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Melgund Township Winter Story Library

Winter Historical Fiction Short Stories

Read a collection of Historical Fiction short stories and flash fiction pieces from the Winter Stories project.

Winter Historical Fiction Short Stories

6 Titles
A Frugal Deception

A Frugal Deception

by Jamie F. Bell

The sterile quiet of a home office, punctuated by the frantic clicking of keys and the low hum of a computer, charged with the tension of unspoken financial ruin and mutual suspicion.

Domestic Thriller Read →
The Last Clear Block

The Last Clear Block

by Eva Suluk

An unseasonable winter warmth settles over the 19th-century Canadian town, causing snow to retreat into slush and the crisp air to feel deceptively mild. The scent of damp earth and wet wool hangs heavy, a constant, worrying reminder that the season's traditions—and its secrets—are on the verge of melting away.

Historical Fiction Read →
The Pinto Years

The Pinto Years

by Jamie F. Bell

The world outside is a muted canvas of winter gray, punctuated by the garish, flickering lights of roadside Americana. Inside, the cramped car is a haven of cold, stale air and quiet tension.

Dark Comedy Read →
The Reckoning

The Reckoning

by Jamie F. Bell

The house, once a beacon of aspirational domesticity, now feels like an icebox. The muted hum of the refrigerator is the loudest sound, a stark contrast to the quiet ferocity of the winter wind rattling the windows. The air is thick with unspoken words, making the already frigid room feel heavier.

Domestic Thriller Read →
The Winter of the Strike

The Winter of the Strike

by Jamie F. Bell

Outside, a fictionalized harsh winter batters 1919 Winnipeg during the General Strike. The streets are a battleground of icy wind and simmering class conflict. Inside "The Cafe on Portage," the air is thick with the smell of brewing coffee and wet wool, a pocket of steamy, fragile neutrality where strikers and special constables occupy the same space without violence.

Historical Fiction Read →
The Wolseley Warren

The Wolseley Warren

by Eva Suluk

A drafty, perpetually cold bungalow in the winter of 1981. The air smells of dust and financial anxiety. The quiet hum of the refrigerator is the only sound, a constant reminder of the electricity bill. Every surface is cold to the touch, and the thin light from the windows does nothing to warm the worn-out furniture.

Dark Comedy Read →