×
Chicago Sun-Times and Philadelphia Inquirer both publish AI-generated fictional reading list
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

The Chicago Sun-Times and Philadelphia Inquirer recently published a summer reading list featuring entirely fictitious books attributed to real authors, marking another prominent case of AI hallucinations infiltrating mainstream journalism. This incident highlights the persistent challenge with generative AI systems, which can produce convincingly realistic content that appears authoritative while being completely fabricated – a particularly concerning development as these tools become more integrated into media production workflows.

The big picture: A special section in two major newspapers recommended nonexistent books supposedly written by prominent authors including Isabel Allende, Min Jin Lee, and Pulitzer Prize winner Percival Everett, all generated by artificial intelligence.

Why this matters: This incident demonstrates that despite improvements in generative AI technology, these systems still cannot reliably distinguish between fact and fiction, posing serious challenges for media organizations implementing AI tools.

Key details: The AI-generated book recommendations appeared convincingly authentic, with plausible fictional titles attributed to well-known authors.

  • The fabricated descriptions matched authors’ known styles, such as suggesting Isabel Allende had written another “multigenerational saga.”
  • The list also included fictional books falsely attributed to bestselling authors Delia Owens, Taylor Jenkins Reid, and Brit Bennett.

The broader context: This case represents part of a growing trend of AI hallucinations appearing in respected news publications.

  • AI chatbots often present fabricated information with an authoritative tone that makes falsehoods difficult to detect.
  • The incident demonstrates the continued risks of deploying generative AI in journalism without robust human oversight and fact-checking procedures.
A.I.-Generated Reading List in Chicago Sun-Times Recommends Nonexistent Books

Recent News

Tim Cook tells Apple staff AI is “as big as the internet”

The rare all-hands meeting signals mounting pressure as talent flees to competitors.

Google adds 4 new AI search features including image analysis

Desktop users can now upload PDFs and images for instant AI analysis.

Take that, Oppenheimer: Meta offers AI researcher $250M over 4 years in talent war

Young researchers now hire agents and share negotiation strategies in private chat groups.