Editor seeks lasting stories for disposable formats
By
Brett McKay
For nearly 10 years, Jason Lee Norman has been curating flash fiction and putting it out into the world in unconventional places, like coffee sleeves and beer cans. Now he's tweaking one of his long-running projects, so he can spend more time on stories and less on distribution.
To get his #yegwords coffee sleeves project off the ground, Norman took to buying the cardboard sleeves in bulk, getting very short stories by local writers printed on them, and distributing them to participating cafés himself. Along the way, he got some grant money, but the program has shrunk quite a bit lately.
To make it more sustainable, Norman is looking to shift #yegwords into something he does for just one business, as a way to bolster its marketing.
"I am working with one of the cafés about doing just that, about keeping the coffee sleeves going but branding them to that specific café," Norman said. "It's something that I wanted to get ahead of it at the time, which was offer branded stuff, but it's so difficult with just me trying to do stuff on my own."
Norman likened this approach to his ongoing collaboration with Blindman Brewing. It publishes stories and poems on cans of its Super Session Ale, which are also featured on CKUA's Session Stories. Blindman Brewing handles the design, printing, and ordering, allowing Norman to focus on collecting and preparing the stories that appear on the cans.
The deadline for submissions for the next round of Session Stories is Sept. 23. Winter is the theme, and the story or poem must be no more than 200 words.
Lizzie Derksen's work has appeared on the #yegwords coffee sleeves, on the Blindman beer cans, and in the short story vending machine that Norman got set up at the Edmonton International Airport.
"I think that part of what characterizes this type of publishing is the extremely wide audience that it's trying to reach," she told Taproot. "As a writer, you really have no demographics to aim for, especially the one at the airport. That's literally everyone."