Twisty Little Passages: An Approach to Interactive Fiction
By (Author) Nick Montfort
MIT Press Ltd
MIT Press
11th February 2005
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Computer games / online games: strategy guides
006.7
Paperback
302
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 17mm
431g
Interactive fiction - the best-known form of which is the text game or text adventure - has not received as much critical attention as have such other forms of electronic literature as hypertext fiction and the conversational programs known as chatterbots. Twisty Little Passages (the title refers to a maze in Adventure, the first interactive fiction) is the first book-length consideration of this form, examining it from gaming and literary perspectives. Nick Montfort, an interactive fiction author himself, offers both aficionados and first-time users a way to approach interactive fiction that will lead to a more pleasurable and meaningful experience of it. Twisty Little Passages looks at interactive fiction beginning with its most important literary ancestor, the riddle. Montfort then discusses Adventure and its precursors (including the I Ching and Dungeons and Dragons), and follows this with an examination of mainframe text games developed in response, focusing on the most influential work of that era, Zork. He then considers the introduction of commercial interactive fiction for home computers, particularly that produced by Infocom. Commercial works inspired an independent reaction, and Montfort describes the emergence of independent creators and the development of an online interactive fiction community in the 1990s. Finally, he considers the influence of interactive fiction on other literary and gaming forms. With Twisty Little Passages Nick Montfort places interactive fiction in its computational and literary contexts, opening up this still-developing form to new consideration.
"Anyone interested in the use of technology for artistic and cultural purposes should crack open Twisty Little Passages." - Book Bytes"
Nick Montfort is a Ph.D. student at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the coeditor (with Noah Wardip-Fruin) of The New Media Reader (MIT Press, 2003).