ShelbyDawn57
Fae Princess
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2019
- Posts
- 3,603
There have been a few threads about story length and a few mentions of people writing novels in the last day or so. It got me thinking how much my personal system of classification varies from everyone else's lately and I'm curious.
I found this online somewhere, and used it as the basis for how I catalog my stories.
Here's a breakdown:
I found this online somewhere, and used it as the basis for how I catalog my stories.
Here's a breakdown:
- Short Story:Generally ranges from 1,000 to 7,500 words, but some publications may accept up to 10,000 words.
- Novelette: Typically falls between 7,500 and 17,500 words.( I chose to combine Novelette into Short Stories just because, well, because.)
- Novella: Usually between 17,500 and 40,000 words.
- Novel: Begins at 40,000
What I'm curious about is where do you draw the lines and what other criteria do you use for qualifying a story as a short story or a novel. Are there subtleties besides length that delineate short stories from novelettes or novellas?
Especially where novels are concerned, story complexity has to come into play, maybe number of characters or sub story lines.
I'd think this is even more important with shorter novels. I mean who doubts that GRRM's "A Song of Ice and Fire" series, most with a minimum of about 300K words are novels. I seem to remember "The Great Gatsby" is only about 45K, and Hemmingway's "The Old man and the Sea" is less that 30K. Both are considered classic novels, so...
I'm as curious about your opinions as I am about where this is going to go.