The library

Everything we know about
finishing the book.

Free, practical guides on starting a novel, the craft of the line and the scene, structure for plotters and pantsers, revision, the AI question, and the path to readers. No gates, no sign-up. Written by the people building a writing studio that reads your draft and never writes it.

Craft

The sentence-level and scene-level skills that make prose work.

Choosing a Point of View for Your Novel

First or third, limited or omniscient, present or past: how each choice shapes the reader, and what head-hopping quietly costs you.

Describing Setting Without Stalling the Story

How to ground a scene in a handful of telling details instead of a paragraph of scenery, and how to make place carry mood and reveal character.

How to Build a Character Arc

A character arc is not a personality upgrade. It is the slow cost of trading a comforting lie for a harder truth, paid out scene by scene.

How to Fix Pacing Problems in Your Novel

Pacing is not speed, it is control. Here is how to find the stretches that drag or rush, and what to actually do about them.

How to Write a Compelling Antagonist

A memorable antagonist is the hero of a story you are not telling. Here is how to give them a motive, a worldview, and enough pressure to feel inevitable.

How to Write Natural Dialogue

Why real speech makes flat prose, and the small set of moves that make written dialogue sound spoken: subtext, beats, clean tags, and ruthless cutting.

Keeping Character Voices Distinct

How to give each character a sound of their own, and how to keep that sound steady from the first chapter to the last.

Raising the Stakes Without Melodrama

Higher stakes are not louder ones. Here is how to escalate what a character stands to lose without tipping into melodrama.

Scene and Sequel: The Engine of a Chapter

A scene drives forward on a goal that meets conflict and ends in trouble. A sequel absorbs the blow and chooses what happens next. Together they are the smallest engine of a working chapter.

Show, Don't Tell (and When to Just Tell)

What the advice actually means, two short worked examples, and why skilled telling is its own craft.

Weaving in Subplots: How to Braid Secondary Stories Into a Novel

A subplot earns its place when it changes the main story, not when it simply runs alongside it. Here is how to choose, count, and braid them.

Writing Chapter Endings That Pull the Reader On

A reader decides whether to keep going at the end of a chapter, not the start. Here is how to end on a turn, a question, or a decision instead of a full stop.

Revision

Turning a messy draft into a finished book.

A reading room, and a writing room.

The library is free and always will be. So is the DraftProse workspace: a binder, a focused editor, and word goals. The Reader, our whole-manuscript analysis that never generates prose, is the only paid part.

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The DraftProse Library · DraftProse