OverDrive is the company that provides a lot of digital content to libraries. If you’ve borrowed an ebook or an audiobook in Libby, or read a magazine in Kanopy, that’s OverDrive.
It seems there is some AI weirdness with audiobook narration on OverDrive, and the narrator is only part of the story.
On Monday, October 14, librarian Robin Bradford posted on Blusky that she’d purchased an AI audiobook for her library system and she was really upset about it:
Over 100 titles by AI “narrators” were in their catalog, and Robin was having trouble finding indications that the authors themselves are real?
Interesting.
Not only is that A LOT of audiobooks, but similar to my casual foray into contemporary romance cover art, I noticed that there was a odd pattern to those author names:
- Mostly one or two syllable first names
- One syllable last names
- All very basic nouns and adjectives as surnames
That homogeneity is a little strange, right? Good thing I’m really nosy.
I reached out to Robin for an interview to learn more. What had brought this to her attention? What was her next step? While we were corresponding, we both searched names and author websites for more information.
This is really weird, y’all.
Her investigation started when she received a message from a patron of her library system that there was something wrong with an audiobook they had borrowed.
The patron reported that during a quiet part of the audio, there seemed to be a tiny portion of another recording inserted into the silence. It happened more than a few times and the patron also provided a timestamp, because this patron is very awesome.
Robin says that this isn’t unusual, and the process is pretty routine: “It’s usually just a corrupted file transfer or something. And we contact the publisher and let them know, or let OverDrive know, and it gets re-uploaded.”
So then what happened?
Robin: “So I went to look up the specific book to see who the publisher was. Mostly because I wanted to know. We would contact OverDrive about the error, and they would fix, or talk to the publisher directly.”
Digital files get corrupted often enough, so this isn’t alarming. But then, Robin and her coworkers noticed the name of the narrator: “Scarlett Synthesized Voice.”
Scarlett, I noticed, is pretty busy: their books appear in Everand, and Audiobooks.com, as well as Chirpbooks and Libro.fm.
Even more intriguing: all the books featuring this narrator are very similar in appearance, and all of them were authored by one of the names Robin noted earlier.
In other words, the authors Robin mentioned were all using AI/synthesized voice narrators.
Here’s a screenshot from Libro.fm’s search results:
These results are similar to what Robin saw within her own library’s OverDrive. When she searched for just the terms “synthesized voice” she found over 100 books, as she mentioned on BluSky.
Let’s take a look at the books themselves for a second:
Look at the similarity in format and style across all these authors. All He Verbs. So Adjective. The Unseen Noun. Not to mention the repeated silhouette, the outer glow, likely courtesy of Photoshop. VERY consistent imagery, right?
All these authors with different names and different series, with similar cover formats, styles, and the same audiobook narrator, who isn’t real?
Huh.
Back to my conversation with Robin. Robin hadn’t initially noticed it was an AI narrator because she never pays attention to the narrator when there’s a patron report of a problem with an audiobook: “It’s always file problems, not narrator problems.”
“And it’s probably still not a narrator problem. It could have happened to any file. BUT, it sent me down the rabbit hole of ‘oh shit, I bought an AI narrated book?’
“I wonder how many of those I bought on accident.”
“OH SHIT, we have HOW MANY?”
Hello and greetings from the depth of the rabbit hole that swallowed us both.
I noticed, as did Robin, that there is no publisher listed that we could find. I pointed out the similarities in the cover art, style, genre, and names, which made me wonder if the author(s) are AI, too.
“That is where I am right now,” Robin replied. “And I’m shocked because I would have sworn on a stack of bibles that Blake Pierce was a real person.”
As she said earlier in her thread on BluSky, “I go to the book author’s webpage it is….incredibly bare. I wonder if the whole thing is AI now. Books, audiobooks, everything.”
We started googling the authors and the results are very similar: websites that are mostly pages listing the books in a series, sparse bios that follow the same format of listing what series the author has written, and very, very few with social media outside of a Facebook group, and none of the social media accounts are linked from the author websites.
Let’s take another look at that list of names:
- Blake Pierce – website is all series lists, no social media linked, but does have a Facebook group
- Kate Bold – website is all series lists, no social media aside from a Facebook group, which isn’t linked that I could find.
