Ted's story "The Secret"
was Long-Listed in the
Brilliant Flash Fiction Competition
for Winter, 2018
If you like your fiction entwined with fact ("faction"), this collection of flash fiction (less than 250 words per story) is for you! Theodore Jerome Cohen is an award-winning author who has published more than ten novels-all but one of them mystery/thrillers-two short-story anthologies, and one Young Adult (YA) mystery/thriller written under the pen name Alyssa Devine. During his 45-year career he has worked as an engineer, scientist, CBS Radio Station News Service (RSNS) commentator, private investigator, and Antarctic explorer. What he's been able to do with his background is mix fiction with reality in ways even his family and friends have been unable to unravel!
A few of the stories featured here, in Book 4 of the series Flash Fiction Anthologies, were award-winning entries in the weekly Flash Fiction Challenges sponsored by the Website Indies Unlimited. Most, however, are the product of Cohen's creative mind, knowledge of history, and yes, even a great sense of humor, all prompted by an endless stream of provocative photographs of people, animals, buildings, and landscapes found on a variety of Internet sites. Specifically, in this volume, you'll find, a chat with Frank Sinatra, a tale about a deadly tarot reading by Madam Ophelia, a discussion between a photographer and an orangutan regarding the best film to use on a photo shoot, and the history behind a secret meeting between the Israelis and Palestinians in 1986. In short (pun intended), there is something in this book for almost every genre and taste.
"Theodore Jerome Cohen (sometimes aka Alyssa Devine) is a storyteller par excellence, and he proves himself anew in this most recent collection of short-short fiction (aka Flash Fiction) Creative Ink, Flashy Fiction: Flash Fiction Anthology – Book 4. Cohen demonstrates that he can grab your interest from the start, engage your curiosity through a meagre 250 words or so, and land a finishing punchline that may just leave you breathless. Hyperbole? Just read his first story about a wartime British girl sitting with her doll post-Blitz. (Perhaps the most compelling of the lot.) If this story does not grip you by the throat, evoke the kind of anguish fully-fledged war novels seek desperately to produce, and leave you saddened beyond its minimalist length, you are free to turn in your human card.
"Per Theodore Jerome Cohen, as stated in his introduction to Creative Ink, Flashy Fiction, the included stories are based upon single photographs selected serendipitously at random. They do not feel so random. Each photograph (presented and captioned at each chapter heading) cries out for an explanatory story. The precise story, surprisingly, that Cohen proceeds to tell. It's uncanny. And it makes you wonder which came first – the photo or the story. From Cohen's remarkably concise and polished writing, and his unquestionable ability to fabricate a story both meaningful and precise, one cannot be sure. One can, however, rely on this storyteller's ability to send you to a place and time both real and altered by imagination. Where once again you might ask: which is real and which is imagination? No hyperbole. These stories are wonderful.”