<p>‘There’s no book like it. <strong>Scholarly, childish, fascinating and hilarious</strong> – one of our funniest writers dissects what it takes to build a story and what that tells us about being human. <strong>It’ll really make you think, if you can stop laughing</strong>.’ —Chris Addison, co-creator of <em>Breeders</em></p>
<p>'Entertaining and alarmingly relevant, provocative and philosophically satisfying, it’s ultimately <strong>a profoundly human text</strong>.'<em>—Observer</em></p>
<p>‘<strong>A magnificent experiment</strong> by a perfect fool – deep and shallow and stupid and clever – the perfect use of AI (Andy Intelligence).’ —Robin Ince, author of <em>The Importance of Being Interested</em></p>
<p>‘In detailing his <strong>hysterical</strong> efforts to get ChatGPT to write a masterpiece, Stanton offers <strong>real insight into how it works or, well, doesn’t</strong>.’ —<em>New Scientist</em></p>
<p>'It's sometimes hard not to feel sorry for the priggish chatbot as <strong>Stanton deploys all his impish (some might say puerile) irreverence to goad the programme</strong>... Ultimately, however it is there, in Stanton's footnotes that the <strong>real genius</strong> of the book is found. <strong>For all the hilarity and absurdity, it asks profound questions</strong> about the relationship between humans and machines... <strong>you'll be hooked</strong> on the conundrum that is AI. There really is no turning back.' —<em>Perspective</em></p>
<p>'<em>Benny the Blue Whale</em> is many things. It’s a fascinating discourse on the nature of language and storytelling. It’s a philosophical treatise on the possibilities of artificial intelligence. It’s a receptacle for obscenely hilarious jokes, and the abstruse and arcane learning that fills Stanton’s brain... A <strong>brilliant and beautiful </strong>cyborg: part human brain, part computational muscle. <strong>It’s a post-post-modern work of genius</strong>.' —Anthony McGowan, Carnegie Medal-winning author of <em>Lark</em></p>
<p>‘A <strong>funny and surprising</strong> creative battle between man and machine.’ <em>—The Bookseller</em></p>
<p>‘The real draw, though, is Stanton’s breakdown of ChatGPT’s craft… The irreverent tone buoys <strong>a surprisingly thoughtful exploration of how AI might aid artists</strong>, and the ways in which it comes up short against its human competitors. <strong>This fascinates</strong>.’ —<em>Publishers Weekly</em></p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Andy Stanton is the author of the bestselling Mr Gum series. He lives in North London and has been a stand-up comedian, a film script reader, a cartoonist, an NHS lackey and lots of other things.