Gangrey
Vol. I · No. 1Prolonging the Slow Death of NewspapersEst. 2026

The Rattling Of Wheels

Hemingway once said that Ivan Turgenev's "The Rattling Of Wheels" was the best short story of all time. I recently read it, and it reached a fine climax despite a slow start, but there are others I prefer. Annie Proulx's "People In Hell Just Want A Drink Of Water," for example. Or that haunting piece, "The Lottery," by Shirley Jackson. Or an incredibly evocative story that Justin Heckert recently showed me: "Heat," by Joyce Carol Oates.

For a lot of us who write narrative nonfiction in the range of, say, 4,000 to 10,000 words, great short fiction is an enticing model to follow. We can see the parallels in nonfiction stories such as Gary Smith's "Walking His Life Away," or this blistering…

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