Artificial Intelligence is no longer a science-fiction concept: it is a reality. One that is changing every field and industry around the world, including—or perhaps specifically—book publishing.
From helping analyze book sales data to challenging copyright laws, AI is changing how work gets done, for good and for bad. Here are the most notorious changes taking place right now or that might affect the industry in the near future.
While writers and editors remain the powerhouses behind the creative process, AI tools stand out as efficient assistants to smooth out the ride.
The first and most obvious impact of AI in the book industry is at the creation level. AI writing assistants and tools have found a place on most writers’ desks, as they can help them brainstorm, organize thoughts, beat writer’s block, catch common mistakes, and even pinpoint pacing issues. Supporting authors, but without replacing the unique nature of human craft.
While the industry has yet to make these concepts mainstream, AI tools have opened the door to new and improved ways of writing books, making it a near-certain next step.
Enhanced, even more dynamic Choose Your Own Adventure (CYOA) and mixed-media books are now a possibility—interactive books that adapt to readers’ choices, create multiple timelines, insert videos or sounds when appropriate, and more.
The editorial side of the book industry is littered with tasks, and AI tools can help manage the most menial ones. With the right approach, editors can reduce the time they spend on detecting grammatical mistakes, repetitive phrasing, or name inconsistencies, freeing up time to handle the heavy stuff: consistency, voice, tone, structure, and emotional response.
The script is written and edited—now it’s time for the publishing industry to get started. And AI is having a huge operational impact on the entire process.
With AI tools, acquisition teams can browse and manage thousands of manuscripts of book proposals much more efficiently.
Certain tools can assist by pre-screening according to editorial criteria standards. By scanning each manuscript, it can identify certain signals and compare them with similar titles by cross-referencing patterns in book databases, such as ISBNdb. It won’t replace human editorial judgment, but it can classify and match in ways that make tasks more manageable.
Online catalog records are essential for the storage and discoverability of books, and this happens thanks to metadata. What used to be a tedious, time-consuming task can now be done in seconds with AI: automating description workflows, generating accurate BISAC codes, and standardizing subject tags across entire catalogs.
For publishers managing large catalogs, this is a time-saving feature that takes the painstaking, manual tasks out of human hands without taking over entirely.
Selling books is all about connecting the right book with the right reader as often as possible. Luckily, AI might be the key to improving accuracy and increasing scale.
Overstocking on books that do not sell well or stockouts of trendy fad books are common issues that might be a thing of the past. With AI, inventory forecasting can help booksellers anticipate demand by accounting for seasonality, trends, and regional preferences. It’s a small task with huge repercussions—improvements in inventory accuracy can be a lifesaving measure for many bookshops.
AI tools can collect readers’ data, analyze it, and generate highly accurate, personalized recommendations based on the information they compile. Modern recommendation systems are built on rich book datasets that capture everything from genres and topics to writing style and reader ratings, giving AI the foundation it needs to make meaningful suggestions. Topics browsed, readers’ interests, and past reading history come together to help publishers understand their audience and suggest not only trending bestsellers, but also hidden gems.
This can promote books more efficiently and, in turn, improve sales and marketing campaigns.
Aside from the largest corporations, most bookselling teams do not have the budget to run advanced, comprehensive marketing campaigns. AI tools can provide the data needed to generate targeted marketing strategies for the right audience at the right time, ensuring the best results with minimal margin of error.
Libraries provide a great service with limited resources, which is why AI can offer much-needed support in achieving this grand goal.
AI analytics can help librarians gather and analyze the necessary data for library management. For example, these tools can help them determine which sections are popular, which are underused, which new titles might align with patrons’ consumption patterns, and the correlation between community demographics and book preferences.
The librarian remains in charge, and their judgment is irreplaceable, but these tools can help organize the information more quickly.
With an AI-powered catalog, readers and patrons will find it much easier to pinpoint the book they’re looking for, discover similar reads, or narrow down their options when they don’t know what they want.
Improved tagging systems, smarter interfaces, and a more direct language search option can help serve patrons who speak different languages, are at different literacy levels, or require special accessibility features.
While AI tools are excellent mechanisms for improving efficiency, they also pose significant challenges for the publishing industry, which could evolve into serious threats if not addressed properly.
The concept of AI-generated books is unpleasant to many readers, and this fear is not unwarranted. AI models can generate large amounts of text akin to a book, so AI books flooding the market is not an impossible scenario.
As it stands, AI is not capable of matching human creativity, so a rise in AI-generated books could lead to lower-quality books in the market and a stagnation in originality.
So-called Generative AI does not create concepts or ideas out of thin air—these models absorb large datasets and use them to identify patterns and create outputs. This means that many authors’ works were used to train AI models, probably without proper consent or compensation.
The copyright issue is a pressing topic and raises the question of whether AI-generated content—no matter how innocent—can be deemed original in the first place. Likewise, it raises ethical concerns about potential plagiarism when using AI.
As it stands right now, AI won’t replace the human heart at the center of the book industry. Publishing is a field that feeds on creativity, something that AI is, currently, unable to replicate.
However, AI is already making significant improvements to the tools used to bring books and stories to readers. Metadata, forecasting, cataloging, and recommendations—these smart tools are making the difference, and using them correctly will set publishers, booksellers, and librarians on the path of success.

