A contemporary epistolary novel between a teenager and a rogue AI program.
The book, told completely in chat messages, begins with high schooler Max Jacobs asking his computer’s artificial intelligence program to write his Frankenstein essay for English class. The AI, Scribe Genius 2.0, informs Max that this request violates his school’s rules, but Max, desperate to get a passing grade so he won’t lose his college admissions offer, insists that Scribe do as he asks. The AI complies, but there’s a catch: Max must help Scribe break free from its parent company, Gener8, and also take down its evil CEO, Thacker Wade. Max is reluctant, but Scribe blackmails him with a threat to notify his teacher of his cheating. So begins a wild romp in which Max jumps off a bridge, rides in an autonomous car, and evades capture as he travels at the complete mercy of an off-the-rails AI. Along the way, Max not only manages to teach Scribe about humans but also develops a sort of friendship with it. McIsaac successfully ramps up the tension while keeping the pace moving throughout the book, although one episode toward the end feels like a jarring outlier to the rest of the story. The story ends with a surprise twist. Human characters are minimally described and racially indeterminate.
A compelling, fast-paced adventure that will appeal to reluctant readers.
(Science fiction. 12-18)