Cool new chapters from Spring Short Stories
Welcome to our daily collection of spring short stories, a key part of our ongoing creative arts and seasonal storytelling research initiative. This project is all about being experimental and playful while we explore how digital literacy and AI can help us tell better stories about the changing seasons. We’ve had a lot of fun leaning into our curiosity to see how the feeling of spring—with all its messy growth and new light—can shape the way we write and share our work.
These stories are more than just fun tales; they help us reach our goals in storytelling, scriptwriting, technology, and creative talent development. By focusing on urban environments and the unique experiences of Northern cities in springtime, we are testing new ways to blend technology with traditional craft. Clearly, the work is exploratory and experimental in nature, designed to help us notice the fleeting moments that make this time of year so special for everyone living through it.
Today’s Spring Short Stories

Broke and Bussin
Author: Jamie F. Bell | Category: General Fiction | Genre: Dystopian
Facing eviction, two broke tailors pivot their business model after uncovering a stash of nineties windbreakers.

Main Character Cabbage
Author: Jamie F. Bell | Category: Science Fiction & Fantasy | Genre: Horror
Zeke uses an illegal accelerant on his hydroponic cabbage, resulting in a violent mutation and a domestic war.

Soil and Sus
Author: Tony Eetak | Category: Mystery | Genre: Motivational
Jed tracks a black-market farmer to a hidden bunker, only to uncover the gruesome secret behind her crops.

Ghosted by the Future
Author: Tony Eetak | Category: Inspirational | Genre: Motivational
Liv presents a radical design to a stagnant council, faces rejection, and builds a forbidden structure.

Divide Spring Formal
Author: Tony Eetak | Category: Coming-of-Age | Genre: Horror
Zack braves the toxic, hallucinatory fog dividing Oak River to ask Penny to the spring formal.
Design Notes and Applied Research
This daily collection utilizes genres ranging from dystopian horror to motivational fiction to test the boundaries of narrative structure and audience engagement. By navigating these diverse subject categories, including science fiction and coming-of-age tales, we have actively explored how skills development translates across different creative mediums. These exercises serve as a practical framework for advancing digital literacy within the arts, ensuring that information management remains central to the storytelling process.
This interdisciplinary project provided an invaluable opportunity to merge creative writing with modern data organization techniques. We gained significant insights into how varied thematic elements, such as mystery and inspirational motifs, can be effectively managed within a digital ecosystem. The collaborative nature of this experience has been both exciting and educational, marking a successful milestone in our ongoing efforts to integrate technology with artistic expression.