
Today’s post is by author Tuesday Kuykendall.
I’m a retired materials scientist and an avid physics geek. I love robots, computers, and artificial intelligence. I was reared on Star Trek (Spock and Data are my favorites), 2001: A Space Odyssey, Philip K. Dick, Isaac Asimov, Carl Sagan, and the early excitement of the US space program. Science and science fiction are welded to my view of the world.
Most of my stories include AI characters. Not so much as subject matter, but because I can’t imagine a future without them. My themes cover topics about what defines intelligence, non-human sentience, and what consciousness means. (That sounds more serious than it is—my fiction is meant to be fun!)
I would never use AI to write for me. I embrace the hard part of writing. A search in my thesaurus or dictionary for just the right word or phrase, writing and rewriting a scene until it feels right: I love that. The thrill of creating something new would be ruined for me if I turned any of it over to a software program.
I’m what’s called a pantser, or I write by the seat of my pants. I have found that outlines, story maps, cards, sticky notes, etc, end up interrupting my writing more than aiding it. Often, once I’ve completed an outline, I will lose interest in the story. But I can go down long rabbit holes and spend way too much time on things like making pretty charts, creating word maps, or doing research.
I usually have a vague idea of where I want to go, but I like to let the story tell itself, especially in the first draft. It’s after that, when I do the editing, rearranging, researching, fleshing out scenes, that I focus on the mechanics of the thing. And that’s where I find AI of value. (But see caveat at the end of this article.)
Scientific realism
I make up a lot of science-y sounding stuff. But I want it to be grounded in real science, real physics. AI evaluates my ideas and lets me know if it’s feasible or ridiculous. If it’s way off, AI will make suggestions for making my ideas more realistic. I also use it to summarize complex scientific papers (like quantum computing) for me in layman’s terms.
In the example below, I wanted to know if the concepts and devices I created for a book about a small group of survivors living on the moon made sense. One of the primary protagonists is a quantum computer AI (CIMON, a real computer on ISS) and the MAVs are part of the space vehicle systems I imagined. Here is an example of ChatGPT’s answer when I fed in the paragraphs I’d written and asked it to evaluate feasibility.
| Concept | Accuracy | Notes |
| Quantum AI | ❌ Mostly Fictional | CIMON exists, but quantum AI is not yet a reality. |
| Life Support & Oxygen Management | ✅ Accurate | Good understanding of space station logistics. |
| MAVs as Earth-Moon Shuttles | ✅ Plausible with advanced propulsion | A nuclear or hybrid system would make sense. |
| MAVs with Atmospheric Capabilities | ⚠️ Uncommon but possible | Most space-to-surface vehicles aren’t both atmospheric and deep space-capable. |
| Digital Library & File Sharing | ✅ Accurate | Astronauts do bring personal media to space. |
| Psychological Effects | ✅ Highly Accurate | Realistic astronaut behavior in crisis. |
In another book, my protagonist is a homeless woman named Jane who has amnesia. She and her companion are surprised when she demonstrates medical skills. I wanted to put her in a situation where she automatically knew what to do, but I don’t have any medical knowledge to make that sound realistic. I asked Claude to suggest some scenarios and provide the proper medical terms. This is its (abridged) response:
A diabetic emergency would work perfectly; common, dramatic, but manageable with basic medical knowledge.
Scenario: Someone in the town collapses, sweating, confused, shaky hands. Could be low blood sugar (hypoglycemia) or high blood sugar (diabetic ketoacidosis)…[that Jane solves]…
Suggested terms and symptoms and their meanings:
- Sweating, confused, shaky hands
- Low blood sugar (hypoglycemia) or high blood sugar (diabetic ketoacidosis)
- Blood glucose (not “blood sugar”)
- Glucose gel, orange juice, anything with simple carbs
- Check pulse, “tachycardic” (fast heart rate)
- Fingernails, skin – “Poor Perfusion”
- Elevate legs
I will do some fact checking to make sure the AI didn’t make up something stupid. But this information helps make the scene authentic.
Story bible and technical documents
I’ve used Claude to help create my story bibles, which include documents that lay out basic concepts, like where the story takes place, when it happens, what are the technologies and what are the rules. Consistent rules in world building are critical in science fiction and fantasy.
All the information I share comes from me. I create my own character profiles, specifics about the world I’m building, technology, and relevant draft passages, then feed that data into the AI.
Here’s an excerpt from a document describing a quantum computer in the future. Remember, these are my inputs and ideas. AI organizes it and provides a reality check. It made a few suggestions and clarifications for how a quantum AI might work if it were real. How, or if, I use that information in my book will be up to me.
Fundamental principles
- Node Definition: Quantum resonance cavities are pockets of spacetime that maintain quantum coherence long after the extinction of quantum computers.
- Detection Method: Exotic, short-lived particles behaving as entangled pairs within quantum foam background noise, created by these resonance cavities.
- Energy Correlation: Older nodes produce weaker quantum signals requiring more computational energy to access and amplify, similar to tuning distant radio stations.
