5 Short Stories You Can—And Should—Read Online Right Now
In an age where culture is all-consuming and there’s an abundance of material out there, the short story is the perfect literary form. Not only do short stories provide some of the most dazzling, insightful and memorable moments in literature, they’re also, well, short. Requiring little time investment on your part, they allow you to explore genres and authors in just one sitting.
Want to delve in? Here are five* short stories you can read for free online.
1. “A Good Man Is Hard To Find” by Flannery O’Connor, 1953
If there’s a contemporary queen of the short story genre, most would agree it’s Flannery O’Connor. Her writing is as fascinating and unforgettable as her own personal life (Google her obsession with peacocks sometime), making her an essential name on any list of short stories. This first tale in her classic collection of Gothic and grotesque stories provides one of the most debated final scenes in American literature. When a grandmother and her family run into an escaped prisoner after their car breaks down, O’Connor’s examination of morality is as thought-provoking as it is bone-chilling.
2. “Black Box” by Jennifer Egan, 2012
No author consistently pushes more boundaries and remains as delightfully undefinable a writer as Jennifer Egan. Whether she’s creepily predicting the future of technology or experimenting by writing an incredible chapter of her novel in PowerPoint form, she’s full of surprises and innovations. With “Black Box,” Egan made headlines yet again, publishing her science fiction story through a series of tweets on The New Yorker’s Twitter account. The effect is a dazzling, fragmented story from the point of view of a spy.