<div>Spike wrote:</div> <div>In any story, one has one's favorite personalities. It be cool to be<BR> able<BR>to filter a story, to follow the adventures of one or two characters.<BR> We<BR>could have the software keep track of what material one has already<BR> read,<BR>then keep offering more detail on one's chosen characters, or go on to<BR>others at will. Then reading a novel becomes more like doing a modern<BR>google search, nibbling at one's areas of interest but not trying to<BR>actually absorb the entire contents of the internet.<BR><BR>Such a format requires soft copy and specialized software.<BR>><BR></div> <div>Spike, I think you are really on to something! But I think you may still be at least a few years ahead of your time. I was recently at my local Borders bookseller and I noticed a thick tome they were pushing for twentysomething women which had you making choices "Choose your own Adventure-style (remember those?)" and
so the main character might wind up divorced, happily-married, rich, homeless, dead- it was all up to your choices. But I prefer the more complex and enriched concept you have proposed. </div> <div> </div> <div>I have the tendancy with a novel to read just those parts which include characters which engage me. I did this with David Brin's "Uplift War" because the "evil" aliens appealed to me much more than the human characters. And I partially read Star Wars novels (please don't hit me!)- but just the parts with the Sith baddies. </div> <div> </div> <div>John Grigg : )</div> <div> </div> <div> </div><p>
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