"Sorry, we cannot accept this for publication!
It has some
words that are not even in the dictionary!
Is the plot even possible?"
Amy had typed every word with
great imagination.
PHOTO PROMPT © Jeff Arnold |
She clutched her novel's
manuscript and made her way out.
It was their loss that they
could not understand her Micro Superhero's story.
She self-published.
The scientific fraternity was
shaken six decades later.
Amy's grand-daughter succeeded in
creating the smallest microbe in history - a virus that was a superhero.
This was actually a superhero
anti-virus that could kill deadly viruses, just as Amy had written in her
novel.
100 Words Story for Friday Fictioneers
Why is it so difficult to accept creativity?
Do you agree with Einstein -'Imagination is more important than knowledge'?
May we soon have vaccines to cure all deadly viruses.
In this difficult time of COVID19 i.e. coronavirus disease attack, I request everyone to Stay Home and to Stay Safe. Maintain Social Distancing and please take care. Let us Flatten The Curve.
This too shall pass.
Lessons From Coronavirus #Covid19
Dear Anita,
ReplyDeleteMay your story come true. Stay safe yourself.
Shalom,
Rochelle
Yay for microbe superheroes! That's what vaccines are
ReplyDeleteTopical and optimistic, good stuff!
ReplyDeleteA timely superhero! I'm sure we have all felt this way before, when our best efforts are rejected or misunderstood. Sometimes we get to prove the doubters wrong!
ReplyDeleteAh, if only ...
ReplyDeleteNice one.
A big hooray for the superhero. Nice little story, Anita.
ReplyDeleteSusan A Eames at
Travel, Fiction and Photos
Yes, I agree with Einstein. Without imagination, we wouldn't have dreams. Without dreams, hope would die. And so would we.
ReplyDeleteScience fiction has a way of guiding our reality, for better and worse. My mom's a huge Star Trek fan and will not let go of the idea that the transporter is coming.
ReplyDeleteSuper story, Anita.
ReplyDeleteWouldn't that be cool?
ReplyDeleteYay for self-publishing. Publishers can be brutal.
ReplyDeleteThere have been a lot of superheroes, but none as useful as this!
ReplyDeleteBoth imagination and knowledge are needed for any scientific advance. Science is always built on earlier work. Isaac Newton is famous for having declared that his work was only possible because he was standing on the shoulders of giants.
ReplyDeleteThere is an enormous amount of work in progress on vaccines. It is built on all sorts of different areas of knowledge, and being carried out with imagination. There may well be a vaccine against Covid 19 in about 18 months - this will be the quickest ever; Ebola took 5 years.
It would be nice if we could find a super hero anti virus. Nice take on the prompt
ReplyDeleteWell penned. Einstein was right, imagination is the key.
ReplyDeleteThat is a wonderful quote. The world awaits a Micro Superhero.
ReplyDelete