Mangla "Greenly, Everett and Marion, 1878-1903"
Booth (2015)
http://t.co/Fzz2l0lUsK pic.twitter.com/ZP2q0qTBYs
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 13, 2015
Short Story of the Day #225
Michelle Richmond's "Hum"
The Missouri Review (2007)
http://t.co/zGQLcAuAxu pic.twitter.com/En9C4bfxhl
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 13, 2015
Short Story of the Day #226
Ashley Farmer's "DMV"
elimae (2009)
http://t.co/39Otq1qNR7 pic.twitter.com/IYXh6bWdnY
— Rahawa Haile (@RahawaHaile) August 14, 2015