Hypertext fiction

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Hypertext Fiction is a genre of interactive literature that uses hypertext links to direct the reader into sometimes complex passages throughout a story. These hypertext links can also lead the reader to analogous images. Some hypertext fiction stories are scripted in a fashion that allows the reader to have a different encounter each time the story is read. The reader does not follow a continuous path, but, instead, experiences the story on an interactive basis, as one trying to solve a puzzle or follow a map. The reader is given links to explore, creating a new experience when new directions are chosen.

Hypertext Fiction began circulating in the late 1980’s via floppy disk through a small community of writers.

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Examples of Hypertext Fiction

From the story "24 Hours" by Philippa J Burne

Trams clack past; cars jerk by, stopping, starting. The street is a mixture of dirt and slick. Sculptures sit on corners and hang over shop doors. Posters fill their spaces on pillars and walls advertising bands and readings and political action. Cafes and clothes racks spill onto the pavement, immersed in car fumes. Locals with somewhere to be weave past tourists gazing into shop windows; learnt stares of contempt meet glances of curiosity. You wander through it all; wonder about Jess. For two or so blocks you absorb the street without seeing, then get sucked in, you start looking, to be interested. To shop.

You pass a "bookshop", a "candle shop", a "cafe" , a "shop full of flowers".




“Sunshine 69” by Bobby Rabyd

“Twelve Blue” by Michael Joyce


Works Cited

  • Basaraba, N. (2013, October 23). Examples of hypertext fiction – how to write hypertext narratives?. Retrieved from
  • Clark , L. Hyper-what?: Some views on reader discomfiture with hypertext fiction. Retrieved from
  • Montecino, V. (2002, May). What is hypertext?. Retrieved from Retrieved from
  • O’Connell, L. (2012, March 21). Hypertext fiction. Retrieved from Retrieved from