What breaks today
- The world lives in your head, and heads leak
- By chapter thirty you're tracking hundreds of established facts across a year of writing. The contradiction you'll ship isn't carelessness — it's arithmetic. No memory holds it all.
- Most AI wants to write it for you
- The tools on offer mostly generate prose — and generated prose is slop in your book's voice, not yours. Handing the writing to a model gives away the one thing that makes the book worth reading.
- The threads slip
- The setup you planted in chapter three, the arc you promised a side character, the rule your magic obeys — these are easy to lose across a long draft, and a reader feels every dropped one.
How Creader helps
- Structured world memory
- Your characters, locations, rules, timeline, and threads live as connected entities — not buried in a notes doc. The world is a record you can query, not a thing you have to remember.
- AI that checks, not writes
- Guardian reads your draft against your canon and surfaces the contradictions — the changed eye colour, the impossible age, the unpaid setup. It offloads the mechanical vigilance so your judgement stays on the prose.
- Support that respects your voice
- The AI here is built to help you think, not to replace your sentences. It retrieves, checks, and reminds — the cognitive load a long book imposes — and leaves the writing, the part that's yours, to you.
You're deep in chapter twenty-eight and the words are flowing. Creader quietly notes that the heirloom blade you just described as silver was bronze in chapter five. You keep writing; the catch is waiting when you surface.
Tools for authors
- Story bible builderCapture characters, locations, rules, timeline, and threads as one structured world.
- Character consistency checkerBuild a character around the four things that drift — facts, voice, knowledge, arc.
- Foreshadowing trackerPair every setup with its payoff and surface the threads left dangling.