Output formats
Plain text, Markdown-ready
Copy-paste ready sections with headers and suggested image alt-text
Free AI tool
Quickly turn an idea into an ordered chapter outline or a ready-to-edit chapter. Choose chapter count, target length, tone, and reading level; get plain-text or Markdown-formatted output optimized for copy-paste into your manuscript or LMS.
Output formats
Plain text, Markdown-ready
Copy-paste ready sections with headers and suggested image alt-text
Workflow focus
Outline + continuity
Generate chapter titles, objectives, ordered sections, then expand
Control levers
Chapter count, section depth, tone, reading level
Tune draft complexity and voice to match your audience
Solve slow drafting and broken continuity
The generator is built for creators who need repeatable chapter structure and consistent voice across multi-chapter projects. It removes the repetitive outlining work and gives you reusable prompt templates for outlines, drafts, and continuity passes.
Outline, sectionize, draft, refine
Start with a macroscopic outline, break chapters into ordered sections, then expand a single chapter to an export-ready draft. Use continuity passes and tone controls to make multi-chapter work feel unified.
High-use prompts (copy and paste)
These ready-made prompts map to common tasks. Replace bracketed terms and run them as-is.
Create a multi-chapter structure with learning objectives.
Expand one chapter to a publishable draft with recap bullets.
Enforce consistent terminology, timeline, and voice across chapters.
Get headers, subheaders, and image alt-text in one go.
From editor to manuscript
Generated chapters are formatted for fast editing: plain text for paste-in editors and Markdown-ready output for static-site generators, course platforms, and manuscript drafts.
Common audiences
Built for creators who produce multi-chapter content and need repeatable structure and consistent voice.
Turn a loose idea into a chapter roadmap and draft specific chapters for fast iteration.
Convert chapters into lesson plans and LMS-ready modules.
Produce long-form pillar content and ebook drafts from a blog-series outline.
Break large manuals into consistent, ordered chapters with clear objectives.
Consolidate a blog series into a unified book with consistent voice and structure.
Keep multi-chapter work coherent
Use the generator’s continuity prompts and tone settings to preserve terminology, timeline, and voice across chapters. Best practice: run a continuity pass after drafting every 3–5 chapters.
Move from generated draft to final manuscript
Generated text is a first-draft accelerator. Use these steps to finish a publishable chapter:
Start with a short brief: topic, target audience, desired chapter count, and a sample tone (e.g., conversational, formal). Use the 'Outline from brief' prompt to generate chapter titles, one-sentence summaries, and three learning objectives per chapter. Review the outline, reorder chapters if needed, then create section breakdowns for chapters you plan to draft first.
Yes—use the continuity pass template. Provide the generator with prior chapters or a short style guide (preferred words, terms to avoid, tone, and reading level). Run a continuity pass after drafting groups of chapters to align terminology, cadence, and references.
You can set target word ranges for drafts, choose tones (formal, conversational, instructional), and request a reading level or grade. Include those parameters in your prompt (for example, '700–900 words, conversational, 9th-grade reading level') to get focused output.
Choose the 'Export-ready Markdown' option to receive headers, subheaders, and image alt-text. Copy-paste the Markdown into your editor or LMS. For plain-text workflows, use the plain output and paste into word processors, then run a final style and citation pass.
The generator supports both. For fiction, include setting, character names, timeline, and POV instructions. For nonfiction, provide audience, level of technical detail, and sources or references to maintain factual consistency. Use continuity prompts differently: fiction continuity focuses on characters and timeline; nonfiction continuity focuses on definitions and concept consistency.
Ownership and licensing are governed by the platform’s terms of service. Typically, creators retain rights to the original content they produce, but you should review the platform’s current terms and consult legal counsel for commercial or contested uses.
Be specific in your brief (audience, prior knowledge, tone, length). Add constraints like 'include two examples' or 'cite three reputable sources' where needed. For classroom use, request objectives, in-chapter exercises, and a short quiz. Iterate: generate an outline first, then expand only the sections you need.
Workflow: (1) Generate outline and select chapter order. (2) Produce section breakdowns for the first draft chapters. (3) Expand one chapter at a time to the target length. (4) Run a continuity pass on every 3–5 drafted chapters. (5) Final edit for voice, citations, and formatting before export.