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A Most Anticipated Book from The New York Times and more! - One of Esquire's Best Books of the Year (So Far)
"I cannot imagine a better guide through the infuriating, labyrinthine underworld of technology than Vauhini Vara."--Carmen Maria Machado, author of In the Dream House
"Smart, funny, honest."--The New Yorker - "At once genre-defying and gripping."--The Washington Post
When it was released to the public in November 2022, ChatGPT awakened the world to a secretive project: teaching AI-powered machines to write. Its creators had a sweeping ambition--to build machines that not only could communicate but also could do all kinds of other activities, and better than humans ever could. But was this goal actually achievable? And if reached, would it lead to our liberation or our subjugation?
Vauhini Vara, an award-winning tech journalist and editor, had long been grappling with these questions. In 2021, she asked a predecessor of ChatGPT to write about her sister's death, resulting in an essay that was both more moving and more disturbing than she could have imagined. It quickly went viral.
The experience, revealing both the power and the danger of corporate-owned technologies, forced Vara to interrogate how these technologies have influenced her understanding of herself and the world around her--from discovering online chat rooms as a preteen to using social media as The Wall Street Journal's first Facebook reporter to asking ChatGPT for writing advice--while compelling her to add to the trove of human-created material exploited for corporate financial gain. Interspersed throughout this investigation are her own Google searches, Amazon reviews, and the other raw material of internet life--including the viral AI experiment that started it all. Searches illuminates how technological capitalism is both shaping and exploiting human existence while proposing that by harnessing the collective creativity that makes humans unique, we might imagine a freer, more empowered relationship with our machines and, ultimately, with one another.
Belletrist is a book club founded by actor Emma Roberts and producer Karah Preiss.
APRIL BOOK ✨ Searches: Selfhood in the Digital Age by @vauhinivaraa ❤️ a personal exploration of how technology companies have both fulfilled and exploited the human desire for understanding and connection. We hope you join us on Belletrist x @jointertulia to read along!
"A thought-provoking investigation into personal history, creativity, and technology, elements that make us all"
"I cannot imagine a better guide through the infuriating, labyrinthine underworld of technology than Vauhini Vara. Searches is so many things--heart-stoppingly sad, a formal high-wire act, a wise and funny and thoughtful encyclopedia of our modern age--but most of all it is a book about human relationships: how imperfectly we made this thing that connects us, and how we might use this thing to re-meet ourselves and each other."
-- Carmen Maria Machado, author of In the Dream House
"What an original, expansive, epic achievement. I've been waiting for a follow-up to Vauhini Vara's magazine piece 'Ghosts, ' where she introduced us to a new machine-based technology -- a predecessor to ChatGPT -- that had the potential to replace writers like herself. What she's delivered in Searches is a riveting, provocative and deeply personal exploration of our ambivalent relationship with technology that spans from our earliest history to the advent of the internet to the race to dominate artificial intelligence. This is a book that will challenge your notions of what it means to be human, investigating our quest for connection and understanding of our place in the world when technology is getting devilishly good at mimicking us. There is no one better to tell this story than Vauhini Vara, with her deeply engaging personal narratives, infused with curiosity and humor, who has grown up with the internet and sat in the front row as the captains of Big Tech brought us the technologies that now permeate our lives. This book doesn't lead you to a simple and automatic conclusion. In perhaps the most human of qualities, it will make you continue to question, to search."
-- Cecilia Kang, co-author of An Ugly Truth: Inside Facebook's Battle for Domination and award-winning New York Times technology and policy reporter
"Searches picks up where Vauhini Vara's impressive first novel, The Immortal King Rao, left off; this new book deepens, complicates, and amplifies her ongoing investigation into the nature of artificial intelligence, especially in relationship to the human body, mortality, sorrow, and grief. Blessedly free of cant or posture and extremely knowledgeable about (and acutely conscious of its complicity in) the networks it's mapping, Searches is Vara's best and most compelling book yet."
--David Shields, author of Reality Hunger
"In Searches, the novelist Vauhini Vara gives us a thought-provoking exploration of our age of digital networks and AI. A seemingly omnipresent observer of this revolution, she takes us on a journey from middle-school chat rooms in 1990s Oklahoma, to an early, pre-OpenAI interview with Sam Altman, to her wary interactions with the then-new, not-yet-public AI model GPT-3 as she seeks to make sense of a youthful trauma that won't go away. Searches defies simple, familiar narrative at every turn, rendering a compelling warning of how our technology both connects and commodifies us, molding our understanding of our world and ourselves."
--David A. Price, author of Geniuses at War and The Pixar Touch