Twenty years ago I had an idea for a magazine that combined the swift impact of flash fiction with the true storytelling of memoir, and Brevity was born. To be honest, I expected it to last a year. Issue One had five stories and a horrible design. Issue Two didn’t look much better, and I even published myself, something any serious literary journal editor would never do. But what we then called the World Wide Web was uncharted territory, and I variously referred to my Brevity experiment back then as an e-journal, a website, a web journal, a zine. I didn’t know what I was doing, and I didn’t have a plan.
But Brevity limped along, and by Issue Four (check out the nifty Comic Sans font) none of the writers we published were close friends of mine. It started to look real. The hyper-talented Brian Doyle appeared in that issue, and became a regular in our pages. It saddens me that he is not in our 20th Anniversary Issue, except in spirit through Karen Babine’s beautiful remembrance.
But we did invite some of Brevity‘s repeat players to join us in our celebration, and if you read the specially-commissioned flash essays from Lee Martin, Diane Seuss, Brenda Miller, Sue William Silverman, Rebecca McClanahan, and Ira Sukrungruang in this issue, you may detect a common theme (or at least a common word)
As a rule, we don’t solicit work. We broke that rule for this issue. But a large part of Brevity’s mission remains providing a venue for new writers, sometimes writers who are previously unpublished, often writers who are just starting out.
In the early years, we had a staff of one. For most of our first decade, we had a volunteer staff of two. Now we have roughly a dozen volunteer staffers, hard-working, loyal, bleary-eyed, and still excited by our mission. It shocks me how much we’ve grown in twenty years: the number of submissions, the quality of submissions, the number of monthly visitors (13,000), the international audience, the growth of the blog.
I had no plan, and thus I never saw it coming.
Once or twice every year I decide to just shut the entire operation down because it takes so much time and effort, but then I hear from folks how much they value the magazine, and I say, “Okay, one year more.”
To the future.
13 comments
Darci Petrov says:
Sep 15, 2017
I only just found this page today and I love it already. I’m glad I made it here in time for at least another year.
Eunice Tiptree says:
Sep 18, 2017
Congratulations. As someone who founded, published and edited a magazine in the ancient days of print, I understand what an accomplishment you’ve achieved. I am in a state of awe.
Joanne Marie says:
Sep 18, 2017
And I’m so glad you didn’t shut it down. I refer folks to it all the time, and love what’s published here.
Iris Graville says:
Sep 18, 2017
Brevity is a huge gift to readers and writers. Thank you, Dinty, for your foresight 20 years ago and your continued commitment. And thanks, too, to the staff who keep you – and it – going. Made a long-overdue donation today.
Brigitte says:
Sep 20, 2017
Thank you and your team for the hard work. This is such a great concept and help avid readers squeeze even more reading in.
Hayley says:
Sep 21, 2017
Congratulations–a fantastic celebratory issue! Love the amazing essays and striking pictures.
Sally Ashton says:
Oct 1, 2017
Thumbs up, Dinty, for all.
Rantonucci says:
Oct 14, 2017
‘ere’s to another 20!!!
Angel says:
Oct 19, 2017
Please never give up on Brevity! I look forward to each issue with such anticipation! It is cathartic to read these beautifully written non-fiction pieces filled to the brim with imagery and emotion. And I learn so much about writing while I read this journal and each submission.
Alaina Smith says:
Oct 29, 2017
Yes, please keep publishing Brevity! Brevity is fantastic and one of my favorite places to learn how to be a strong writer. I would be heartbroken without it. Thanks to you and your volunteers for all you accomplish by producing and sharing Brevity.
Dan Goldsmith says:
Nov 3, 2017
Keep up the necessary work. Non-fiction writing with integrity is so difficult to find. As a teacher, I have used pieces from Brevity in order to expose my students to quality writing of important content. The short nature is less intimidating, while the insight into life powerfully moves them. Thank you. Your work is a gift.
JoAnne Lehman says:
Nov 14, 2017
I’m so glad to have found Brevity too.
Ximena Blanco says:
Mar 23, 2019
By far my favorite magazine around. Reading back through all the old issues. Congratulations on going past the 20th year.