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You were born; you lived; you died. Not everyone gets a second chance to go back and change crucial decisions. You have been granted one and must go back to critical moral dilemmas; but do you change the course of your life, or daren't you?
[--blurb from The Z-Files Catalogue]
v.9: 05-May-2022 01:17 -
Paul O'Brian
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v.8: 05-May-2022 01:11 - Paul O'Brian Changed external review links | |
v.7: 03-May-2009 20:05 - Dave Chapeskie Changed cover art | |
v.6: 03-May-2009 19:54 - Dave Chapeskie Changed external review links | |
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v.1: 16-Oct-2007 01:47 - IFDB
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>INVENTORY - Paul O'Brian writes about interactive fiction
I thought this was really an impressive piece of work. Yes, it was a bit heavy-handed at times, and probably a little too derivative of Neil Gaiman's visions of Fate and Evil in his Sandman cycle. But nonetheless, I found the situations compelling, the dilemmas convincing, and if a work is going to be derivative of someone, you could do a hell of a lot worse than Gaiman.
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SPAG
Reviews by C.E. Forman and Duncan Stevens
I loved the writing in "Tapestry," particularly the purgatorial prologue scenes. Vivid and absorbing, the prose makes you feel, which is rare for I-F. ...
Despite my differences with it, though, I must grant that Tapestry is a well-written and, mostly, well-crafted work, with plenty of thought behind it. ...