Has an AI-authored story just won a literary prize? What does it mean for writing and books?

The elephant is so firmly in the room that the debate is no longer about whether Jamir Nazir’s story The Serpent in the Grove, the winner for the Trinidad and Tobago, Caribbean region of the Commonwealth Short Story Prize 2026, was in fact written by an AI agent using a Large Language Model. It is about whether a story written by such an LLM could actually convince a literary jury to give it a prize.

If that is indeed the case, the implications are extraordinary. Extrapolate from jury to general reader, and you have a situation where the very idea of a critically and/or popularly acclaimed novel or a story in the near future – or already – may well be the work, primarily, of an LLM agent.

Fundamental assumptions about the human creative impulse being the basis of art in general and literature in particular will then be seriously challenged.

The allegation

All five winning stories from each of the five regions were published online in the literary magazine Granta, as has been the practice in recent years. The first hint that Nazir’s story may have been written in part or fully by an AI agent came from writer and researches Nabeel S Qureshi, who pointed to parts of the...

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