Published Books

Finally, AI Makes Sense; The Plain English Guide to Understanding, Using and Staying Ahead of Artificial Intelligence - At Work, At Home and In Everyday Life

Finally — a book about AI that actually explains it.

You keep hearing about AI everywhere. Your employer just rolled out Copilot or Gemini. A colleague mentioned ChatGPT again. The news swings between "AI will solve everything" and "AI will take your job" — and you are still not sure what these tools actually do or whether you should care.

This book closes that gap.

Written for people who are not engineers and do not want to become one, Finally, AI Makes Sense is a plain-English guide to understanding, using, and staying ahead of artificial intelligence — at work, at home, and in everyday life.

No math. No jargon walls. No breathless hype. Just the working mental model you need to use these tools with confidence and evaluate the claims you hear about them.

Inside you will learn:

  • What large language models actually are — and what they cannot do

  • How to write prompts that get useful answers instead of generic ones

  • What to do when your workplace rolls out AI (a week-by-week first-month guide)

  • Honest answers to the fears people have but rarely say out loud

  • How to spot when AI is being oversold — by vendors, media, and internal proposals

  • How real professionals in marketing, project management, healthcare, education, and small business actually use these tools

  • A day-by-day first week with AI tools (just 30 to 45 minutes a day)

  • The ethical questions worth taking seriously — treated honestly, not reassuringly

Also included:

  • A prompt template library you can reuse immediately

  • A plain-English glossary of every AI term you will encounter at work

  • A red-flags checklist for evaluating any AI claim

  • A directory of the tools worth knowing — and the questions to ask before adopting one

This book is for you if: your employer is rolling out AI and you want to be the person who uses it well, you are a small business owner deciding what is actually worth adopting, you came to technology later in life and want to engage with it on your own terms, or you are simply tired of nodding along in meetings when AI comes up.

The goal is not to turn you into an AI researcher. It is to turn you into someone who can use these tools with confidence, evaluate them with appropriate skepticism, and have something real to say when the conversation turns to where all of this is heading.

Stop feeling behind. Start understanding what everyone is talking about.

Previous
Previous

The Real Haunted Maine

Next
Next

When Science Meets the Strange