Artificial: A Love Story

Available
Product Details
Price
$38.00  $35.34
Publisher
Catapult
Publish Date
Pages
368
Dimensions
8.19 X 10.31 X 1.1 inches | 2.65 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781948226387

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About the Author
AMY KURZWEIL is a New Yorker cartoonist and the author of Flying Couch: A Graphic Memoir. She was a 2021 Berlin Prize Fellow with the American Academy in Berlin, a 2019 Shearing Fellow with the Black Mountain Institute, and has received fellowships from MacDowell, Djerassi, and elsewhere.

She has been nominated for a Reuben Award and an Ignatz Award for "Technofeelia," her four part series with The Believer Magazine. Her writing, comics, and cartoons have also been published in The Verge, The New York Times Book Review, Longreads, Literary Hub, WIRED and many other places. Kurzweil has taught widely for over a decade. See her website (amykurzweil.com) to take a class with her.
Reviews
Chicago Tribune, A Top Pick for Fall

"A breathtaking graphic memoir, Artificial is also a tender family story and a meditation on how art, technology, and memory keep people alive." --Francie Lin, The Boston Globe

"A product of rapt observation . . . Kurzweil's attentiveness is an act of devotion. Artificial is an art book about AI arriving at a time when the two fields are in intense conflict . . . Artificial invites readers to view AI as a potential bridge." --Naomi Elias, KQED

"Can artificial intelligence preserve us from the loss of death? This is one of the many fascinating questions Amy Kurzweil raises in her second graphic memoir . . . Artificial is a big book full of big ideas about identity, heritage, and technology. In that sense, it couldn't be more timely . . . Kurzweil is doing something really interesting here--and on a variety of levels at once." --David Ulin, Alta

"In her magnificently complex and dizzyingly astute new graphic memoir, Artificial: A Love Story, Amy Kurzweil has attempted nothing less than to apprehend life's deepest mysteries . . . Past and present are miraculously contemporaneous on a single page." --Melissa Holbrook Pierson, Hyperallergic

"Even as [Kurzweil] presents complicated concepts (because technology--and Kurzweil!), she deftly enables accessible understanding. Her inviting art is as intricate as photos and screenshots . . . and as simple as a few lines . . . The questions inspire imagination, invention, and intriguing interaction." --Booklist (starred review)

"Intimate reflections and powerful visual elements combine in an exemplary work of graphic nonfiction." --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"[Kurzweil] reconstructs archival materials in graphic form, including her grandfather's correspondence, newspaper clippings, photographs, and memories. This gives the work a collage effect, which works beautifully . . . Kurzweil's highly recommended memoir is unlike any other. It will leave readers with much to contemplate." --Library Journal (starred review)

"Part meditation on immortality, part profile of the author's father--inventor and artificial intelligence pioneer Ray Kurzweil--this finely crafted graphic family memoir from New Yorker cartoonist Kurzweil takes an intimate approach to philosophy . . . This melancholic yet loving investigation gets at how AI is as much about the past and what humanity has already created as it is about the future." --Publishers Weekly

"A thought-provoking examination of family and identity, artificial intelligence, and the nature of creativity . . . Even those with little interest in AI will connect with the desire to feel known and loved, across time and distance and even across generations . . . A wide-ranging and intellectual memoir, one that insists on the growth that comes through uncertainty." --Shelf Awareness

"Kurzweil's extraordinary graphic memoir is a story about memory, family, immortality, artificial intelligence, love and consciousness itself. Far-reaching and fascinating." --Roz Chast, New Yorker cartoonist

"Powerful, tender, and complex, Kurzweil's Artificial: A Love Story strikes all the chords. In her drawings, she visualizes the vivid simultaneous perceptions that go into consciousness in a way that feels strikingly accurate. In the story, she pushes past the blank wall one usually hits when trying to fathom death--and plainly asks the questions we wish, more than anything, we could answer." --Liana Finck, author of Let There Be Light

"Hilarious, heady, and full of feeling, Artificial tells the history of an exceptionally compelling family--a conductor grandfather, a futurist father, an artist daughter and granddaughter--through the lens of technology, art, and memory. Amy Kurzweil draws her way through big questions (What is genius? What is love?) with so much open-hearted wisdom that I wanted to follow her right off the page. It's a rare artist who can so eloquently move between the personal and the metaphysical: This book is beautiful, strange, and belongs on your bookshelf forever." --Kristen Radtke, author of Seek You: A Journey Through American Loneliness

"With her masterful counterbalancing of intricacy and simplicity, repetition and surprise, subtle detail and stark contrast, Kurzweil is at the peak of her powers as a cartoonist. Artificial is a poignant record of a daughter's clear-eyed devotion to her quixotic genius of a father, of her finding true love despite everything, and of the sources of her own quirky gift for conquering time and space with nothing more than paper, pencil and ink. I absolutely adored this book." --Michael Chabon, author of Moonglow

"Thoughtful, touching, and deeply human. Artificial invites us to think and feel deeply about the nature of human connection, and the forces--and people--that give shape to our lives. A beautiful story, told beautifully." --Brian Christian, bestselling author of The Most Human Human and The Alignment Problem

"Artificial: A Love Story is an incandescent memoir that manages to be both personal and philosophical. Kurzweil writes with soul and wit about the often slippery relationship between art and artifice, past and future, our embodied limitations, and the profoundly human desire for transcendence. It's a story that left me feeling more alive for having encountered it, and more attentive to the patterns of meaning that make us who we are." --Meghan O'Gieblyn, author of God, Human, Animal, Machine