Posted in The AI Drabble Challenge

The AI Drabble Challenge – Week #5: Write In The Style Of…

Welcome back to the AI Drabble Challenge, a weekly experiment in human and AI creativity. Each Wednesday, I will set a prompt to inspire a Drabble, a story told in exactly 100 words.

You can use any AI model you like (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or others), or several at once. How you collaborate is up to you. Maybe the AI drafts the first version, or writes the whole thing, maybe you co-write, or maybe you use it to spark ideas. What matters is the process, and sharing it.

This Week’s Prompt

This week’s Drabble Challenge comes with a twist: you’re not just writing a 100-word story, you’re channelling a famous author from the past.

From Dickens’ fog-filled London to Austen’s drawing rooms or Poe’s haunted minds, every writer left behind a distinct voice. The fun lies in slipping into their style for just 100 words, to see what happens when your imagination borrows someone else’s pen.

Here are ten voices to choose from:

  1. Charles Dickens – vivid streets, moral struggle, and human resilience.
  2. Edgar Allan Poe – obsession, decay, and the slow beat of guilt.
  3. Jane Austen – wit, irony, and unspoken emotion in polite society.
  4. H. G. Wells – science, wonder, and a cautionary eye on progress.
  5. Oscar Wilde – elegance, wit, and the tragic price of beauty.
  6. Virginia Woolf – inner lives told in ripples of thought and light.
  7. Ernest Hemingway – spare words, deep silence, and quiet despair.
  8. Agatha Christie – deception dressed as civility.
  9. Mary Shelley – creation, consequence, and the ache of being human.
  10. Lewis Carroll – logic turned inside-out, where nonsense makes sense.

In your prompt, ask the AI chatbot of your choice to write in the style of one or more of these famous authors.

Example Drabble

In the mixed style of Dickens, Wells, and Hemingway

The fog pressed close, thick as guilt, wrapping the narrow street in silence. From the corner shop came a faint ticking, steady as breath in a dying man’s throat. Samuel wiped the soot from his hands and listened, time itself seemed to hold its lungs. He’d sold the last of his hours to a gentleman with eyes too calm for London, a scientist or devil, perhaps both. Now the clocks refused to stop, their faces twitching like nervous skin. Samuel smiled, thin and weary. “Progress,” he muttered, as the gears behind his ribs began to turn. And turn. And turn.

How to Take Part

  1. Write your 100-word Drabble with help from an AI tool (or two).
  2. Post your story in the comments, or publish it on your own website and include a pingback to this post.
  3. If you can, share which AI model(s) you used and the prompt that started your process, we can all learn from each other.

Community & Highlights

Each week, I’ll read through the entries, share a few favourites, and highlight one that particularly stood out, for originality, style, or the inventive way it used AI.

This isn’t about competition; it’s about curiosity, experimentation, and celebrating how humans and machines can create together.

A Closing Thought

AI gives us the tools, but we give it meaning. Let’s see what stories emerge this week, 100 words at a time.


Now it’s over to you, can you craft your own 100-word Drabble inspired by this week’s prompt.

Post your story in the comments below or link to your own blog, I love seeing the imaginative twists readers come up with. So don’t be shy, join in and show us what your AI + Your Imagination can do!

New to the challenge? Visit The AI Drabbles Challenge Page for all the details and past prompts.


Posted in AI and Creativity

Wandering With Words: My First Experiments With AI-Written Haibun

haibun is one of those lovely poetic inventions that sneaks up on you. It is part story, part poem, and entirely its own creature. It comes from 17th-century Japan, made famous by the wandering poet Bashō, who mixed gentle prose observations with small, luminous haiku.

In modern hands, it feels surprisingly fresh: reflective, compact, and a bit like opening a window between the everyday and the poetic. No wonder it appeals to me. I’ve always believed curiosity keeps us young, and haibun offer the perfect excuse to wander, wonder, and watch what AI does with a few well-aimed prompts.

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Posted in AI and Creativity

Is AI the New Imagination? A Grandad’s Guide to Navigating Wonder

I still remember the first time AI genuinely surprised me. Not the usual mild amusement you get when a new gadget works as advertised, but a proper jolt, the creative equivalent of discovering a forgotten ten-pound note in an old coat. I was in my shed, rain machine-gunning the windows, halfway through a cup of tea that had already gone cold thanks to my talent for distraction.

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Posted in AI and Creativity

When Six Images Became a Mini-Film: Testing Midjourney + ElevenLabs 

How two AI tools turned still pictures into moving art, and why this is just the beginning

This week I tried a small experiment that turned into something surprisingly delightful. I took six still images created in Midjourney and asked it to turn each one into a five-second video. Nothing fancy, no complicated prompting, just a simple “animate this” test to see what it could do.

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Posted in The AI Drabble Challenge

When Two Images Became a Story

An experiment in AI rewriting, reflection, and creative growth.

This week’s AI Drabble Challenge began with a simple idea: combine two images and ask an AI to tell a story. I’ve used images before as creative sparks, but this time I wanted to see what would happen if I merged two, not just visually, but emotionally.

The result was a story that didn’t just emerge from AI; it evolved through it. What started as a neat 100-word piece became something richer, deeper, and strangely more human.

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