Winners of Literary Prizes Face AI Accusations: This May Be the New Norm

Initially, the laureates of the esteemed Commonwealth Short Story Prize for 2026 basked in the envy of their contemporaries. However, since their works garnered this accolade, these writers have been subjected to intense scrutiny from the literary community, with several facing accusations of using generative artificial intelligence in their writing process.
These claims have largely originated from a variety of readers, many of whom are fellow writers, expressing confusion and disappointment that the prize jury overlooked possible indicators of inauthentic authorship.
Each year, the Commonwealth Foundation, a nongovernmental organization based in London, presents its short story prize to one writer from each of five regions: Africa, Asia, Canada and Europe, the Caribbean, and the Pacific. An overall winner is subsequently chosen from this shortlist. Regional champions receive ÂŁ2,500 (approximately $3,350), while the ultimate winner, to be revealed next month, will claim ÂŁ5,000 (around $6,700).
On May 12, the esteemed UK literary magazine Granta showcased the top five entries for 2026âall unpublished, in accordance with contest rulesâon its website. (The magazine has featured the winning submissions for the prize since 2012.)
However, within days, one entry sparked doubt. âThe Serpent in the Grove,â authored by Jamir Nazir from Trinidad and Tobago, which achieved recognition for the Caribbean region, raised concerns among some observers as it appeared to exhibit stylistic markers indicative of AI-generated text.
âWell, this is a first: a ChatGPT-generated story has won a prestigious literary award,â remarked researcher and entrepreneur Nabeel S. Qureshi, formerly a visiting scholar of AI at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, in a post on X. ââNot X, not Y, but Zâ sentences everywhere, the âhumsâ trope, and many other unmistakable signs of AI writing. A significant milestone for AI, regardlessâŠâ
âThey say the grove still hums at noon,â begins Nazirâs evocative and enigmatic tale. Quereshi, in his screenshot of the opening lines, emphasized the second line as what he deemed a quintessential example of AI syntax: âNot the beesâ neat industry or the clean rasp of cutlass on vine, but a belly soundâas if the earth swallows a shout and holds it there.â
As the literary community conducted a more thorough examination of Nazirâs narrative, many found its language and metaphors to be illogical, questioning how the Commonwealth judges could perceive any value in them. Others shared screenshots indicating that the AI-detection tool Pangram identified âThe Serpent in the Groveâ as 100 percent AI-generated, a finding that WIRED later corroborated. (While no AI-detection program is foolproof, outside analysis has consistently rated Pangram as the most reliable, boasting a near-zero rate of false positives.)
Nazir did not respond to a request for comment sent to an email address listed on his Facebook page. The posts on that account, along with the LinkedIn profile of a Jamir Nazir in Trinidad and Tobago, were also flagged as AI-generated by Pangram. Although speculation arose suggesting that Nazir could represent an entirely AI-created persona, a 2018 article in the Trinidad and Tobago edition of The Guardian regarding his self-published poetry collection Night Moon Loveâwhich includes a photograph of Nazir with the bookâindicates that he is indeed a real individual.
WIRED reached out to both Granta and the Commonwealth Foundation regarding Nazirâs story; neither provided direct commentary, but both issued public statements.
âWe are aware of the allegations and discussions surrounding generative AI and our Short Story Prize,â stated Razmi Farook, director-general of the Commonwealth Foundation, in a release on the organizationâs website. âWe take these claims seriously and are committed to addressing them with diligence and transparency.â Farook defended the prize’s judging process as ârobust,â involving multiple rounds of reviews, with the top judges chosen for their âexpertise.â
