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KF5JRV > TECH     12.05.16 13:30l 74 Lines 3904 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: First Computer Written Book
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Sent: 160512/1117Z 2799@KF5JRV.#NWAR.AR.USA.NA BPQ1.4.65

The First Book Written by a Computer Program 1984

Detail from cover of The Policeman's Beard is Half Constructed, the first book 
written by a computer program.  Please click on image to see image of entire 
cover of book.

In 1984 American writer and programmer William Chamberlain of New York 
published The Policeman’s Beard is Half Constructed, a volume of prose and 
poetry that, except for Chamberlain's introduction, was entirely written by a 
computer program called RACTEROff that had been developed by 
Chamberlain with Thomas Etter. The program was given credit for authorship on 
the title page which read: The Policeman's Beard is Half Constructed. Computer 
Prose and Poetry by Racter. Illustrations by Joan Hall. Introduction by 
William Chamberlain. The bright red cover of the paperback stated that this 
was "The First Book Ever Written by a Computer." It also called it "A Bizarre 
and Fantastic Journey into the Mind of a Machine." The blurb stated that the 
book contained:

"• Poetry and limericks

"• Imaginatige Dialogues

"• Aphorisms

"• Interviewss

"• The published short story , "Soft Ions" and more.

"You are about to enter a strange, deranged, and awesome world of images and 
fantasies– the 'thoughts' of the most advanced prose-creating computer program 
today."

The program, the name of which was an abbreviation for raconteur, could 
generate grammatically consistent sentences with the help of a pre-coded 
grammar template. Although certainly readable in the sense that each sentence 
displayed a competent grammar, any anxiety that the program could replace 
human authors would have been put to rest after a single glance at the 
computer-generated narrative:

"At all events my own essays and dissertations about love and its endless pain 
and perpetual pleasure will be known and understood by all of you who read 
this and talk or sing or chant about it to your worried friends or nervous 
enemies. Love is the question and the subject of this essay. We will commence 
with a question: does steak love lettuce? This question is implacably hard and 
inevitably difficult to answer. Here is a question: does an electron love a 
proton, or does it love a neutron? Here is a question: does a man love a woman 
or, to be specific and to be precise, does Bill love Diane? The interesting 
and critical response to this question is: no! He is obsessed and infatuated 
with her. He is loony and crazy about her. That is not the love of steak and 
lettuce, of electron and proton and neutron. This dissertation will show that 
the love of a man and a woman is not the love of steak and lettuce. Love is 
interesting to me and fascinating to you but it is painful to Bill and Diane. 
That is love!" 

According to Chamberlain's introduction to the book, RACTER ran on a CP/M 
machine. It was written in "compiled BASIC on a Z80 micro with 64K of RAM." 

The book was imaginatively published by Warner Books, extensively illustrated 
with black and white collages combining 19th century imagery with computer 
graphics by New York artist Joan Hall.

Describing the "author," the book stated on its first preliminary page:

"The Author: Racter (the name is short for raconteur) is the most highly 
developed artificial writer in the field of prose synthesis today. 
Fundamentally different from artifical intelligence programming, which tries 
to replicate human thinking, Racter can write original work without promptings 
from a human operator. And according to its programmer, 'Once it's running, 
Racter needs no input from the outside world. It's just cooking by itself.' 
Racter's work has appeared in OMNI magazine and in 1983 was the subject of a 
special exhibit at the Whitney Museum in New York. Now at work on a first 
novel, Racter operates on an IMS computer in New York's Greenwich Village, 
where it shares an apartment with a human computer programmer.


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