self-publishing

Mia Ballard, Shy Girl, and AI use accusations …

I’d never heard of Mia Ballard until yesterday when a New York Times headline caught my eye. Apparently, she self-published a feminist horror novel in February 2025 titled Shy Girl about, well, it doesn’t matter. What matters is that Hachette, one of the Big 5 publishers, snatched it up for traditional publication. But according to the Times, it canceled its imminent US release amid accusations that it was written with the help of generative artificial intelligence.

I’ve not read the book. Nor will I. I recommend you watch the YouTube video above for a thorough breakdown by Frankie’s Shelf, who I would never want to review one of my books, not because I used AI to create them (I didn’t), but DAMN is he vicious! I recommend Ballard not watch this video.

“This controversy has changed my life in many ways and my mental health is at an all time low and my name is ruined for something I didn’t even personally do,” Ballard told the Times. She took no responsibility, blaming an unnamed person she had hired to edit her manuscript.

I don’t believe her. If you’ve ever hired an editor to review a manuscript you’ve labored over for months, you will re-read the manuscript once it’s returned to you. You don’t simply take the editor’s word for it. If you love your manuscript, you essentially know it inside and out. You’ve read and revised it countless times. You would spot any changes almost immediately. So, sorry, Mia. Your explanation doesn’t wash.

Hachette bears a lot of the blame for the kerfuffle getting this far. I have no idea if Ballard has an agent, but he or she has some ‘splainin’ to do, too. We assume that agents and Big 5 editors are these godlike gatekeepers who wouldn’t dare let substandard writing and incoherent stories hit bookstore shelves. They’re human, like everyone else, and make mistakes. Still, this disheartens those of us in the query trenches and with works out on submission who get passed over, knowing that Shy Girl passed for quality and numerous worthy, original, well-written works didn’t. Hey, that’s publishing for you.

My questions:

If Ballard is agented, did the agent read the entire book (the way an agent is supposed to)? I’d love to know what the agent enjoyed about the writing.

Did Hachette perform any due diligence? If a publishing house is going to extend a contract to a writer and offer an advance, which I’m assuming happened here, at least one editor must have read the manuscript. A copy editor, too. So, this manuscript, which has been picked apart online for months for subpar, repetitive, and at times nonsensical writing, met agent/editor approval at the highest levels and was already published in the United Kingdom, with the US date in April scuttled. Makes you wonder what the professional class didn’t see that the rest of the hoi polloi did.

Will accusations of AI use impugn innocent writers? Most likely. My understanding is that AI-detection software exists, but sometimes flags non-AI writing as suspect. Also, how is an author supposed to prove he or she didn’t use AI to escape the Scarlet Letters? (See what I did there?)

What is considered fair AI use? Spell-check existed long before what we consider AI today. That’s absolutely AI. What about grammar checks? AI again. Is that forbidden? If so, every writer on the planet might as well use a typewriter and have physical dictionaries nearby. And who makes the rules? Publishing houses probably need to specify what cannot be done. If the grammar checker slightly rewrites a sentence for clarity, and not substance, is this cause to pass on a manuscript?

We’re entering a murky period for publishing. (And other artforms, of course.) Most agents ask writers who query them whether AI was used to create the submitted work, and every writer worth his/her salt will mark No. But not everyone’s honest.

I assume someone writes a book to express creativity and knowledge, both in fiction and nonfiction. Relying on a program that generates what you want it to, and passing it off as your own, no more makes you a writer than heating up a Digiorno pizza makes you a chef. It’s easy to spot a Digiorno pizza by taste. As AI technology advances, it will become more difficult to spot its use and prove it.

Maybe publishers can include in their contracts that AI use (as they define it) is verboten, and that discovery of its use after publication would give the publisher specified legal options to pursue against the writer.

Whatever the case, Mia Ballard’s career likely ended as a trad-pubbed writer. Going fully independent appears to be her only route for the foreseeable future. If she’s truly creative and works on her craft, there’s nothing saying she can’t put out a quality product. And I hope she does.

But her claim that she didn’t know AI was used to perfect Shy Girl doesn’t pass any logical test, as every true writer will confirm.

Did you create your own author website? Asking for a friend …

Every author needs a website. I’ve had one since 2014, and based on what people I contacted on Reedsy said, it apparently dates back to the Stone Age.

So, new book or not, I need to update my site. The lady I hired more than 13 years ago was nice as can be. She built the website from scratch and it’s currently hosted on HostGator. And when I go to review the code, I see things like this:

HTML <<44 smfjoeodm xxxxx fdsoirms.fne>>

<tm> PL ^##skjed <crush> uuz # TML.

And there are HUNDREDS of those rows! I have no idea what any of that is, as I’ve never learned to code. And I hope I never have to. I could go back to the designer, but that would cost more. That’s fine. Or, I could hire someone to build a new website. I’ve gotten quotes on Reedsy ranging from $750 to $800, which I find reasonable. And I’ve gotten ones for thousands of dollars.

If you get to Squarespace, it’s quite intuitive. Meaning, in theory, I could build my own website without knowing any code.

I’ll have to renew HostGator in March, which will cost money. Or I could sign up with Squarespace and take the plunge (and still spend money, but it’s far less than $800).

I don’t need anything fancy. I just want something functional that looks nice and professional. I don’t need animations with dragons swooping across the screen. And if you’ve ever thought about going indie, you’ll need not just a good book cover, but a great one. That will cost over $1,000, likely more. (I got a quote for $10,000!) I won’t spend that much, but I will certainly invest in a great book cover because, let’s face it, some indie book covers look unprofessional. And this isn’t a knock on any author or artist. People choose what they can reasonably afford and what they think looks good on them. Heck, I had small presses (that are no longer in business) make excellent covers and, frankly, cringy ones. It’s the way it is.

But if you’re going indie, you want the most professional-looking product possible, both inside and out. That will cost thousands of dollars. Can it be cheaper? Sure. But it won’t look good. You and I both know it.

So, if creating my own website can save me money that can go toward a cover (I’ve already had it professionally edited, and that was pricey but worth it), I figure, why not try it? If I screw up, I can always go back to the professionals I originally contacted and see if they’ll take me on.

So, I’m curious. Did you build your own site?