- Molly Black – website is all series lists, same template as Kate Bold, no social media
- Fiona Grace – website is all series lists, same template, no social media links
- Rylie Dark – website is all series lists, same template, no social media linked, but I found a Twitter account, a Twitch account, and an OnlyFans
- Ava Strong – website is all series lists, no social media links
- Jack Mars – website is all series lists, no social media links
- Taylor Stark– website is all series lists, same template as Bold, no social media links
- Mia Gold – website is all series lists, same template, no social media
- Laura Rise – website is all series lists, same template, no social media, newsletter link broken
- Audrey Shine – website is all series lists, same template, no social media, Facebook group found via google, not via link on site. Audrey does have a profile at CozyMystery.com
- Sophie Love – website is all series lists, no social media linked
- Ella Swift – website is all series lists, no social media linked
- Vin Strong – website is all series lists, same template, no social media linked
- Katie Rush – website is all series lists, same template, no social media linked.
The lack of social media linked from the author website is really sending me: what author who isn’t a Massive Major Name eschews social media?!
I want to go back to Blake for a second: when I image searched “Blake Pierce author” this result caught my attention.
The Babelio page is in French, but features that image.
And Glasses Blake shows up when I searched for Molly Black as a “related person:”
When I used a reverse-image search for that image of Glasses Blake, I honestly thought I’d get a stock image site.
No, I got a Fresh Fiction interview with an author named Tyrell Johnson?
Johnson, author of Wolves of Winter, also uses this photo on Audible and Amazon. His book was reviewed in the NYT with another photo at the top – same person, I think. He also has an active Twitter account. His book, The Lost Kings, was narrated by living human Saskia Maarleveld (their narration is excellent).
Why is Tyrell Johnson’s author photo being used for Blake Pierce? No idea.
I tried to reach out to Tyrell Johnson, but the website listed on their Facebook page, tyrelljohnsonauthor.com, loads to a Penguin Random House page for their book with no contact options. I’ve reached out via Facebook but haven’t heard back.
Deep in that rabbit hole, Robin and I kept googling Blake Pierce. And I had to sit back in my chair and recognize for a moment that, alongside Robin, I was researching whether these authors were real people. What a tremendously bizarre use of our time!
We were not the first to ask this question: on Reddit in r/books, four years ago someone asked the same question:
Who is Blake Pierce? And the collective ghost writer theory.
I was presented to the works of one named Blake Pierce, a murder/mystery author that carries a baggage of hundreds of books published, with multiple series with different protagonists running simultaneously. And for such a huge number of books, Blake Pierce keeps the quality high (for mostly free books that you can get for Amazon Kindle).
After searching the web for some information about the author I ran into something weird: nothing. Not a photo, nor a biography.
The abysmal number of books published, the lack of information about the author and the overall not-charging brought up the idea of a collective ghost writer situation where a number of different writers join together and publish books using the same author name to facilitate it’s distribution – such as in the fringe theory that Shakespeare was not one, but multiple writers joining ideas and hands to create masterworks.
SO, anyone of you ever heard about such a thing for real as in collective ghost writers? And do YOU know anything about BLAKE PIERCE?
Have a good one.
The commenters searched copyright.gov and found that “the copyright claimant is Noah Lukeman from Larchmont New York. Lukeman seems to be a literary agent based in NY. Maybe using new authors to write the series??”
Another commenter said, “Apparently a woman. Supposedly wrote the first book in 2015. I’m going to go with a collective of writers.”
A year ago, another person updated: “Here we are now 3 years later. by the end of 2023. Blake Pierce will have written 244 books. He /She is writing 61 books just in 2023 for release.”
Two months ago, a user noted that there were no print editions of Blake Pierce books in any Barnes & Noble:
This thread is interesting. I am only now reading it as I noticed something odd last weekend. I went to our local, ginormous Barnes and Noble store to search for some books by Blake Pierce. I have purchased several in the Apple books store, but have always preferred to actually hold a book versus reading my phone. I looked at the shelves and didn’t see one book by Blake Pierce. I thought that was weird considering, as many have mentioned, the number of books out under the author.
And anyone reading a book by Pierce from Apple would see the many, many pages before the Table of Contents in these books highlighting the bazillions of books by this author.
I showed the lady at B&N all the books listed and she, too, thought it odd I hadn’t found any. So she searched.
And of all the B&N stores in our city and a few surrounding towns, there was not ONE STORE that contained even one of Pierce’s books.
There were a few that could be purchased online, but even then nowhere near the amount written. We tried to look at the books and maybe come up with a different name under which they may have been published but came up empty handed.
