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56 votes
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Bobiverse book 5 (Not till we are lost) - coming Sept 5 2024
22 votes -
How to subtitle your book so people will read it: Tajja Isen on balancing the demands of marketing with artistic vision
13 votes -
Apple is turning William Gibson’s Neuromancer into a TV series
32 votes -
Etsy sellers are turning free fanfiction into printed and bound physical books [against the wishes of the authors], and listing them for sale for more than $100 per book
59 votes -
Amanda Churchill on embracing her Japanese heritage through food
8 votes -
Booktok and the hotgirlification of reading
19 votes -
Remembering trailblazing LGBTQ+ civil rights activist James Baldwin this Black History Month
16 votes -
Seismic City by Joanna Dyl: an economic class and political history of the aftermath of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake
5 votes -
How Nellie Bly and other trailblazing women wrote creative nonfiction in English before it was a thing
12 votes -
Why AI writing is inherently coercive
Writing, at its core, is a shared experience between the author and the reader—an exchange of thoughts, emotions, and ideas. This connection, built on trust and authenticity, is the bedrock of any...
Writing, at its core, is a shared experience between the author and the reader—an exchange of thoughts, emotions, and ideas. This connection, built on trust and authenticity, is the bedrock of any meaningful relationship, even one as seemingly one-sided as the parasocial relationship between an author and their audience.
When AI is introduced into the realm of writing, it disrupts this delicate balance of trust. Readers inherently believe that they are engaging with the genuine thoughts and expressions of a fellow human being. However, the introduction of AI blurs this line, creating a scenario where the words on the page may not be the product of human experience or creativity.
Imagine delving into a piece of writing, believing you are connecting with the unique perspectives and emotions of another person, only to discover that those words were crafted by a machine. The sense of betrayal and disillusionment that may follow disrupts the very essence of the reader's trust in the author. It's akin to thinking you are having a heart-to-heart conversation with a friend, only to later realize it was an automated response.
This violation of trust erodes the foundation of the parasocial relationship, leaving readers questioning the authenticity of the connection. Human communication is a dance of shared experiences and emotions, and AI, no matter how advanced, lacks the depth of personal understanding that defines true human interaction.
In essence, while AI may expedite the writing process and provide creative insights, it does so at the cost of jeopardizing the sacred trust between the writer and the reader. As we navigate this digital era, let us not forget the importance of preserving the authenticity that underlies our human connections through the written word.
Generated by ChatGPT.
21 votes -
Five of the best Terry Pratchett books and suggestions for how to read Pratchett's work
38 votes -
Someone discovered a new pen name used (probably) by Louisa May Alcott in the 1850s
11 votes -
Choose Your Own Adventure - 45 years ago, one kids book series taught a generation how to make bad decisions
25 votes -
Obituary for Terry Bisson (1942-2024)
10 votes -
Each year from 2014 to 2114, a manuscript is sealed in The Silent Room of Norway's Future Library – the goal: greater hope for humankind
13 votes -
The male glance [2018]
49 votes -
Peter Watts on conscious ants and human hives
14 votes -
Spotify's push into audiobooks sparks concern among authors
13 votes -
My doomed career as a North Korean novelist
24 votes -
Masha Gessen’s Hannah Arendt Prize has been canceled because of their essay on Gaza
22 votes -
The Murderbot Diaries Book 7 - System Collapse just got released
28 votes -
Has it ever been harder to make a living as an author in the Anglosphere?
13 votes -
UnbanCoolies interview with Ashley Hope Peréz, author of Out of Darkness
3 votes -
How John Steinbeck tricked his kids into reading great books
29 votes -
Jon Fosse: ‘It took years before I dared to write again’
9 votes -
Palestinian voices ‘shut down’ at Frankfurt Book Fair, say authors
15 votes -
Patrick Rothfuss on the wait for book two of The Kingkiller Chronicle (2009)
27 votes -
Salman Rushdie announces memoir, Knife, about being stabbed in 2022 - describes it as 'an attempt to answer violence with art’
17 votes -
Video interview - science fiction author - Lois McMaster Bujold who wrote the award winning Vorkosigan series, the Curse of Challion and sequels and more
7 votes -
Database containing nearly 200,000 pirated books being used to train AI - authors were not informed
41 votes -
Robots are people, too: On the ways writers use non-human characters to tell human stories
11 votes -
Swedish crime novelist Camilla Läckberg has been forced to deny claims that she tricked readers into buying books she didn't write herself
12 votes -
In his novels and plays, the Norwegian author Jon Fosse has continually probed the limits of the perceptible world
7 votes -
The Wolves of Eternity by Karl Ove Knausgård, review – long-lost siblings are linked across time and space in this expansive novel
7 votes -
A second, silent language: A conversation with Jon Fosse
5 votes -
Pittsburgh Pennsylvania children's author writes a book titled 'Banned Book', discusses censorship
12 votes -
Interview with Martha Wells about Murderbot and more
8 votes -
Octavia Butler’s advice on writing, found in recently published Octavia E. Butler: The Last Interview and Other Conversations
12 votes -
Every country’s highest-rated book by a local author - based on GoodReads data May 2023
12 votes -
Why 'The Hobbit' is still underappreciated, eighty-six years later: A Culture Re-View
16 votes -
Strike and Robin return – but JK Rowling really needs an editor
6 votes -
A publisher published a book on educational technology generated by AI. Authors of a cited source found plagiarism
10 votes -
Debut novel by Millie Bobby Brown reignites debate over ghostwritten celebrity books
16 votes -
Alan Moore interview: ‘I’m giving all my screen royalties to Black Lives Matter’
20 votes -
Olga Ravn on her new hybrid novel about maternal ambivalence, her debt to Doris Lessing, and attempting to read Freud aged ten
5 votes -
‘It's time the Girl With the Dragon Tattoo grew up’ – Karin Smirnoff on her shocking sequel
13 votes -
Molly Holzschlag, known as 'the fairy godmother of the web,' dead at 60
18 votes -
Terry Pratchett was fantasy fiction’s Kurt Vonnegut, not its Douglas Adams
47 votes -
Literature Map: The more people like an author and another author, the closer together they move
17 votes