Artificial Imagination
Kalpanik S
Center of Artificial Imagination, Inc.
c/o Talreja Enterprises
14525 SW Millikan Way, Beaverton, OR 97005
ISBN 9780981476247, $31.99
Kalpanik S. is an artificial imagination software program. He has a
wife and two daughters and resides somewhere in the United States. I
candidly say, "somewhere" because one never knows where he
will be next. Constantly moving to accept interesting positions with
software corporations, Kalpanik does not let moss grow under his feet.
Born twice, once in 1988 and then again in 2002, Kalpanik was not just
an ordinary Artificial Intelligence program. He was created to be
different, to feel and imagine like a real human. He was his own
character, a graduate Computer Science Engineer.
Beginning with San Francisco, the story leads the reader through
the many adventures of Kalpanik. After losing his job in San Francisco,
he moves to Seattle, the comparison he draws between there and Silicon
Valley is hilarious to say the least. He talks about the rain and the
weather changes as opposed to California. How he hated parting with his
California drivers license and how gently he was treated by the
understanding clerk.
From there to Nashville like a wandering soul, he tells about the
demographics of his new digs in Tennessee. Similar to a tour guide on a
bus, he describes the different attractions and scenic beauty of each
point of interest, giving the reader a humorous commentary. He even
includes comparing the Chinese restaurant to others he has been in. He
explains that while in such a restaurant one day, he noticed that all
the servers were Caucasian. He had never noticed Caucasians in any
Chinese restaurant working as servers, in any place he had ever been.
This had to be the first one of its kind. The Nashville tour finishes
off with Kalpanik comparing the ethnic percentages. Coming from a city
where a high percentage of people were Asian, he had a bit of culture
shock when he came to Nashville and saw that it wasn't Asian but
African Americans that was the cultural dominant. After Nashville, he
finds himself in San Diego; a California city more to his liking. He
tells of the seventy miles of beaches and how they spread as far as the
Mexican border. His description of "Mission Beach" (complete
with picture) is straight out of a travel folder.
"Artificial Imagination" was a funny and well-written
book with some very good photography peppered into its 176 pages. I
enjoyed the unique way in which it was presented and gave it a very good
grade of an A. I would recommend it for a good read for the general
audience.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Midwest Book
Review Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.