
I don’t know if I have time to write and post it today, since I had a tough work shift, looked at over 600 emails and listened to four books. In reality, I’m not worried about the extra books I got during the holidays since I’m finishing them so quickly, even if I know someone will judge me for listening to my books. Here’s a question for you: am I the only one who, if I’m the first one to rate and/or review, I worry if or not this novel was made using AI?
Now that I’m back to reviewing books, I thought of doing so with some novels I read last year and loved. If you have been around my blog for a while, you know that I love Eva Lovelle’s writing, but they are a prime example of my AI doubt—something else I found weird now that I have read more than 20 books of theirs. They use the same name for multiple characters. I don’t know if it is typical, but it never happened to me before.
Snow Blind by Eva Lovelle is the first book I read from this author, and to say I was hooked is an understatement. We meet Val Monroe, a freelance photographer tasked with photographing and writing a story about how the weather is affecting places, until she’s stuck in a snowstorm that is. Out of nowhere, she starts to hear something crying, so she goes to investigate. She finds a dog, and by looking at it, she knows it needs urgent help. Here is where, like magic, vet Dr Sarah Bennett shows up, and together they helped the dog get back up on all four paws.
The background image is from Pexels
I think it’s probably going to get harder to tell who is actually writing and who is AI-ing. I’d say just reviewing the plot and how the story moves, because AI stories tend to feel quite ‘flat’… if you know what I mean. Again, no sure how long it will be before everything gets undecipherable. Ah well.
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