Novella

A novella is a prose narrative that is longer than a short story but shorter than a novel. SFWA defines the word length of a novella as 17,500 to 39,999 words. A novella is more than just a word count, however.

Compared to a novel, a novella's plot is tightly focused and intensely presented. It usually describes a single event of limited duration (often less than a day), seen or told from the perspective of one character. Many novellas also have a real-world object that serves as the novella's symbol, the pivot around which the story turns: a treasured item, a single well-defined place, an entity or person who is not the narrator, a hunted creature or criminal, etc.

Examples of Daria Novellas

 * "And When Your Heart Begins to Bleed," by TAG
 * "Fortunate One," by TAG
 * "Gone," by TAG
 * "Illusions," by TAG
 * "Invisible Planet," by TAG
 * "It Slipped Through My Hands, Like a Shadow, Like a Dream," by TAG
 * "The Thirteenth Man," by TAG
 * "Turnabout Confusion Part I: We All Fall Down," by Dennis