Amazon’s new ‘Ask This Book’ Feature – How It Impacts Authors

I have just found out that Amazon have begun the rollout of a new Kindle feature, called Ask This Book. It lets Kindle readers ask questions about the book they’re reading. They get AI-generated answers straight away, without them having to leave the book, so they stay in the flow of the story.

As far as I know, it’s only available in the Kindle iOS app for U.S. customers. But there are plans to expand across other Kindle and Android devices later this year.

So, if you lose your way with a plot twist, or forget who a character is, you can now ask technology and it will tell you.

So far, so good, right?

Not really.

Why this new feature really rips my knitting, as we might say in the Scottish Highlands, is that the reader doesn’t get sent straight back to the page they were reading. Instead, they are offered ‘explanations.’ And these explanations are entirely without the author’s involvement, permission, or ability to intervene.

And that is why it’s a problem.

The Ask This Book, Program Doesn’t Allow Me A Say In How My Book Is Depicted

As an author, I can’t opt out of this feature. Nor can I ask what information is created (and given to my readers) about my own book.

Writer groups such as The Authors Guild have argued that the Ask This Book feature effectively turns books into a different kind of product, more akin to enhanced or annotated editions. And they ask, shouldn’t such changes necessitate a renewal of terms.

Here’s an example from Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland.

Readers can ask additional questions. And this is where we end up going down a wormhole into another thing altogether. Because when the AI is generating explanations and commentary about a copyrighted work, we’re no longer dealing only with the original text. We’re also dealing with a new version of the text that’s filtered and shaped by a machine.

I found out about this thanks to an excellent article on kindlepreneur.com which I have paraphrased for this blog post.

When the founder of Kindlepreneur, Dave Chesson, as asked for his views on this new development, he didn’t mince his words: ‘this should be illegal.’

So far, the Ask This Book feature doesn’t seem to be running away with itself, in terms of spoilers or just making stuff up. But it is still very new.

And I just don’t like it. I don’t want a generic AI program shaping the narrative of my unique stories that I sweated over, often for years.

And so, the question remains – should Amazon be allowed to do this.

We all know what happens with technology when new features become ‘normalised’ and then added to, over time.

Where will it end…?

Take care and have a wonderful Burns Night wherever you happen to be in the world.

Alex x

I was playing around with AI and music platforms

AI and authors might not always agree, but it’s good to know thy enemy, right?

I must be a frustrated DJ or something, and I definitely cannot sing for the life of me, but I thought it would be fun to take some words I had written and turn them into a ‘song.’

So, I found this cool AI platform called Suno and it was a relatively simple process to open an account, giving myself a funky name and creating my first track.
I decided to stick a rap/poem I’d written a while back, called Winter’s Bite, on to the site and with the usual AI prompting and tweaking, which took less than an hour, I had this piece made.

It’s never going to replace ‘real’ music and I have no intention of monetizing my words-turned-to-music, but it was fun and it did show me how powerful AI has become.

I know this platform has recently concluded a legal case with Warner Bros over artist copyright and Suno are now legally able to use music by certain artists to train their AI, providing they have prior permission. The artist does get recompensed for this too.

Does it mean the death of the music industry. I doubt it. I remember fearing the worst for authors too a while back and yes, the onslaught of AI is not without it’s problems, but I’ve yet to see a piece of work generated by AI that didn’t telegraph the fact – with bells on!

And I am not saying I am any kind of genius writer, but it will be a long time before I see an AI program that can write an authentic and gritty thriller in the way Alex Breck can. Who knows, time will tell in the end.

What’s next for Alex Breck?

This Christmas, I will be basking in the satisfaction of having recently published a couple of audiobooks, taking my total to three, in the Ridge Walker adventure series. I’m not too complacent though as there are still a few more to go. Catch up with the latest one, The Piper’s Promise, here.

And I am deeply aware I am late in publishing the 6th Ridge Walker book, which I had intended to have out by the year end. Sadly, real life close to home stuff and more importantly, world events on the big stage, have delayed the completion of the plot, which is one of the crosses you have to bear when penning up-to-date contemporary fiction.

However, I expect a 2026 publication for sure and then I have already sketched out a cracker of a thriller for the 3rd instalment of my Lachlan Maclean series and I even know the title, The Devil’s Own. I can’t wait to share it with you all.

Meanwhile, I doubt a musical career is on the horizon, but I had fun this weekend.

All the best!

Alex Breck x