2021 Force Majeure Flash Contest Winners!

After a big eyeball-lift and a sluice of delicious writing, we’re panned out our most shiniest flakes of gold! It is our massive honor this year to announce the winners of the 2021 Force Majeure Flash Contest:

1st Prize: Serrina Zou, “Bái Chī”

2nd Prize: Sherrell McLafferty, “Can Elizabeth Bishop Relate?”

2nd Prize: Justine Teu, “The Water Cycle”

We are also pleased to note these flashes of distinction, our Honorable Mentions in this year’s contest:
• “Congratulations, You’re Approved! We Are Pleased to Welcome You to Your New Habitation!” by S. Erin Batiste
• “An Incomplete Inventory of What Once Belonged to My Mother” by Jax Connelly
• “Praisesong for Fornication” by Erica Frederick

All of these flashes will appear in Storm Cellar Vol. X No. 1, due in winter 2021-22. Our deepest thanks to everyone who entered the contest — we are exhausted in the best way by the volume of excellent flash we read this year. Thank you so much!

2020 Flash Contest open now!

The 2020 FORCE MAJEURE FLASH CONTEST is open now! $500 in prizes for flash of any kind. Deadline April 30. Guidelines and enter: https://stormcellar.submittable.com/submit/72759/force-majeure-flash-contest

2018 Pushcart Nominations

We’re so happy to announce our Pushcart Prize nominees for this year:

Best of luck to them all. And: read on!

2017 Force Majeure Flash Contest Winners!

It is our pleasure to announce the winners of the 2017 Force Majeure Flash Contest, as decided by Sidney Taiko, Editrix of Storm Cellar and the Managing Editor Benjamin Goodney:

TOP PRIZE
“Keep Moving” by Anne Riesenberg.
A perfect balance of nuance, the unexpected, and the familiar. In keeping with the title, this piece moves: staccato thoughts flowing together in a well-cinched column, in contrast to the progression of the greater narrative, resulting in a surging-forward feeling. Concrete images (pink ribbons braided into raven-black hair, for one) juxtaposed with lines like, “In my favorite my mother has two mouths one joyful the other slides off her face.” This flash taps into a deep human experience that we constantly seek when reading. This notion of “running into the arms of my life,” while shame is floating somewhere in the background. It’s unapologetic, raw, and peppered with the kind of intimate and funny details that we’re all desperate for (who doesn’t want to know about the time your friend threw up the pot brownies?).

SECOND PRIZES
“P.S. While You Were Sleeping” by Bucket Siler.
One of the most fascinating and formally daring entries. Many lines might be considered whole stories, and yet they still join together thoughtfully and playfully. Its exciting, phantastic ideas and unexpected moves a welcome surprise in an age of pyramid-diagrammed miniatures. This piece is fun, sharp, and deftly engineered. The personality of the narrator shines through… if we could befriend a piece of flash fiction, “P.S. While You Were Sleeping” would be hanging out at the corner bar with us right now.

“Hunger” by Rita Ciresi
Another narrative paying close attention to both character and situation while using the formal possibilities of limited space. One of the entries that drew us through subject matter — social relevance is significant, and yet this piece doesn’t seem to want to promote a specific agenda. The use of second person is effortless and the narration is childlike without being childish. We’re fans of code-switching and it’s employed efficiently here.  A close-cut, intimate, and memory-filling piece.  This one will stick with us.

We would also like to recognize our outstanding HONORABLE MENTIONS:
“A Not-So-Angry Inch” by Alex Clark. Thoughtful and intimate, yet raw and unfiltered, an underrepresented perspective given full form in a tiny space.
“To Live and Die in EV” by Oscar Mancinas. Bluntly delivered, a space between childhood and adulthood from which we are unsettled, gorgeous lines peppered throughout. 
“In Olden Times” by Derek Updegraff. A turn from whimsical to lovelorn retrofits this piece with deeper meanings for its perfectly developed character moments.

All of the winners combined powerful language and imagery, careful attention to formal matters, unique insight, and a certain grace; congratulations are well deserved.

Thanks to all the entrants! We received nearly five hundred entries, more than we had hoped for, and with so many fine flash works we were nearly spoiled for choice. Indeed, a few more contest entries will be published in our magazine; we’d like to have taken more, but we had to draw a line somewhere. Thank you, everyone, for sharing, participating, and helping this little contest-experiment of ours come off a roaring success.

We’re really excited to bring you these flashes in the next issue of Storm Cellar, so get ready for it. And: read on!

Pushcart Nominations 2016

We’re pleased to announce our Pushcart Prize nominations for 2016: