Still dark, still stormy!

Great to see that the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest is just as dark and stormy as ever: https://www.bulwer-lytton.com/2024

My contributions to this distinguished(?) literary(?) event(?) date back to 1988, when I won the Children's category.

From the "Children's" Category

"Can you say ‘webbed feet’?” asked Mr. Bodgers, unaware that he, a kindly media fixture for generations of Oakdale’s children, had unwittingly broken, with his gentle question about pedal appendages, a carefully constructed conspiracy ofsilence that had reigned since the night, four years before, when bright flashes and roars of thunder had been heard from the western outskirts of the now-unused nuclear power plant.

—Charles Hamilton
Baltimore, Md.

I was kicked out of Baltimore shortly thereafter. I wonder why?

The winner above, and these equally-brilliant (?) contributions were published in the long out-of-print It Was a Dark and Stormy Night: The Final Conflict: Yet More of the Best (?) from the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest.

From the "The Way We Live Now" Category

Sigmund realized he’d better stop playing with the cat: the interviewers, seeing his horribly scratched arms and hands, would think he was a junkie, and he’d never get into med school.

—Charles Hamilton
Baltimore, Md.

From the "Lyttony III" Category

It was 3:24 of a snowy Saturday afternoon as Rick stared at the televised image of Marsha—she of the frowsy, split-ended, bleached blond hair, ghastly turquoise eye shadow, too much nose and not enough chin—cheering as her husband, Craig, caressed the enormous eagle-topped trophy, and wondered once again what kind of a woman would marry a professional bowler.

—Charles Hamilton
Baltimore, Md.

From the "More Vile Puns" category

This will be a marketing concept to rival mashed, preformed potato chips in a can, mused Merlin McDivot, Magician to the Masses, as he recalled his pride in perfecting the technique of preserving evil spells in thin metal packages; his dismay in discovering that the spells tended to go bad while his customers worked up their nerve to use what they had bought; and his joy in realizing that the problem could be overcome by replacing the package at a fraction of the cost of recharging the spell, so that the charms and cantrips could be stored indefinitely; the sign proclaiming his revolutionary method was, even now, being hung in his modest shop window—CURSES FOILED AGAIN.

—Charles Hamilton
Baltimore, Md.


Next Off to see the future...

Charles Hamilton, Seattle