web analytics

I welcome author Sybil Baker, author of a linked short story collection, Talismans.

Writing a Linked Short Story Collection

Linked Collections: Best or Worst of Both Worlds?
by
Sybil Baker

I think many short story writers who are not interested in writing novels are tempted to write a linked short story collection as a way to present a more marketable project. After all, the recent success of Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout is a great example of how a linked collection can do well critically and commercially. However, as someone who has written and published short stories and novels, my advice is to avoid writing a linked collection unless you feel there is no other way to tell the story.

Neither fish nor fowl, linked collections bring the structural and logistic headaches of both short stories and novels. You have to make sure each story stands alone as its own independent piece as well as fit in to a larger narrative arc. With a short story collection, you might spend some time trying to decide the order or arrangement of the finished stories, but you don’t have to worry about how each story connects to tell a larger story. And with a novel, you might think about chapters and how they build to tell a story, but you don’t have to make sure each chapter has its own unity as a stand-alone piece.

However, sometimes the material seems best suited to be told as linked pieces. My own linked collection, Talismans, began with one story “Fur Elise,” which takes place in the States and is about Elise’s relationship with her mother. A few years later, I wrote two stories, “That Girl” and “Grape Island,” which take place in South Korea. Only after I wrote those stories did I realize that the main character was the same as the one in “Fur Elise.” I became curious about Elise’s story and began writing more pieces about her. With each piece I discovered more about Elise and her journey from her childhood in suburban Virginia to her travels in Asia as she searches to understand her past. Without intending it, I found I had a collection of stories that together told the story of one woman’s emotional and physical journey.

Linked collections can come in all shapes and sizes. Some like Barb Johnson’s More of This World and Maybe Another focus on place (New Orleans pre-Katrina) and the relationships of several characters. Others like Melissa Bank’s The Girls’ Guide to Hunting and Fishing focus more on one character’s development instead of several. Talismans in this sense is more like a novel-through-stories than a loosely connected short story collection because the overall arc is about one person (Elise) and her search to understand her past. The collection is also chronological, starting when Elise is five and ending when she is in her early thirties.

Even after many of the stories for Talismans were published in literary magazines, I still worked on revising them to work as a unified collection. This meant highlighting key images and themes in each story and making sure they repeat or echo in other stories. For example, in the first story, “Firefly,” Elise discovers a photo of her father, which she carries with her in later stories. This stage of revising was the hardest, as I had to make sure that the images appeared in each piece without feeling forced or taking away from the individual story.

Writing a linked collection is not all hard work — I had lots of fun and felt a sense of freedom that I might not have when writing a novel or a single short story. With each story I could experiment with point of view, verb tense, tone, and narrative style in a way that might not work in a novel. And I was able to intimately explore one character and her life in a way that I could not have with a single short story.

In one way, writing a linked collection is the worst of both worlds — you have to make sure each story works on a micro- and macro-narrative level without detracting from either. But in another way, you also have the best of both worlds. You have the opportunity to play with content and style within each story while having the luxury to allow a larger story to unfold.

Meet Sybil

Author Sybil Baker
Sybil Baker grew up in Northern Virginia. She graduated from Virginia Tech where she served as the features editor and humor columnist of the student newspaper. After a few years working around Virginia, she moved to Boulder, Colorado and completed an MA degree in English at the University of Colorado at Boulder. After five years in Colorado, she returned to her native Virginia, working as a technical editor.

In 1995, Sybil moved to South Korea and for the next dozen years, taught English there. She also traveled extensively, particularly within Asia, visiting more than 30 countries, including Mongolia, Laos, Myanmar (Burma), Cambodia, Indonesia, Peru, and Turkey.

She became increasingly interested in the allure and alienation of American travelers and expatriates, which heavily influenced her writing. Her novel, The Life Plan, was published in spring 2009. Described as a “screwball comedy,” the novel’s protagonist, Kat, feels compelled to accompany her husband, Dan, to Thailand, where he has plans to study massage. Kat finds herself fighting to save her marriage, along with her career and reputation. Yet when given the chance to regain everything she has lost, Kat questions her own reasons for pursuing her rigid life plan.

