With reference to contemporary short story cycles (published post-2000), this dissertation proposes a genre definition of this literary cycle based on the identification of three key techniques: small moments, unfinished endings, and metatextual elements. The genre study builds on the work of short story cycle theorists Forrest L. Ingram and Gerald Lynch by using Wolfgang Iser’s narratology theories about the ways a text can influence the reader. Small moments are broken into three categories—phrase repetition, event repetition, and character repetition—which instigate moments of connection where the reader is positioned to create links not explicitly stated in the cycle. Unfinished endings are made up of the pivotal story and the return st...