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  1. Yes, really

    Yes, really is a perverse counterpoint about listening, memory and internal and external realities. Three characters, in various ways deaf or blind to each other but each in the same time and place, talk separately — to you, dear reader. While these people share their interlocking stories from different perceptions you, listening to their individual narratives, put it all together. What you’ll come up with is your interpretation. Experience is like that, right? Yes, really.

    yesreally.novamara.com

    author's home page: www.novamara.com

    Yes, Really was shortlisted for the inaugural New Media Writing Prize, in 2010.

    Katharine Norman - 16.08.2011 - 23:43

  2. The O2 Tales

    This charmingly handcrafted hypertext work is built upon the narrative framework of The Canterbury Tales, but in a completely contemporary fashion, using the Simon Cowell’s popular tv musical talent show The X Factor as the motivation for a pilgrimage to the O2 concert arena in London. The inviting hand-drawn train (reminiscent of Max Dalton’s art used in Wes Anderson’s films) uses its characters as an interface to learn about their motivations and interconnected stories. The background music consists of amateur performances of popular songs, of a quality that might give Simon Cowell abundant opportunity for a snide remark, but in this case fits the tone and aesthetics of the piece. The poem in the Prologue echoes Chaucer in its structure, but is cut from the same cloth as the music— offering lines that win readers over with enthusiasm and charm, as it does when it rhymes “telly” with “melée.” (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 28.02.2013 - 11:45