Digital Fiction, writing for the network.

The limits of representation of the word are greatly expanded in the programmability of a screen, compared to the precious stillness of the printed page. Digital Fiction is defined as a site of 'electronic interactive narrative', which its creators' own admission, want to leave aside the cultural stereotypes and technical issues related to writing with digital media, helping to create an interesting narrative online that is able to 'tell' stories using an appealing style of writing combined with the original offer user interaction. In fact the poems and short stories here run to the rhythms of animated flash, with a common taste for a split of information and simulation, in some areas, pages, often in their natural black and white with movable elements at will. In 'The Diary of Anne Sykes', for example, text, perloppiù treated as an image, is uncoordinated blocks by dragging with the mouse and zoom with the appropriate interface to interpret the meanings and the common thread that unites them, an intricate affair to interpret through even through the pieces that you can find between the sheets. But animation can achieve admirable virtuosity, as in the beautiful and dreamlike 'Dream', which in a free fall with continuous changes of perspective and a minimal text impregnable for speed, communicates the urgency and the continued unpredictable transformation of a dream.