American English for Educators - We've all lost things before. In this example of flash fiction, author Lydia Davis questions whether our lost items are really lost. To her, they are just “
The Paris Review - “Improving My German” by Lydia Davis, new in issue no. 234, Fall 2020. Read more of the six very short stories from Davis published in this issue, and
![Stan Carey on Twitter: "Some of Davis's stories are extraordinarily short https://t.co/gx3332BKqw" / Twitter Stan Carey on Twitter: "Some of Davis's stories are extraordinarily short https://t.co/gx3332BKqw" / Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EVzxIBjUMAAnq2E.jpg)
Stan Carey on Twitter: "Some of Davis's stories are extraordinarily short https://t.co/gx3332BKqw" / Twitter
![Ranka Primorac on Twitter: "A Lydia Davis short story, especially for @efemiachela. #Nobelpreis https://t.co/EEpjZRSHDE" / Twitter Ranka Primorac on Twitter: "A Lydia Davis short story, especially for @efemiachela. #Nobelpreis https://t.co/EEpjZRSHDE" / Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Cs9JWVSXgAAOG0y.jpg)
Ranka Primorac on Twitter: "A Lydia Davis short story, especially for @efemiachela. #Nobelpreis https://t.co/EEpjZRSHDE" / Twitter
![Preface and Character from Lydia Davis's Short Story, “Marie Curie, So Honorable Woman” – Biblioklept Preface and Character from Lydia Davis's Short Story, “Marie Curie, So Honorable Woman” – Biblioklept](https://biblioklept.files.wordpress.com/2014/11/mcld.jpg?w=640)