AI Generated Books

Infinite Bookshelf is a Github repo that uses Groq and Llama3 to generate 100-page books. The examples are of technical subjects: LLM basics, and Data Structures.

Omniscience lets you write and publish long form books. The site contains dozens of lengthy AI-generated books, plus an API that will automatically publish yours on Kindle.

Final copy on Amazon Kindle

Writesonic’s AI Writer will generate 500-5000 word content on any topic, specially crafted to rank high in Google’s search results.

Books

Otto generates a book-length 7500 biography from short interactive sessions. $49

Groqbook is an open source book-making project that lets you generate lengthy books from a single prompt. Click here to read a sample 15-chapter book based on the prompt “The basics of large language models”.

YouAI lets you build custom apps with full-blown workflows, including chat interfaces, summarizers, analyzers, and document editors, plus trained with external data.

Wired says YouAI developed Book AI, being used by Solution Tree and other publishers to make an interactive way to talk to a book.

SchoolXpress lets you make your own AI-conversational book by uploading your content.

gpt-author is a GitHub repo from @mattshumer_ that

This project utilizes a chain of GPT-4, Stable Diffusion, and Anthropic API calls to generate an original fantasy novel. Users can provide an initial prompt and enter how many chapters they’d like it to be, and the AI then generates an entire novel, outputting an EPUB file compatible with e-book readers. A 15-chapter novel can cost as little as $4 to produce, and is written in just a few minutes.

How it works

The AI is asked to generate a list of potential plots based on a given prompt. It then selects the most engaging plot, improves upon it, and extracts a title. After that, it generates a detailed storyline with a specified number of chapters, and then tries to improve upon that storyline. Each chapter is then individually written by the AI, following the plot and taking into account the content of previous chapters. Finally, a prompt to design the cover art is generated, and the cover is created. Finally, it’s all pulled together, and the novel is compiled into an EPUB file.

2023-10-29 6:21 AM

Tyler Cowen and LLMs

2023-03-29 8:15 AM

Tyler Cowen’s GPT-4 interview with Jonathan Swift is a neat idea but results are oddly unsatisfying. Pretty clear it’s a bot, and not just because the transcript is read with too much formality. Answers are, well, robotic. The bot shows no awareness of the host or the present context. Cmon, how could The real JS would have tailored his answer to the times. This reads like an undergrad essay exercise.