Weekly Unfinished Tales and Short Stories from our Dataset
This curated selection presents a daily collection of narrative experiments drawn from the ‘Unfinished Tales and Short Stories’ project. Each piece, a fragment from our extensive dataset, represents an ongoing exploration within an interdisciplinary arts and narrative storytelling program. These diverse textual artifacts are cultivated not only for their inherent creative merit but also for their capacity to illuminate broader trends and challenges in contemporary storytelling.\n\nThese narratives serve as crucial data points for our dual research foci: AI-Assisted Storytelling and Talent Development. By analyzing their structural variations, character arcs, and thematic developments, we gain insights into how artificial intelligence can augment creative processes, from idea generation to plot diversification. Concurrently, the project examines the evolving skill sets required for creative professionals navigating AI and immersive technologies, fostering digital literacy and interdisciplinary approaches essential for future narrative production.
Today’s Unfinished Tales and Short Stories

A Dire Script
Author: Eva Suluk | Category: Comedy | Genre: Family Saga
The air in the dusty rehearsal room hung thick with the ghosts of forgotten lines and stale coffee. Outside, autumn rain lashed against the theatre’s grimy windows, a fitting percussive accompaniment to the internal storm brewing between Connie and Terry as they stared at the offending script. A singular, inexplicable ink blot marred page thirty-two, right over the most ludicrous monologue, a tiny, dark omen, like a splotch of dried blood on a map to nowhere. It was a detail only they, the doomed navigators of this theatrical shipwreck, would ever notice or assign such dire significance.

The Dandelion Accord
Author: Eva Suluk | Category: Romance | Genre: Satire
The spring air carried the scent of damp earth and the sweet, cloying perfume of budding lilacs. Mud, a stubborn, tenacious kind, clung to everything, especially the edges of Peggy’s wellington boots. The municipal park, usually a cheerful riot of colour, felt strangely hushed in the early afternoon, the kind of quiet that meant adults were either busy elsewhere or plotting something important, like the precise placement of annual bedding plants. Peggy knelt near a weathered bench, her gaze fixed on a cluster of green that, to her, held monumental significance.

Salvaging the Absurd
Author: Tony Eetak | Category: Comedy | Genre: Slice of Life
The air in the rehearsal room hung thick and cold, smelling of stale coffee and damp plaster. Outside, a relentless winter wind rattled the single-paned windows, a bleak counterpoint to the increasingly frantic whispers inside. Fluorescent tubes hummed overhead, casting a sickly yellow glow on the worn floorboards and the two figures huddled over a script, their expressions a grim testament to the artistic torture they endured.

The Ghost of Operation Mistletoe
Author: Leaf R. | Category: Psychological Drama | Genre: Espionage / Spy Fiction
The air in the community hall hung thick and heavy, laden with the scent of old wood, stale popcorn, and the faint, metallic tang of an overheating projector bulb. A single, dusty spotlight cut through the gloom, illuminating a patchwork stage set that looked less like Victorian London and more like a forgotten attic sale. The summer heat was relentless, even indoors, pressing down on the handful of us gathered, making every movement a chore, every line delivery feel like a desperate gasp for air.

The Chakra Harmonizer
Author: Tony Eetak | Category: Romance | Genre: Satire
The ‘Zenith Blossom Summer Equinox Gathering’ had promised enlightenment and inner peace. What it delivered, instead, was an overpowering scent of burnt sage and desperation, trapped within a geodesic dome that vibrated with the low thrum of a ‘Chakra Harmonizer.’ Dorothy, already on her third internal sigh of the morning, felt a distinct unease, like an ill-fitting shoe she couldn’t quite kick off. The air, thick with the humid summer heat and the earnest, if misguided, efforts of fellow attendees, pressed in on her, making her silk scarf cling unpleasantly to her neck.
Design Notes and Applied Research
This collection, spanning Family Saga, Satire, Slice of Life, and Espionage / Spy Fiction, alongside themes of Comedy, Romance, and Psychological Drama, directly reflects our project’s focus on skills development within the arts. Engaging with such diverse narrative structures and emotional landscapes hones critical writing, character development, plot construction, and thematic exploration abilities. The integration of these varied forms also showcases how digital platforms facilitate the creation, archiving, and dissemination of complex storytelling, pushing the boundaries of traditional artistic practice.
This daily collection effectively demonstrates the multifaceted impact of digital transformation on contemporary artistic skills. It highlights how digital tools enable creators to experiment with genre conventions and thematic depth, fostering innovation in narrative approaches and audience engagement. The entire endeavor proved to be an exceptionally enjoyable project and a highly valuable experiment in exploring the evolving intersections of storytelling, skill acquisition, and digital methodologies.
About the Project
The Unfinished Tales and Short Stories collection was an interdisciplinary arts and narrative storytelling experiment in 2025. It was part of a creative arts and participatory research project by The Arts Incubator Winnipeg and the Art Borups Corners collectives. It focuses on two key areas: AI-Assisted Storytelling and Scriptwriting, exploring AI tools for generating ideas, plot structures, and story arcs; and Talent Development and Training, studying digital skills, literacy and training needs for creative professionals by experimenting with AI and immersive technologies to inform future projects. Funding and support were generously provided by the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects program and the Government of Ontario. We thank them for supporting the arts, digital transformation, and applied Artificial Intelligence (AI) research.
