Francine Witte |
By Francine Witte
ELJ Ediriona,
Ltd.
New York, NY
Copyright © 22021
by Francine Witte
ISBN-13:
978-1-942004-36-3
Softbound, 22
pages, $10
Review by
Francine Witte’s flash fiction
has appeared widely in magazines and anthologies as well as Best Micro fiction
and Best Small Fiction in 2020. She won the Thomas Wilhelmus Award in 2010 for
her flash fiction.
A new chapbook of flash fiction
by Francine Witte is one to celebrate and it does live up to expectations. Her
twenty stories are not happy, in fact, some are downright depressing, yet each
one offers interesting stories and creative writing.
In the first story, “On the Way
to Our Summer Place,” we meet a family heading to their retreat not knowing if
it is still there. The children are told there are no gas stations or trees and
no other cars.
Another tells us that a woman’s
DNA test reveals she has a sister she never knew existed, and in another story
everything a girl’s father measures, furniture, tables are soon gone. There is
a surprise ending too.
Other stories center around
lemons, a man with an extra arm, a ghost, an unfaithful husband, a cab ride and
a dying mother, a woman who meets her ex for dinner and the proverbial tunnel
of love story that is not what one usually thinks. In fact, none of Ms. Witte’s
stories are what you think they are. They are dark with humor that is often
subtle, not uproariously funny.
Witte’s writing uses her ideas
and her creative ways so the reader marvels both the stories and the way they
are presented.
Here is one story, In the Park:
On an afternoon when the sun
goes stone and thuds itself under the horizon, and the trees shake their veiny
leaves like hands about to hit, and the bench nearby is a gather of slats
holding up the elderly couple we were going to be, him spooning ice cream into
her quivery mouth and not even minding the dribble. And then, over there, the
children on swings, sailing the air as if practicing for a life of come and go.
And right in the smacky center of that, is you sitting there, your eyes two
blackened holes, your mouth telling me about the sometimes death of love.
The
Cake, The Smoke, The Moon is an enjoyable read. The stories and their endings always leave the
reader with something more to ponder and with the knowledge they have read an
author worth reading.
_______________________________________________________________________Zvi
A. Sesling, Brookline, MA Poet Laureate (2017-2020)
Author, War Zones and The Lynching of Leo Frank
Author of forthcoming flash/micro fiction The Secret Behind The Gate
from Cervena Barva Press
Editor, Muddy River Poetry Review
Thanks for finally talking about >"The Cake, The Smoke, The Moon By Francine Witte" <Loved it!
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