
The Brian Lehrer Show Writing Novels in the Age of A.I.
Mar 26, 2026
Andrea Bartz, novelist and essayist known for thrillers like The Last Ferry Out, discusses the Shy Girl controversy and writing amid A.I. She describes how readers and investigations flagged AI-like passages. Short takes cover what AI 'slop' sounds like, why disclosure and trust matter, experiments with ChatGPT mimicking her voice, and ways authors can protect themselves.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Reader Detection Triggered Publisher Pull
- The Shy Girl controversy began with readers spotting passages that 'sounded like AI' and posting about it on TikTok, prompting a New York Times investigation.
- Hachette pulled the U.S. release after those reader-led findings, showing crowd detection can trigger publisher action.
Slop Detectors Won't Keep Up
- Andrea Bartz warns models are rapidly improving and will soon evade readers' 'slop detectors,' making AI-written fiction harder to spot.
- She fears exponential improvement means stylistic mimicry will outpace our ability to distinguish machine from human.
Human Trust Is The Core Currency
- Trust between author and reader is central: readers expect a human connection and may feel betrayed if work is machine-generated.
- Bartz argues losing that contract of trust would damage authors, readers, and an already-struggling publishing industry.



