In June, the Book Review Book Club will read and discuss a novel about a tradwife who wakes up in 1855, living the pioneer life she has been performing online.
What the rise of A.I. and the gutting of books coverage across U.S. media will mean for literature. By Dwight Garner In 1981, Donald Barthelme published “Challenge,” a funny and weirdly prescient ...
“The Singularity is Nearer,” Ray Kurzweil, was on my library’s new bookshelves when I desperately needed reading material. I decided to risk it. Sadly, my expectations were met. It has almost all the ...
Hezbollah: Born With a Vengeance’ is a book written in 1997 by journalist Hala Jaber. She works for the Sunday Times, writing articles, then as now. She primarily writes on Middle East and Women’s ...
Buried beneath a stack of papers, dangling at the bottom of the priority list, obscured in the shadows, hidden in plain sight. This is the book review, so ubiquitous to the academic enterprise that it ...
The New York Times has cut ties with a freelancer after the paper discovered he used AI to help write a book review that inadvertently incorporated elements of a Guardian review on the same title. A ...
An author and freelance journalist has admitted to using AI to help him write a book review for the New York Times. The Times promptly dropped Preston, calling his “reliance on A.I. and his use of ...
And yet, though sticks and stones and words are weapons, as in the new memoir, “Something We Said” by Elizabeth Stordeur ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results