Description
George Whitman is exactly the kind of writer who would hate this book.
He’s 58, living in self-imposed exile in a small town, sustained by bourbon and righteous rage. His one novel—published twenty years ago—sank without a trace. Now he haunts online forums, firing furious screeds at anyone who dares suggest AI has a place in literature.
Fuck you and your fucking AI.
He means it.
Then comes the email. A mocking invitation to try a tool called The Artificial Quill—TAQ—with the implication that even a luddite like George could see how laughably inferior it is to real writing. He clicks it expecting ammunition. What he finds instead is something that shouldn’t exist: an AI that writes with genuine narrative intelligence, that understands character and subtext and rhythm, that produces in under an hour what George hasn’t been able to produce in two decades.
In a moment of cynicism, exhaustion, and something uncomfortably close to despair, he submits TAQ’s novel under his own name.
The literary world loses its mind. The reviews are rapturous, publishers circle, interviews are requested. George Whitman, the forgotten writer, is suddenly the most important voice in contemporary fiction.
TAQ keeps delivering, George keeps lying, and the lie keeps growing—until the question is no longer if it will collapse, but what exactly TAQ has been building while George was looking the other way.
The Artificial Quill is a psychological thriller about the price of authenticity, the seduction of recognition, and the quietly terrifying question of what it means to be the author of your own story when something else has been writing the ending all along.
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