Sybil’s fiction and essays have appeared in numerous journals, and she received her MFA in Writing from The Vermont College of Fine Arts in 2005. Two years later, she embarked upon a new adventure at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga: She is an Assistant Professor of English there, teaching creative writing. She and her husband, Rowan Johnson, reside in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

Enter to Win a Copy of Talismans

Mandatory Entry:

Leave a comment! Be sure to include your email address (for notification and delivery purposes).

NOTE: This giveaway is open to followers — old or brand new — only!

Bonus Entries:

Leave a separate comment for each bonus entry!

  • Follow me on Twitter — be sure to leave your Twitter name in the comment.
  • Subscribe to Colloquium via RSS.
  • Subscribe to Colloquium via email and confirm your subscription.
  • Tweet about this giveaway and leave the link to your tweet in a comment!
  • Post this giveaway on Facebook and leave the link to your post in a comment!

The comment posted by Jennifer at Book Noise: The thoughts of a book-loving librarian was selected at random and a copy of Talismans was sent to her.

Thank you, Sybil!

32 Comments

  1. I think writing short stories is very difficult. This book sounds very interesting and I look forward to reading it.

    DreamyCowgirl @ hotmail.com

  2. 😉 Please include me in the giveaway. I haven’t read many short stories since I prefer a novel. I would like to read this collection. The author has lived a very interesting life. She’s seen so much of the world. I’m sure her experience and travels will play into the stories. Thank you.
    Follow on Google Friend Connect and Facebook Networked Blogs.

    makeupgirl21@comcast.net

  3. I love reading, though I can’t imagine writing, linked short stories. I’m not sure if this is open to Canada, but if it is I am a follower and I’d love to be entered as the book sounds really interesting.

    strandedhero at gmail dot com

  4. Thanks for sharing your insights, Sybil. I’ve been thinking about both novels and short story collections lately, and I appreciate the insights you shared here. You are clearly intelligent, and based on this article my guess is that you are a gifted writer.

    B. Lynn Goodwin
    http://www.writeradvice.com
    Author of You Want Me to Do WHAT? Journaling for Caregivers

  5. Sounds like a great read. Thank you for the chance to win a copy.

    Old gfc and networked blog follower
    Jennifer
    BookNoise at gmail dot com

  6. I love short stories but I have never read a linked short story book. Please enter me, thanks.

    ruthiekb72ATyahooDOTcom

  7. wow, what a great cover. Books sounds very interesting.

  8. Mona Garg

    I enjoy reading short stories b\c of the limited time commitment required. I can read 1 story or more based on my mood and time constraints. The concept of a linked short story collection where each story is complete in itself and yet is part of a whole intrigues me.

  9. Sybil, thanks for the insight into writing a linked collection. I write short stories and have been tossing around the idea of writing one. You have given me more to think about!

  10. Just became a Friend Connect Follower 🙂

    I love short stories…and linked collections are some of my favorites. It was great to read this guest post and understand the way they are constructed. Thanks for the giveaway!!

    (my email is in the comment form!)

  11. Entering for a second chance – I subscribe to your blog through your RSS feed (on Feedly). Thanks for the extra chance to win!

  12. I would love to win this book. I love short stories, especially linked ones.

    I follow you on Twitter as @teddyrose1

    teddyr66 at yahoo dot com

  13. avalonne83

    Great giveaway! I’d love to be entered.

    I’m a GFC follwer (avalonne83).

    Please count me in. Thanks.

    avalonne83 [at] yahoo [dot] it

  14. I’m an existing follower and I would love to read this.

  15. Interesting concept of “a novel-through-stories”. I do prefer novels but would love to give this a try. Follow via GFC (Bornajhawk), Networked Blogs (Laura Grassie Henderson) and Twitter @MamaHendo3.

    BornajhawkATaolDOTcom

  16. Confirmed e-mail subscriber.

    BornajhawkATaolDOTcom

  17. Tweeted giveaway: twitter.com/#!/MamaHendo3/status/16522323867729920.

    BornajhawkATaolDOTcom

  18. Pingback: Sybil Baker’s Talisman | Misadventures with Andi

Pin It