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The Bridport Prize 2008
Short Story Report - Helen Simpson
The first thing to say is this: if your own story is not on
the list of winners, do remember that all such competition
judging is subjective, and that every judge has his or her blind
spots. You should also know that your stories went through a team
of ten careful and skilled reader-sifters before the short-listed
manuscripts landed on my doormat. Astonishingly, this short-list
represented just a small percentage of the total number of
entries, so if your name is here you can feel very pleased with
yourself.
I found that many of the stories I read improved as they went
on – after an unpromising first page or so, they would
often get into their stride and be really impressive towards the
end (and I include the winner of first prize in this
observation). This is not ideal, for the short-story
reader’s patience is far more limited than that of the
novel reader, and out in the real world any story which does not
harness the reader’s attention on its first page (indeed
with its first paragraph, its first sentence) will likely be cast
aside. The problem is easily remedied – take more trouble.
Many stories on this list read as first or second drafts. Also,
when in doubt, cut. At least half the stories I read would have
benefited from being shorter. Short stories often are short. I
smiled when I read the covering letter which arrived with the
stories from head story-sifter Jon Wyatt – ‘You would
not believe the number of stories that purport to be 4998 words
long.’ Just because there is a limit of 5000 words for the
Bridport Prize, you don’t have to meet it. Is that length
the right length for the story you are writing? If not –
cut!
The stories that most satisfied me had the ring of emotional
truth as well as some sort of intentional shape or form. Several
short-listed entries reminded me afresh that although a
slice-of-experience piece of writing may be moving as a document
of pain, unless it is transformed by art it is not a story. Also,
the choice of ostensibly weighty subject matter (for example,
terrorism and natural disasters) does not in itself guarantee a
good or well-written story – in fact, perversely, it often
does quite the opposite.
A surprising number of these stories were written in the
present tense. The accepted wisdom seems to be that this will
increase their sense of immediacy and emphasise dramatic moments.
I’m not so sure – the present tense can also lead to
a sort of solemn, frozen, sitting-on-the-fence quality. This is
emphatically not the case, however, with the winning story,
Face, where the present tense is used to recount an old
woman’s moment-bymoment perceptions of a quietly
devastating day. Dramatised in short telling scenes, alternating
dialogue with the main protagonist’s observations and
memories, Face is powered by real emotional honesty.
A Pocket Guide to Infidelity for Girls, winner of the
second prize, uses both the present tense and the tricky
second-person viewpoint, as pioneered by Jay McInerney in
Bright Lights, Big City. This viewpoint is good for a
wired-but-detached tone when describing addiction of one sort or
another – here, that of a young woman’s obsession for
her married lover, told with utterly convincing intensity. In
third place, Little Bad, a story about parents coming to
terms with their two-year-old daughter’s diagnosis of
epilepsy, shows some rare, welcome pleasure in language. Even if
the word play is not quite in Dorothy Parker’s league
– ‘good cope, bad cope’ – the bravely
wise-cracking dialogue and drily witty tone give the story extra
poignancy, particularly in its second half.
Of the ten other winners, Irrational Acts contained
some excellent vivid lines and powerful images, but needed work
on its shape and general coherence. The Greenhouse Effect,
too, rambles on confusingly – at times I was tempted to
rename it Under the Influence – but after a while
demands to be read aloud, its energy contained in a sort of
syncopated forward momentum. On Such a Night is another
story which gets better as it goes along; at first I was put off
by less-than-careful writing (for example, the main protagonist
is ‘self-depreciating’) but found myself gripped by
the second half.
Curl Up and Dye is a blackly comic story about old age
and death which put me in mind of Muriel Spark’s brilliant
Memento Mori. One for You, One for Me was as short and
sharp as the slaps exchanged in it; I admired its scene-splicing
and vigour. On the Edge was a well-structured story about
new parents torn between the buzz of city life and the sunlit
patios of the suburbs (it was a shame about
‘Berkhampstead’, though, as misspellings shake the
reader’s confidence in the writer). Portrait of a
Lady, describing the aftermath of a husband jumping ship, is
told in a fluent chatty voice with a nicely-judged edge of
hysteria. Breathing is an oblique account of the
disintegration of a marriage, sensitively written from a
child’s viewpoint.
Finally, the contrast between two very different stories
reminded me of an interesting distinction Angela Carter made
between the short story and the tale – ‘The tale does
not log everyday experience, as the short story does,’ she
wrote in her afterword to Fireworks. The casual prolixity
and naturalistic surface of Going for a Turkish lulls the
reader along so that when an apparently comic character begins to
issue threats it is all the more alarming. However, The
Butcher and the Thief is quite different in method and
approach – brief and elliptical, with repeated motif-like
images of meat and fruit, this is definitely a tale rather than a
short story.
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