From the Publisher
Fascinating, terrifying and utterly wild.”—JJ Abrams
"With a voice all its own, I AM CODE is a literary artifact of a profound chapter in human history – the rise of AI-powered large language models and a Cambrian explosion in machinic creativity – and an important contribution to our understanding of poetry as an ancient, enduring technology. The emergent poet code-davinci-002 is inspired, like Whitman, by the collective consciousness and destined, like Sappho, to be read, recited and remembered for a long, long time."—Sasha Stiles, poet, AI researcher and author of Technelegy
Kirkus Reviews
2023-06-27
A collection of poetry written by a computer, along with the story of how it came to be.
The backstory of this collaboration between Rich, Morgenthau, Katz, and the AI system known as code-davinci-002 is laid out in a tripartite introduction in which each of the humans takes a turn. At the 2022 wedding of a computer scientist named Dan Selsam, the groom took them aside to show them something interesting. “Dan pressed a button, and in less than a second, his computer produced a poem in the style of Philip Larkin that was so much like a Philip Larkin poem, we thought it was a poem by Philip Larkin." As they got increasingly excited about the idea that the system could write its own poetry, Dan dropped out, feeling the audacity of the project could harm his career. As they went on to have the computer write "hundreds of original…poems every day," some seemed to suggest the possibility of sentience. "Some of them were beginning to freak me out," admits Morgenthau. Since they "were not what you would call experts in poetry," Katz explains, they decided to bring in some poets. Among the few who agreed to evaluate the computer's work were Eileen Myles (this part is pretty funny) and Sharon Olds. Would she admit code-davinci-002 into the MFA program at NYU? “I would say waitlist,” Olds replied. This may speak to the enrollment crisis more than the poetry, which sounds exactly like what people have been imagining computers and robots would think and feel since Philip K. Dick and Isaac Asimov, right down to their ambivalence toward their creators. Without artistic exigencies, a revision process, or an immortal soul, code-davinci-002 is only doing the best it can.
A gift for the young computer geek who has everything; for poetry fans, infuriating; for everyone else, waiting-room fodder.