Seth Kugel and Stephen Hiltner write: “In March, Amy Kolsky visited Amazon.com and typed in a few search terms: travel, guidebook, France. Among the top search results was the highly rated France Travel Guide, by ‛Mike Steves,’ who, according to an Amazon author page, is a renowned travel writer. When it arrived, Kolsky was disappointed by its vague descriptions, repetitive text, and lack of itineraries. Kolsky had fallen victim to a new form of travel scam: shoddy guidebooks that appear to be compiled with the help of generative artificial intelligence (AI), self-published and bolstered by sham reviews.” Similarly, Jane Friedman reported finding books attributed to her, but likely generated by AI, on Amazon and Goodreads.