
It’s funny how life works out. It was only recently that AI witch hunts came up in my writers’ group, and we were talking about how far it had all gone in such a short space of time. How quickly suspicion had started replacing proof. I did not expect to be on the receiving end of that conversation so soon.
And yet, here we are.
When I read a recent review of Beast of Her Heart, it felt like the air had been sucked out of my lungs. It was a gut punch. The nausea came first, then the panic, then the tears. Not because it was 3 stars. Readers are entitled to their opinions. Not every book will land for every person, and I have never expected otherwise. What hit me was not the rating. It was the accusation.
This was not simply a reader saying the story did not work for them. This was a public written accusation that my book was GenAI-written, based on an assumption about chapter length and the overall feel of the writing. That accusation was made without proof.

What makes it even harder to process is that it is not even accurate. Beast of Her Heart has twenty-five chapters, and only one or two of them are around 1,500 words. I am a mood writer. I do not follow rigid chapter rules. I finish a chapter when it feels right. Sometimes that is 900 words. Sometimes it is 3,000. Sometimes it lands somewhere in the middle. The story decides that, not a formula.
So no, this was not a case of me forcing every chapter into some neat, uniform pattern. That is simply not how I write. Which, if I am honest, makes it difficult for me not to question whether every chapter was even properly read before such a serious claim was made.
And that is why this hit so deeply. I do not care about a 3-star review in itself. Every reader has the right to connect with a book or not connect with it. That is normal. That is part of being an author. But this felt like something else entirely. It was not really a discussion of the story. It was an allegation about how the book was created.
We are living in a time where AI suspicion is everywhere, and people are becoming far too comfortable making serious claims without proof. For a huge author with a massive platform, maybe that kind of accusation can be weathered more easily. For a small indie author with a small reader base, it can do real harm. Reader opinion carries weight. Reader trust matters. One public accusation can shape how other people see your work before they have even opened the book.
That is where this stops feeling like just another review and starts feeling much bigger.
I do not think people always realise how fragile things can be for indie authors. One comment might look small to the person writing it, but the impact can be far from small to the person receiving it. A review does not just sit there in isolation. It becomes part of the public face of the book. It influences how readers approach it, whether they trust it, whether they give it a chance at all. When that review moves beyond personal opinion and into an accusation made without proof, the damage can be real.
“Accusations fit on a bumper sticker; the truth takes longer.” — Michael Hayden
What hurts most is thinking about the actual work that went into this story. The late nights. The rewrites. The deleted chapters. The moments where I scrapped whole sections and started again because something did not feel right. The times I sat with a scene knowing it was not there yet, even if I could not explain why, and kept going until it was. That is the reality of how I write.
I do not have paper trails or sticky notes all over my house that I can hold up for visual effect. I write in a Word document that is always accessible to my alpha reader in real time. My beta readers can also access it while I am writing. That is my process. It may not look romantic or theatrical, but it is real, and it is mine.
And that leaves me with a question I do not really have a clean answer for. How exactly is an author supposed to defend themselves against accusations like this? What proof is enough? What process is acceptable enough? At what point did writing cleanly, using proper punctuation, or ending a chapter where it naturally lands become grounds for suspicion?
I also genuinely hope my work was not put through some AI checker without my knowledge or consent, because that opens another uncomfortable conversation entirely. The fact that authors even have to think about things like that now says a lot about the climate we are in.
This whole thing feels messy. It feels like something that can escalate far too easily in a world where people can say almost anything online with very little thought for the consequences. And those consequences do exist. They land on real people. They land on writers who already pour more of themselves into their work than most readers will ever fully see.
I do not have some grand comeback for that. I wish I did.
What I do know is this. I will keep writing to the best of my ability. I will keep finishing chapters where they feel right, whether that happens at 1,500 words or not. I will keep using proper punctuation. I will keep being transparent with my readers, and I will keep doing the work. That is all I can do.
I just hope people remember that behind every book, especially in the indie world, there is a real person. A person putting in real time, real effort, and real heart. And public accusations made without proof do not just disappear into the void. They land somewhere. They land on the writer.






























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