In 2020, we move NFFD online, with a programme that includes international readings and panel discussions, a book day celebrating books released in 2020 and, of course, the winners of the international Micro Madness competition and the national flash fiction competition.
Please see THE FLASH FRONTIER YOUTUBE CHANNEL for the 2020 reading series. including book readings, journal editors, NFFD city chairs and judges, international guests and more.
Micro Madness: runs June 1 – 22; finalists and winners can be found here.
INTERVIEW WITH THE 2020 NFFD JUDGES
- interview with the 2020 NFFD judges, Helen Heath and Sandra Arnold
- interview with the journal fingers comma toes – the host of the NFFD Youth Competition
2020 NFFD CONTRIBUTORS
The Art of Writing Small: A Roundtable with Journal Editors Around the World
Imagination Unbound: Five Women on the Poetic Narrative Form
Best Small Fictions and Best Microfiction: an international reading
Youth Voices: Five writers discuss poetry, story and activism through words
All Micro Madness writers can be found at the above link. The 2020 Micro Madness finalists are:
Mileva Anastasiadou * Amy Barnes * Jodi Barnes * S. B. Borgersen * Sharon Boyle * Diana Burns * Sara Siddiqui Chansarkar * Rose Collins * Judy Darley * Jacques Denault * María C. Domínguez * Bronwen Griffiths * Sheila Hailstone * Charlotte Hamrick * Bronwyn Hegarty * Sara Hills * Marissa Hoffman * Ursula Hoult * Gail Ingram * John Irvine * Kim Jackways * Jac Jenkins * Erik Kennedy * Dallas Kidd * Heather McQuillan * Pam Morrison * Nora Nadjarian * Mandira Pattnaik * Sam Payne * Cherllisha Silva * Rachel Smith * Sophie van Llewyn * Lois Villemaire * Susan Wardell * Nan Wigington * Sophia Wilson * Kay Wise * R. P. Wood * Jenny Woodhouse * John Yohe * Lucy Zhang
Book Day: a collaboration with NFFD UK!
Watch below our celebration of books released during lockdown, and more to come in 2020.
THE 2020 COMPETITION JUDGES
Sandra Arnold lives in rural Canterbury. She has a PhD in Creative Writing from Central Queensland University, Australia, and is the author of five books.
Her most recent are a novel, The Ash, the Well and the Bluebell (Mākaro Press, NZ, 2019), which was a finalist in the 2019 New Zealand Heritage Book Awards, and a flash fiction collection, Soul Etchings (Retreat West Books, UK, 2019). Her short fiction has been widely published in New Zealand and internationally. sandraarnold.co.nz
Helen Heath is a poet and essayist from the Kapiti Coast. Her debut collection of poetry, Graft, won the Best First Book of Poetry award and was the first book of fiction or poetry to be shortlisted for the Royal Society of NZ Science Book Prize.
Helen thinks poetry can be a way of engaging people with big ideas and trying them on for size – a public conversation about what we want the future to be like.
Her latest collection, which won the 2019 Ockham Book Awards, is called Are Friends Electric? and is about people, animals and technology. helenheath.com.