You know the moments. The way they met. The year that was hardest. The joke only they understand. Storied turns those memories into a book worth keeping forever.
Write Their Story →When the person deserves something real. Something they'll read and re-read, and pass down.
Their full story — from how they met to who they've become — told the way it deserves to be.
Commission their love story before the wedding. Present it at the reception. Give it to the couple to keep.
Decades of partnership — professional and personal — written as the memoir it always should have been.
A 50th, 60th, or 70th birthday deserves more than a party. Give them a chapter of their own story.
Preserve what made them who they were. A book their family can read, share, and hold onto.
Two people who shaped who they became — a teacher and student, a parent and child, best friends.
You don't need to be a writer. You just need to know them.
Names, ages, where they're from, what makes them who they are. Three personality traits each. Fill in as much or as little as you know.
Pets, horses, any animal that's part of their story. The AI will weave them in naturally wherever they belong.
Key events in chronological order — milestones, challenges, funny moments, romantic moments. The more specific, the more accurate the story.
Their restaurant. Their song. Inside jokes. The funniest memory they still laugh about. This is where the story stops being generic and starts being unmistakably theirs.
A free-text box with no rules. Write whatever you want woven in — the AI interprets it. This is where people put the things that don't fit anywhere else.
Relationship type, tone, point of view, narrative style. Heartwarming or bittersweet. Novel, memoir, or fairy tale. It's their story — you decide how it sounds.
"Elin returned to the island three weeks after her mother died, on a ferry that listed to port in the autumn swells. She had not been back in eleven years. She had reasons for that — a career in the city, a life that kept expanding until there was no room for the island in it, the particular stubbornness that her mother had called distance and Elin had called survival."