Publisher SeriesOne Story

Villanova or: How I Became a Former Professional Literary Agent by John Hodgman 0 copies1
Identification Project by Robin J. Lauzon 0 copies2
Buying the Farm by Arlaina Tibensky 0 copies3
The Freshwater Mermaid by Gregory Maguire 1 copy4
One Story (issue 77) by Lydia Peelle 1 copy, 1 review77
One Story (issue 79) by Bradford Tice 1 copy79
One Story (issue 80) by Rachel Cantor 1 copy80
Balloon Night by Tom Barbash 0 copies95
The Strings Attached by James Scott 0 copies96
Bar Joke, Arizona by Sam Allingham 1 copy97
One Story (issue 98) by Amelia Kahaney 1 copy98
Beanball by Ron Carlson 0 copies99
Familial Kindness by Kirsten Sundberg Lunstrum 0 copies101
What the World Will Look Like When All the Water Leaves Us by Laura Van den Berg 181 copies, 16 reviews102
Muscle Memory by Katherine Karlin 0 copies103
Harriet Elliot by Robin Black 0 copies104
Wilderness by Jean Thompson 0 copies105
Safe Passage by Ramona Ausubel 0 copies106
Foreign Girls by Thomas Grattan 0 copies108
The Good Word by Yannick Murphy 0 copies109
We Bluegills by Robert Travieso 0 copies111
Sir Fleeting [short story] by Lauren Groff 1 copy112
The Tremulant by Ben Greenman 1 copy113
Archangel: Fiction by Andrea Barrett 165 copies, 7 reviews114-115
A Splendid Life by Carrie Brown 0 copies116
Meteorology (One Story magazine, Issue No. 117) by Adin Bookbinder 1 copy117
Hurt People by Cote Smith 42 copies, 3 reviews118
Eraser by Ben Stroud 0 copies119
A Minor Momentousness in the History of Love by Cheston Knapp 2 copies133
Our Belgian Wife - One Story no. 248 by Uche Okonkwo 2 copies248
The Eclipse (One Story 296) by Isaac Bashevis Singer 2 copies, 1 review296
What Next (One Story 300) by Vauhini Vara 2 copies300

DescriptionsEdit Descriptions

One Story began in 2001. Hannah Tinti and Maribeth Batcha saw short stories disappearing from high-profile print publications and smaller literary magazines folding. They knew that with fewer venues for short fiction, emerging writers would have a hard time getting noticed, and short stories could fall by the literary wayside. Batcha had the innovative idea of mailing one short story at a time to subscribers, like a letter from a friend. Tinti signed on as editor. One Story launched in 2002. The co-founders set a policy that they would only publish an author one time. Since then, One Story has published 287 stories by 287 different writers in an unfussy 5 x 7 chapbook format. While a copy of One Story might get wrinkled, dog-eared, and passed along, the story itself stays with the reader.
URL: https://one-story.com/ab…s://one-story.com/about/ (English, Publisher)
The One Story magazine: http://one-story.com/ (English, Unclassified)

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