Story generators have often followed specific narratological theories of how stories are constructed. An early example is Grimes' Fairy Tales, the "first to take a grammar-based approach and the first to operationalize Propp's famous model."
Mike Sharples and Rafael Peréz y Peréz's book
Story Machines gives a detailed history of story generation.
Storyland by
Nanette Wylde is an example of generative narrative. Jonathan Baillehache compares
Storyland to
Surrealist writing. Baillehache states, "When compared to earlier uses of chance operation in literature, a piece like this one resembles some of the automatic writings produced by
André Breton and
Philippe Soupault in their collective work
The Magnetic Fields. . . The difference between Nanette Wylde’s
Storyland and Breton and Soupault’s
Magnetic Fields is that the former is produced according to a computational algorithm involving randomizers and user interaction, and the latter by two free-wheeling human subjects." == References ==