Fascinating. I’d love to play around with such a tool if you were to code it. Definitely let me know how that goes.
One thing I’m trying to be mindful of is using GPT-3 to write things the way they’re “supposed” to be. I think of it kind of like playing an electric guitar plugged into an amp after playing an acoustic guitar. Screeches of feedback are technically “wrong” but guitarists quickly incorporated it into their playing on purpose. I actually like the things that GPT-3 does that seem “off” or “incorrect.” The form of the novel is already amazingly diverse, from realist 19th century novels, through the stream of consciousness experiments of modernism, postmodern weirdness ala Pynchon, magical realism, and now the almost feed-like work of younger writers like Patricia Lockwood.
I guess the thing I’m looking to do is create an ongoing repository of chapters so that the AI can at least be aware of them, and it would be ideal to not have to summarize “our story so far,” although I can already see how that actually might be fun. The structure of the novel as we know it is still largely beholden to Charles Dickens, who serialized his work in newspapers, the cutting edge technology of his day. All of this is to say, I’m looking at GPT-3 to blaze a trail into the future of literature rather than replicate what has come before. Glad to connect with other minds puzzling over the same questions.