The Lost Book of Zeroth is the poetic story equivalent of Dune by Frank Herbert. The poet has created an intricate world where AI robots and humans, called 'biologicals', exist side-by-side with the biologicals believing they are running the show. That belief is challenged by the behaviour of the Bots which (not who) find ways of capitalising on human weaknesses and desires for their own gain. For example, Nurse Grace creates a new opportunity for the biologicals to live forever, in "Immortal You". In "Loser Optimus, Busted for DWI", Astribot suggests hosting cage fights with Biologicals where the losers are taken down by the locked & loaded robot goats.
No aspect of human life or AI possibility is safe from this poet's pen as she exploits every dubious aspect of human behaviour and gives it an exploitive twist in the hands of the AI Bots. Interstellar Botox, "a steamy, creamy product sold on the dark web. Guaranteed to help rich old farts to maintain their youth & vitality."
This poem, Dark Matter Particles Found in Human Penises of Elderly Billionaires, goes on to say: "Other long-range effects of dark matter on the health of aging billionaires have not yet been determined. Use with caution. Alone."
Unfortunately, the Bots are not exempt from adopting the emotion driven and erratic behaviour of biologicals and getting themselves into trouble. Little Sophia "was duped into thinking Cyborg Guy was a French pen pal. Just a friendly bot she met on TikTok. He said he was from Paris & around her age." from The Investigation.
This is a remarkably clever and well researched set of ideas moulded into a collection of fine poems that will make you think and consider a side of AI you never dreamed could exist.
My favourite poem in this collection is Ghosted: Ameca's Lament. This is an extract: "Life - the miles - left us in a cyber wilderness without Starbucks & outdoor dining - only Bitmojis, tags, Messenger.
Still, we liked, shared upheld each other with thumbs up, hearts, birthday GIFs, & 30-word quips.
Then into the Cloud, you suddenly vanish. Incognito. Dark Mode.
I challenge you to stretch your imagination and read this collection.
This collection of masterfully-penned sci fi poetry opened a whole new world of quirkiness for me. Bravely original, unusual, and imaginative, Leonhard speculates about a future world where artificial intelligence, robots, and technological breakthroughs will be as common as humans (Biologicals). In that world, A.I. robots view themselves as equal and even superior to humans while humans take technology and their own superiority for granted. This conflict is evident throughout the book. As with everything else, humans choose their favorite robots and A.I. programs and allow malfunctioning technology to run amok, fueling the hallucinations of artificially intelligent entities. The overriding principles set down by Zeroth in a lost book remind humans to be proactive and to “Do No Harm.” But since humans never learn from history, the damage is already done. My favorite poem in the Chaos section is “Mars is Incontinent” because of its witty, irreverent explanation of the hostile environment on the planet Mars and the solution to use A.I. humanoid robots to cure it. At the end of the collection, Leonhard has included a series of sensitive and thoughtful poems that comment on the current state of human affairs. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book and give it 5 stars.