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Writer Brian Naughton joins Thinking on Paper to discuss The Echo Chamber, a 45,000-word novel generated by Anthropic’s AI model Claude.
The experiment began with a simple question: if Claude were to write a book, what would it write about? Brian then allowed the model to develop the novel without rewriting its prose, directing the plot or editing the finished manuscript.
In this episode, we discuss:
How Claude wrote a complete novel
What instructions and tools were used during the process
How an AI model maintained characters, themes and narrative structure
Why Brian chose not to edit or redirect the manuscript
What the novel reveals about the strengths and limits of AI writing
Whether language models can produce genuinely original fiction
Why AI-generated stories often return to consciousness and identity
How authorship changes when a human designs the process but doesn’t write the text
What AI-written books could mean for writers, publishers and readers
The Echo Chamber is both a novel and an experiment in machine authorship. Its language can feel mechanical, but its themes are recognisably human: memory, consciousness, identity and the experience of being alive.
This conversation examines whether AI can write meaningful fiction, who should be considered the author of an AI-generated book and what remains distinctive about human writing when machines can produce complete narratives.
Please enjoy the show and share it with someone interested in AI, writing and the future of authorship.
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Links:
Thinking On Paper: www.thinkingonpaper.xyz
Read The Echo Chamber: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0F8N4S64Q/
Read the Echo Chamber Github: https://github.com/brian-naughton/the-echo-chamber
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(00:00) Introduction to AI-Authored Literature
(00:46) The Role of AI in Creative Writing
(02:41) The Echo Chamber: The First AI Written Book
(06:06) Managing the Writing Process with AI
(09:30) AI Master Prompts
(10:51) Character Development and AI's Choices
(13:51) The Human Element in AI Writing
(17:03) Reflections on the Writing Experience
(20:24) The Future of AI in Literature
(24:12) AI Art: What Happens Next?
By Mark Fielding and Jeremy GilbertsonWriter Brian Naughton joins Thinking on Paper to discuss The Echo Chamber, a 45,000-word novel generated by Anthropic’s AI model Claude.
The experiment began with a simple question: if Claude were to write a book, what would it write about? Brian then allowed the model to develop the novel without rewriting its prose, directing the plot or editing the finished manuscript.
In this episode, we discuss:
How Claude wrote a complete novel
What instructions and tools were used during the process
How an AI model maintained characters, themes and narrative structure
Why Brian chose not to edit or redirect the manuscript
What the novel reveals about the strengths and limits of AI writing
Whether language models can produce genuinely original fiction
Why AI-generated stories often return to consciousness and identity
How authorship changes when a human designs the process but doesn’t write the text
What AI-written books could mean for writers, publishers and readers
The Echo Chamber is both a novel and an experiment in machine authorship. Its language can feel mechanical, but its themes are recognisably human: memory, consciousness, identity and the experience of being alive.
This conversation examines whether AI can write meaningful fiction, who should be considered the author of an AI-generated book and what remains distinctive about human writing when machines can produce complete narratives.
Please enjoy the show and share it with someone interested in AI, writing and the future of authorship.
--
Links:
Thinking On Paper: www.thinkingonpaper.xyz
Read The Echo Chamber: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0F8N4S64Q/
Read the Echo Chamber Github: https://github.com/brian-naughton/the-echo-chamber
--
(00:00) Introduction to AI-Authored Literature
(00:46) The Role of AI in Creative Writing
(02:41) The Echo Chamber: The First AI Written Book
(06:06) Managing the Writing Process with AI
(09:30) AI Master Prompts
(10:51) Character Development and AI's Choices
(13:51) The Human Element in AI Writing
(17:03) Reflections on the Writing Experience
(20:24) The Future of AI in Literature
(24:12) AI Art: What Happens Next?