"Arrival Mind", a graphic novel written by Louis B. Rosenberg, Ph.D., and illustrated by Anastasia Klemevska, analogizes the imminent arrival of sentient artificial intelligences, or AIs, to the arrival of an all-powerful alien -- only from within our own software. It is basically a warning against the advent of too-powerful AI systems; and in that job, it is pretty effective.
Written in poetry in the first half, it is illustrated in semi-scary cartoons with the
Earth encircled in wires tipped with eyeballs, for example. But the colors are light: whites and pastels, so the illustrations, while unsettling, are not horrifying or frightening. They are more pretty. I think the illustrations were the best part of the book.
After a description of how the Earth becomes taken over by the AI because humans are unwilling to pull the plug, the book illustrations turn dark, and the text becomes a pure prose lecture about AIs, how alien they are to human beings, and why we should fear and prepare for them. It was by no means a rant, but it was a little one-sided. Of course, in a short book like this, you can't expect too much in the way of backup or references. For what this book was intended to do, it did a good job.
I received a copy from the publisher for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.