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1. “Baby Shoes” by Hemingway
This is 20th-century American author Ernest Hemingway’s famous six-word
story. You’ve probably heard of it. On a bet, at some point in his
career, Hemingway is said to have written the words:
“For sale: baby shoes, never worn.”
No one is really sure he actually wrote it, however. As Snopes reported,
“Two curious elements of the ‘baby shoes’ tale are that no one seems to
have been able to locate an original source or publication that
establishes Hemingway’s authorship of the story, and that the tale itself
(i.e., the claim that Hemingway wrote such a story) apparently doesn’t go
back much further than the 1990s.”
Regardless, a bunch of notable 21st-century writers gave the six-word
story form a shot back in 2006, lending it literary credibility. You can
read them (very quickly) here.
Even if they’re more, artistically speaking, than just terse sentences,
these six-word tales, including “Baby Shoes,” are short stories. Only the
machinations of the Google search algorithm caused them to be classified
as novels; even the websites they’re listed on refer to them short
stories.
Strike one!
2. The Dinosaur by Augusto Monterroso
This is a strange little text, similar to the Hemingway piece. In the
original Spanish, the entire tale is as follows:
El Dinosaurio
Cuando despertó, el dinosaurio todavía estaba allí.
Google The Dinosaur and you’ll be informed that no less an authority than
novelist and literary critic Umberto Eco crowned it the world’s shortest
novel.
I had a very, very hard time tracking down the source of this rumor. The
original claimant seems to be this blog, in which Eco’s declaration
regarding The Dinosaur is cited without any back-up in a forum post from
more than a decade ago.
Other than the innumerable cut-and-paste Quora and Yahoo Answers posts
that this questionable assertion spawned, the only place I found a
reference to a text that might contain a quote from Eco about The
Dinosaur was on another blog, in which the author was reviewing the book
Letters to a Young Novelist by Mario Vargas Llosa.
Puzzlingly, about Llosa’s book, she writes, “Umberto Eco talks about the
craft of writing novels in this short book. Written in the form of
letters to an un-named disciple, he explains the nuances of writing the
novel. … What impressed me most was the take on the famous one line story
called ‘The Dinosaur’ by Guatemalan writer Augusto Monterroso.”
I think this blogger conflated Letters to a Young Novelist by Mario
Vargas Llosa with Umberto Eco’s book, Confessions of a Young Novelist,
which only includes a brief mention of the word “dinosaur” as it relates
to the dictionary definition of the term, not as a story by Monterroso.
In any event, in Letters to a Young Novelist, author Llosa does indeed
discuss Augusto Monterroso’s The Dinosaur. Llosa refers to it as “not a
novel but a story, perhaps the shortest (and one of the best) in the
world.”
And in 2003, upon the death of Monterroso, Edgar O’Hara, Professor of
Spanish and Portuguese Studies at the University of Seattle, told NPR
that it’s short story — a “really, really short story.”
Incidentally, if you’d like to read a translation of The Dinosaur, you’re
in for a bit of a mind-bending trick played by the Spanish language.
There’s some debate whether the story, in English, would be:
When he awoke, the dinosaur was still there.
Or:
When it awoke, the dinosaur was still there.
Was it a man who woke up, or the dinosaur itself? Puts a whole different
spin on this tiny story! In any case …
Strike two!
3. A fictional dog’s imaginary book
In 2010, Ronald B. Richardson posed the following provocative question:
“Is a novel defined by its length or by a certain approach? Can we
consider a story that is not long a novel if it is epic in scope,
representing a range of experiences and emotions? If so, isn’t Snoopy’s
It Was a Dark and Stormy Night a novel?”
The book in question, a fictional trope of the “Peanuts” comic strip by
Charles M. Schulz, was a long-running joke (imagine, a dog writing a
novel!) that was eventually published as a genuine book by Schulz (with
Snoopy the dog credited as the author) in 1971.
At just 65 pages and filled with elements of metafiction (my favorite
fiction of all), it’s not a bad candidate for shortest novel ever written
… much to my surprise.
I guess … ball?
4. Listicles of the shortest novels of all time
These tempting literary menus look promising at first glance, but they
tend not to pan out. Why? Because the novels listed by and and Electric
Literature and Literary Hub invariably are either well over 100 pages
long, or are generally accepted to be short stories.
They’ve got a few solid hits mixed in, like Edith Wharton’s Ethan Frome
and Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, but on the whole they don’t
answer the question they claim to be tackling; namely, what is the
shortest novel of all time?
Strike 3!
In the interest of classifying The Drowned Town correctly and helping all
of us find out, once and for all, the difference between a short story, a
novella, and a novel, I’ve put together my own list of extremely short
books that claim to be novels. I’m going to read ’em and report back to
you. Here are the top ten contenders for shortest novel of all time:
The Comedian by Joseph O’Connor
Scars on the Soul by Françoise Sagan
Mr. Stone and the Knights Companion by V.S. Naipaul
The Circling Song by Nawal El Saadawi
A Theft by Saul Bellow
I Lock my Door Upon Myself by Joyce Carol Oates
The Shawl by Cynthia Ozick
Wenjack by Joseph Boyden
A Small Place by Jamaica Kinkaid
Snoopy and “It was a Dark and Stormy Night” by Charles M. Schulz
These ten contestants are by authors both famous and obscure from a wide
range of literary traditions that span the globe. Egypt, Canada, Antigua,
France, Trinidad, Ireland, the U.S.A. — we’re searching everywhere in our
quest to find the world’s shortest novel.
First up: Wenjack by Joseph Boyden. Stay tuned!
Originally published at http://the-delve.com on July 27, 2019.
Writing
Short Story
Short Fiction
Very Short Story
Novel
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