
Mytho-Crypto 3.5: Feeling Overwhelmed?
Hello and welcome! I’m Greg, also known as Cryptoversal, and you’re reading the Mythoversal Cryptoversal Newsletter. You either subscribed or are receiving a forwarded copy from a friend—either way, I’m glad to have you in the Cryptoversal community.Too Much to LearnI was talking to an author this week who was making the shift from traditional publishing into Web3, and she was feeling overwhelmed with all that she needed to learn about formats, platforms, and file storage. Does it get easier ...

The Mother of Mother’s Day Experiment Begins
Mother’s Day: The ExperimentIn traditional publishing, the book launch is an event that people react to—or not. Authors can (and should) build a marketing campaign to call people to the action of buying their book. The optimal reader journey is:get the book;read the book;leave a positive review; andanticipate the next book.Over the past two years, I’ve put a lot of thought into how to improve the traditional ebook experience in terms of ownership and utility. But I’ve put less thought into im...

Mytho-Crypto 3.7: Is OpenSea a Criminal Enterprise?
Sorry to offer a bit of righteous anger this week. I was prepared to release another post about the exciting potential for art and technology to combine, but my phone buzzed itself and myself out of our respective sleep modes this morning with news that a multibillion-dollar company, to preserve its market share, would be taking money from creators’ pockets and food from the mouths of our children.The NewsFrom NFT Now:Today (Feburary 17, 2023), the world’s largest NFT marketplace, OpenSea, ma...
<100 subscribers



Mytho-Crypto 3.5: Feeling Overwhelmed?
Hello and welcome! I’m Greg, also known as Cryptoversal, and you’re reading the Mythoversal Cryptoversal Newsletter. You either subscribed or are receiving a forwarded copy from a friend—either way, I’m glad to have you in the Cryptoversal community.Too Much to LearnI was talking to an author this week who was making the shift from traditional publishing into Web3, and she was feeling overwhelmed with all that she needed to learn about formats, platforms, and file storage. Does it get easier ...

The Mother of Mother’s Day Experiment Begins
Mother’s Day: The ExperimentIn traditional publishing, the book launch is an event that people react to—or not. Authors can (and should) build a marketing campaign to call people to the action of buying their book. The optimal reader journey is:get the book;read the book;leave a positive review; andanticipate the next book.Over the past two years, I’ve put a lot of thought into how to improve the traditional ebook experience in terms of ownership and utility. But I’ve put less thought into im...

Mytho-Crypto 3.7: Is OpenSea a Criminal Enterprise?
Sorry to offer a bit of righteous anger this week. I was prepared to release another post about the exciting potential for art and technology to combine, but my phone buzzed itself and myself out of our respective sleep modes this morning with news that a multibillion-dollar company, to preserve its market share, would be taking money from creators’ pockets and food from the mouths of our children.The NewsFrom NFT Now:Today (Feburary 17, 2023), the world’s largest NFT marketplace, OpenSea, ma...
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
One of the most widely used tech tools in the Web3 space, generative art, is best known for churning out cartoon animal NFTs. My question for this week is, what if generative techniques were used to create generative books?
In visual art, the generative process scrambles layers of randomized traits to create thousands of unique images within a cohesive collection. These images have become popular as profile pictures because they express individuality and community membership at the same time.
Generative text could create a book release in which each individual book offers a unique reading experience with an instance of character, setting, and subplots that can be different every time. Paired with a smart contract, such a book could allow its readers to choose among several characters and story paths and lock those particular choices to that particular book.
One early Web3 book project that promised generative text was Annie’s Bookshop. In multiple genres, sentences could be swapped in and out of the story from a bank of variants, creating thousands of possible books. The generative text was then to be incorporated into animated flipbooks with generative titles, cover designs, and backgrounds.

Annie’s project stalled and remains undelivered, but I’ve been rooting for its return.
Generative books did come a step closer to reality with the recent release of The Minthouse, a generative picture book written by Lorepunk.eth and illustrated by an as-yet anonymous artist.
The Minthouse represents a major artistic and technological achievement. The text isn’t generative, but the artwork is, with each copy featuring a main character whose unique set of visual traits are consistently expressed across multiple pages throughout the story.
The protagonist child, always named Robin, may be a boy or a girl, a human or a monkey, a cyclops or a biclops, or possibly a zombie. A variety of realistic skin tones are represented, as well as a few that only exist in fantasy realms.
Some Robins progress through their adventure in their pajamas. Others dress in leisure suits, coveralls, or astronaut suits.
Here are some examples.

Page backgrounds are also generative, creating a variety of settings and environments for our protagonist’s clean, messy, underwater, or treetop home.
I’ve written about this project before, but haven’t been able to view it for a proper review until now. How does this generative book function as a picture book? The collection is ungated, with all of its minted variants viewable from within any marketplace that supports HTML embeds or in the embedded block below.
https://opensea.io/assets/ethereum/0xF0d4c315b9fb1C053B23710a7D32022C5c17fae5/29
Although I’m fascinated by the technology, I don’t own a copy myself and can’t advise you on whether it’s a fitting purchase for you or not. However, I have written a detailed review that is available to paid-tier subscribers to my Substack.
Follow me on Twitter or join my Discord to discuss this further.
--The Mythoversal Cryptoversal
One of the most widely used tech tools in the Web3 space, generative art, is best known for churning out cartoon animal NFTs. My question for this week is, what if generative techniques were used to create generative books?
In visual art, the generative process scrambles layers of randomized traits to create thousands of unique images within a cohesive collection. These images have become popular as profile pictures because they express individuality and community membership at the same time.
Generative text could create a book release in which each individual book offers a unique reading experience with an instance of character, setting, and subplots that can be different every time. Paired with a smart contract, such a book could allow its readers to choose among several characters and story paths and lock those particular choices to that particular book.
One early Web3 book project that promised generative text was Annie’s Bookshop. In multiple genres, sentences could be swapped in and out of the story from a bank of variants, creating thousands of possible books. The generative text was then to be incorporated into animated flipbooks with generative titles, cover designs, and backgrounds.

Annie’s project stalled and remains undelivered, but I’ve been rooting for its return.
Generative books did come a step closer to reality with the recent release of The Minthouse, a generative picture book written by Lorepunk.eth and illustrated by an as-yet anonymous artist.
The Minthouse represents a major artistic and technological achievement. The text isn’t generative, but the artwork is, with each copy featuring a main character whose unique set of visual traits are consistently expressed across multiple pages throughout the story.
The protagonist child, always named Robin, may be a boy or a girl, a human or a monkey, a cyclops or a biclops, or possibly a zombie. A variety of realistic skin tones are represented, as well as a few that only exist in fantasy realms.
Some Robins progress through their adventure in their pajamas. Others dress in leisure suits, coveralls, or astronaut suits.
Here are some examples.

Page backgrounds are also generative, creating a variety of settings and environments for our protagonist’s clean, messy, underwater, or treetop home.
I’ve written about this project before, but haven’t been able to view it for a proper review until now. How does this generative book function as a picture book? The collection is ungated, with all of its minted variants viewable from within any marketplace that supports HTML embeds or in the embedded block below.
https://opensea.io/assets/ethereum/0xF0d4c315b9fb1C053B23710a7D32022C5c17fae5/29
Although I’m fascinated by the technology, I don’t own a copy myself and can’t advise you on whether it’s a fitting purchase for you or not. However, I have written a detailed review that is available to paid-tier subscribers to my Substack.
Follow me on Twitter or join my Discord to discuss this further.
--The Mythoversal Cryptoversal
No comments yet