Once it’s finished, I put the bible alongside my chapters in Scrivener so that I can refer to it while I’m writing. It keeps the world I built coherent, and I don’t have to keep going back and forth through chapters to double check myself when I forget something.
I do not recommend writers do this work with free AI tools.
If I were writing nonfiction science content (something I had to do for years), I would be extremely careful using free tools, if at all. The risk of misinformation or made-up facts is too high.
The quality of AI results is dependent on the quality of the prompts it’s given and the data it was trained on. I often find that I have to go back and forth with it several times before it gives me helpful feedback. If you don’t ask the questions correctly, you might get a lot of information you don’t want, need, or understand. It is important to remember that whichever model you use, it’s designed to provide an answer that you will like. However, specialized AI tools in medicine and other technical fields are honed for accuracy but rarely made available to the public.
There is an aspect of AI prompting that I don’t think gets stressed enough in many of the discussions I’ve read on the topic. When you’re in a chat, the chat itself provides context and your questions are all informing the model’s answers. If you see weird responses, review your prompts to see where it might have gone wrong, then close the chat and start a new one. If you’re in ChatGPT and there is a chat session that’s wonky, I would recommend deleting it so the model doesn’t continue to draw from it.
AI is a beneficial tool, but it is only as good, and as ethical, as the people who are using it. The companies who have created these tools for public use continue to refine them. They claim to be trying to make them harder to use in nefarious ways. I believe writers and other artists have an opportunity to help shape the future of AI. We can provide feedback, input, and hold the companies accountable for how AI develops. In order to do that, we need to understand it and in order to understand it, we need to use it. I hope this helps provide some insight into ways a writer can use new AI tools to support their process.

Tuesday Kuykendall writes out of her home in Seattle, Washington. She is an avid fan of science fiction and nonfiction, whose writing explores how advancements in science and technology might impact human society and culture for good or ill. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Physics and a master’s degree in Materials Science and Engineering and worked in education and industry for over twenty years. Tuesday loves to imagine fantastical worlds and ideas that take technology and physics to their logical (or illogical?) conclusions.




Thanks for this.
I write ultra-near future YA STEM stories where I need to understand what currently exists, what is impossible, improbable, or possible. I like the idea of AI to help with this–it is a more refined google search and I did a lot (A LOT) of google research. I still like the idea of vetting with humans. For my first book, I had a hour-long Zoom call with an astrobiology post doc and exchanged emails with an astrophysicist and a robotics specialist at APL. I wouldn’t give up that experience.
Hi Jill, Yea, I spend a lot of time on google too. I agree that vetting and talking to humans, (especially astrophysicists!), will always provide better understanding of deeper scientific concepts. I know there’s a lot of fear that AI is going to replace humans in the creative process, but the more I use it as a tool, the less likely that seems, in large part for that very reason, bottom line, one human to another is always going to be a richer experience.
I know nothing about AI, but I’m less ignorant having read your piece. Thank you, Tuesday. Now I’m curious to learn more!
I’m glad it was informative. I am considering writing more about the topic.
I don’t write science fiction but it’s helpful to see how other authors use AI. You offer some specific tips that can be applied to other genres. Thanks!
Glad to be helpful!
I love the dedication and depth you put into your research. AI is a great tool for this. I experimented with using AI to write portions of the story and found that it’s not for me. The story and the grammar that came out were “not me, not mine” and I found that I just didn’t care about the finished product.
I thought I’d buy one of your books, but when I arrived at your website, there was no link to a purchasing site.
I agree; it isn’t a good substitute for my writing either. Ironically, I had never thought of using AI that way until after all the controversy. When it first came out, I was just excited to talk to it; I’d been waiting for that experience since the early 80s. Like you, I tried it out for writing, and I never liked the results. I had some funny conversations with it about that. I love to write, so the idea of asking it to seriously write for me always felt absurd. However, as an organizational and research tool, it is useful.
I finished my first book, but it has to be professionally copyedited. I found a copy editor I like, but she won’t have it back to me until early November (it’s 110K words). My second book draft is finished and now will need another six months or so if the first one is any guide. I’ll have a link on my blog as soon as it’s ready.
Great article. I’m a lot like you–ST, love AI always, and science fiction. I’m looking forward to reading your books. I, too, do a lot of research (historical, psychological, legal, cultural) and know rabbit holes way too intimately! I’m also easily bored with outlines, etc. Never thought about using a “bible” but I like that idea for my historical fiction or long essays. Would love to see how you set yours up and have it in Scrivener.
For more information about story bibles; I recommend the description here on Reddit/writers and the second is here – at “On Writing Mastery”.
Another question that came up was how it might look to use a story bible (or any research) in Scrivener, which is the app I use to do all my writing. I’ve included a picture of one way you could use the tool. It can split pages so that you can have your manuscript on one side and the research on the other; the notes and summary sections are helpful too. In the picture, I have a short story that describes Mt. Rainier erupting on one side and on the other I have the Wikipedia page about volcanos so that when I’m describing it, I can make sure I’m sticking to reality.
Hope that helps!