Not All Women Wear Hot-Pants, Some Carry Guns: A Short Story Collective
Aside from other problems, what the hell is a “short story collective?”
Not All Women Wear Hot-Pants, Some Carry Guns: A Short Story Collective
Aside from other problems, what the hell is a “short story collective?”
“Not All Women Wear Hot-Pants, Some Carry Guns”
…
so some women are guys?
But for real, what a stupid title.
No kulak short stories allowed.
Like the Borg Collective? “Your lousy covers will assimilated”
Most of the women I know do neither. Can somebody draw us a Venn diagram please? And sorry, I can’t help with what a short story collective is. If this were an anthology of works by several authors, I might understand, but not if they’re all by KDC.
A Short Story Collective
“You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.” — Inigo Monyoya, The Princess Bride
collective (noun)
1. A farm owned by a collection of people.
2. A farm managed and owned, through the state, by the community.
3. A collective noun or name.
4. A group dedicated to a particular cause or interest.
I am used to reading collection as a set of stories by one author, contrasted with an anthology of stories by different authors.
Who knew that “all women wear hot pants” was a popular notion that needed to be refuted and debunked? And can’t you wear hot pants and carry a gun? Granted, it might be a little harder to conceal said weapon, but still.
A short story collective is one where the means of production is owned by all the short stories. All patriotic short stories will work for the common good by the direction of the central committee. Dissent will not be tolerated in unpatriotic short stories too willful or greedy to recognize the clear virtues of the five year, literary plan. Beatings will continue until moral improves.