The Sword and Laser discussion

44 views
Story support techniques?

Comments Showing 1-5 of 5 (5 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Carl-johan (last edited Sep 29, 2010 07:54AM) (new)

Carl-johan Sveningsson (unclecj) | 4 comments I suspect that many S&L fans like me, prefer the somewhat twisted, non-simplistic novels, but these have the problem that they may require both one and two reads before they sink in properly. It's simply too tricky to immediately connect characters with their motives, and when you have a hunch of what happened a few pages back, you don't go back and check it, especially if it's an audio book.

I've been looking for and considering doing my own sort of story enhancing visualization like that, starting from something like this awesome strip illustrates:

http://xkcd.com/657/

Seriously, to have such an enhancement to stories like The Illuminatus trilogy, anything by Chuck Palahniuk, Neal Stephenson or The Hyperion Cantos would be absolutely invaluable! Dynamically growing like a mind map with the information you have received (by your progress through the book).

I've made my own feeble experiments in the topic here, but would gladly accept any comments or suggestions for how to achieve something in that direction! : github.com/UncleCJ/semanticstories


message 2: by Skip (new)

Skip | 517 comments The one for the Wheel of Time would take up a lot of space.


message 3: by Carl-johan (new)

Carl-johan Sveningsson (unclecj) | 4 comments The space necessary is clearly a secondary issue IMHO. A world map at reasonable resolution takes up a lot of space as well :-)


message 4: by Tamahome (new)

Tamahome | 7230 comments Leviathan (Leviathan, #1) by Scott Westerfeld has a ton of pictures.


message 5: by Carl-johan (new)

Carl-johan Sveningsson (unclecj) | 4 comments @Tamahome This type of illustrations I am asking for you mean?


back to top