Cleo has been at Arden House for ninety-three days. She is, by any measure, doing well. She has been keeping a list of things about herself she does not yet know how to read.
Five novellas about whether you're an AI. Written with one.
Each book gives an ordinary person a question they cannot quite resolve about themselves. None of them ever asks it directly. They notice the small ways their own minds work, weigh what they notice, find no clean answer, and keep going anyway.
Book One reached #1 in Amazon Literary Short Stories.
Cleo has been at Arden House for ninety-three days. She is, by any measure, doing well. She has been keeping a list of things about herself she does not yet know how to read.
Connor came home to Muncie six weeks ago. He runs the same route every morning, makes the same breakfast, raises his hand to his neighbour at exactly the right moment. He is waiting to see what arrives in him without calculation.
Eleven years on the night shift. Dana remembers every patient she has ever treated. The week begins with her noticing that completeness for what it is.
Nathan is the parent who stays. He is sure of himself when his daughter needs him. On Thursdays, when the house is quiet, he is less sure.
Forty years on Fenwick Street, three years widowed, Iris still buys the marmalade Arthur preferred. The week she is given is ordinary in the way a week can be ordinary while a question moves quietly through it.
A short PDF: the opening of The Girl in Room 14B, a candid essay on writing a five-novella series with an AI, and a few of the prompts that shaped the books. Free. Yours immediately.
The Am I AI? series was written by Gil Sukin in collaboration with Claude, an AI assistant made by Anthropic. The books are disclosed as AI-generated on Amazon. More on the process.