Is this weird to anyone else? Sorry to be commenting on such an old post, but I saw someone comment in 2023, and as mentioned I just started reading these books lately. Thanks for your time and have a great day!
How many books has Blake Pierce published as of right now? According to GoodReads:
SEVEN. HUNDRED. AND. ONE. books. Again, with very similar, repetitive cover art for each series:
Repeating a cover motif? Totally normal, I agree. But Seven Hundred Books? No interviews, promotional posts, or social media that I could find? That’s very strange. The Reddit “collective of authors” theory makes some sense.
Robin noted that the publisher on the Blake Pierce titles are attributed to Lukeman Literary, but there’s no mention of Pierce or any of the other authors on the Lukeman website.
Back to my conversation with Robin, where we were sending each other links and using a lot of exclamation points.
Robin: “OverDrive has 1,234 (that number, tho) audiobooks with a synthesized voice. It’s not an insignificant amount.”
When I shared with her my discovery of Tyrell Johnson’s interview with Fresh Fiction, she replied,
“Okay but look at that. He’s answering questions, it’s an interview, THIS is something I would use to verify humanity.”
“I’m not trying to verify identity. I don’t care if HelenKay Dimon and Darby Kane are the same person. I care if they ARE HUMAN. And an interview would be one of the ways I would try and verify that. Are there things in the world where they have answered questions.”
(Please note that I got really excited when I found an interview with Blake Pierce on the Central Illinois Business Podcast, but it’s likely a different person with the same name. Woe.)
I think there are a number of issues here, starting with the presence and proliferation of AI narrators. Audiobook narrators (the human ones) are already fighting against use of AI in their profession.
And I don’t want to listen to an AI narrator, personally. I’m glad they’re marked “Synthesized Voice” but that’s relying on librarians or consumers to notice.
But this particular situation seems weird beyond the question of the narrator. Not only did Robin and I spend time trying to identify why so many books by authors with similar names used an AI narrator, but then we spent time trying to figure out if all the authors themselves were human. And in a lot of cases, we aren’t sure if we know the answer.
Librarians already have to educate themselves about new books when there are hundreds per day, if those books are even accessible to libraries (KU books are not, for example). Now there’s research time for “Is this a human?” Egads.
The library system had already spent money on licensing these books for the library system, but Robin was not planning to buy more. However, some of the titles had hold lists, and usually a book with a hold list will be re-purchased if the license is expired.
I searched to see if the library system had a policy or guidelines about AI narration or AI writing for items in circulation, and presently they do not. My attempts to research library AI policies generally mostly yielded results about using AI for patron experience, such as this statement from the Holderness Free Library in New Hampshire.
Nick Tanzi at The Digital Librarian has written about AI policy and the need for it, but again it’s mostly focused on patron interaction and AI tools for librarians and patrons, not AI-written or AI-narrated materials in circulation. The Massachusetts Library system offers a list of resources regarding issues surrounding AI, but again, no circulation policy that I found. And the University of North Texas (go Mean Green) has resources from the federal government and others about AI, but again, not a circulation policy.
I imagine policies about AI narration and AI authorship are in development, if the question has been brought up. As I said to Robin, there’s going to have to be a meeting, possibly a committee, and definitely a task force. Or all three.
The presence of AI audiobook narration in a library catalog, and the possibility of AI-authored books in circulation, is a policy question that I don’t think has an answer yet, but is one that requires attention.
I want to know whether the person who wrote the book I’m reading is a human, or a conglomeration of networked machine knowledge using an abhorrent amount of electricity and water, per the UN, among other environmental effects. I don’t want to read AI-written books, and I don’t want to listen to AI-narrated audio, and the burden of research to determine both is on me, an individual. On a library system level, that amount of oversight seems impossible.
I reached out to OverDrive to ask if they had a policy or guideline regarding AI audiobook narration, and Jan Leitman, Chief Marketing Officer, responded, saying:
OverDrive does not exclude AI narrated content from the catalog. Where synthetic/AI narration is used, we request that this information is included by supplying publishers in the metadata.
So it’s not a requirement, but it is a request that metadata entries include mention of AI narrators.
When I asked where in the metadata fields this information is commonly replied, Ms. Leitman confirmed that it’s “typically found in the Narrator Name field.”
I’ve reached out to Noah Lukeman for comment and to request contact information for the mysterious Blake Pierce and haven’t heard back.
Does your library have a policy about AI narration or AI-written books in circulation?
Have you encountered AI audiobook narration?