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The Future of Authors

The Future of Authors

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It's 2032. A novelist in Portland finds three chapters waiting for her at 7 AM — drafted overnight in her voice by an AI trained on everything she's ever published. She rewrites one sentence, fourteen words about the weird tidiness of an empty bathroom, and by 8:15 the chapter is done. A 22-year-old in Quezon City earns $150K/year from romance novels written at her kitchen table. An Afghan refugee in Hamburg publishes in Dari and reaches readers in 27 countries without writing a word of German. And 12 million people who never had the craft training to write a book have become published authors.
Ben and Alexa trace how AI liberated an entire profession from the blank-page grind that was consuming it — and unlocked storytelling power for millions of voices the old gatekeeping system would have silenced.
Inside this episode:
- The creative inversion: how the ratio of production time to creative thinking completely flipped
- Voice fingerprinting: how AI learns to write in one specific author's style — and why that makes human contributions more visible, not less
- Robin Sloan's jazz metaphor: why writing with AI is like playing music with another musician
- Sheila Heti's beautiful distinction: "It writes like a competent version of me on a day when I have nothing to say. My job is to bring what I have to say."
- The 12 million new authors enabled by AI — fastest growth in Southeast Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Latin America
- Kwento Row in Quezon City: 200 Filipino authors writing simultaneously in a former Jollibee restaurant
- New careers that didn't exist: voice designers, story architects, narrative experience designers
- Brandon Sanderson on why AI is a lifeline for authors who can't write fast enough to survive
- The bilingual author phenomenon: writing in two languages simultaneously with AI cultural transposition
- How romance — the genre the literary establishment dismissed — led the entire revolution
This isn't a story about robots replacing writers. It's about what happens when everyone who has a story can finally tell it.

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