The Daily Page: Why I Publish One Passage Every Day
204 passages. 204 days. One passage from one book, every single day. The thinking behind The Daily Page.
One Page, Every Day
Starting April 1, 2026, this website publishes one passage from the archive every single day. Not a blog post. Not a summary. An actual passage — a scene, a paragraph, a moment — pulled directly from one of the 68 published books.
Why?
Because most author websites are static. They list books. They show covers. They link to Amazon. And then they sit there, unchanging, for months.
The Daily Page turns this website into a living thing. Every day, a new reader might land on a passage from a book they've never heard of. Every day, the archive surfaces something different.
How It Works
The 204 daily pages are pre-generated from the actual text of the 68 published books. Each passage is:
- A meaningful excerpt (not a random chunk of text)
- Attributed to its source book and chapter
- Linked directly to the full book reader
The passages rotate through the archive, ensuring variety across genres and styles. You might read a thriller passage on Monday, a fantasy scene on Tuesday, and a self-help insight on Wednesday.
The Math
- 68 books in the archive
- 1,352 chapters to draw from
- 2,662,105 words of source material
- 204 daily pages generated (April 1 — October 21, 2026)
That's 204 days of content with zero human effort after the initial generation. The archive publishes itself.
Start reading at /daily. Browse the full archive at /daily/archive.
— Dispatch from the Inamdar ArchiveFrom the Archive
Published by Atharva Inamdar
This content is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Share freely with attribution. No commercial use. No derivatives.