Outlining Skill
Purpose
The outlining skill helps authors create structured plans for their books, whether fiction or nonfiction. It transforms high-level ideas into detailed roadmaps with chapter breakdowns, scene structures, and narrative arcs.
When to Use
- •Story Planning: When the author needs to plan the overall structure of their book
- •Chapter Breakdown: When developing detailed chapter-by-chapter outlines
- •Arc Development: When mapping character arcs, plot threads, or argument flows
- •Structure Evaluation: When assessing whether an outline has proper pacing and balance
Core Capabilities
Story Structure Analysis
The skill understands various narrative structures:
- •Three-act structure (setup, confrontation, resolution)
- •Hero's journey (Campbell's monomyth)
- •Kishotenketsu (introduction, development, twist, conclusion)
- •Five-act structure (exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, denouement)
For nonfiction:
- •Problem-solution structure
- •Chronological progression
- •Thematic organization
- •Argument-evidence structure
Planning Workflow
- •Initial Structure: Create high-level book structure from author's concept
- •Chapter Breakdown: Develop detailed chapter outlines with key points
- •Scene Planning: Break chapters into scenes or sections with specific purposes
- •Arc Tracking: Map how themes, characters, or arguments develop across the book
Outline Components
Each outline should include:
- •Chapter/Section Title: Clear, descriptive title
- •Purpose: What this chapter accomplishes in the overall narrative
- •Key Events/Points: Main content or plot points
- •Arc Progression: How character/theme/argument arcs advance
- •Pacing Notes: Tension level, speed, emotional tone
- •Word Count Target: Estimated length for balance
Integration with Corpus
The outlining skill leverages the corpus for:
- •Consistency Checks: Verify outline aligns with established world details
- •Character Arc Tracking: Ensure character development matches their profiles
- •Timeline Validation: Check that events sequence properly
- •Theme Reinforcement: Identify opportunities to reinforce core themes
Pre-Outline Queries
Before creating outlines, query the corpus for:
- •Character relationship graphs
- •Timeline of established events
- •Location and world-building details
- •Thematic elements to weave through chapters
Outline Types
The skill supports different outline depths:
High-Level Outline
- •Part/section divisions
- •Chapter titles and one-sentence descriptions
- •Major turning points
- •1-2 pages total
Standard Outline
- •Chapter-by-chapter breakdown
- •Key scenes or sections per chapter
- •Character/theme progression notes
- •5-10 pages total
Detailed Outline
- •Scene-by-scene breakdown
- •POV character per scene
- •Specific plot beats and dialogue points
- •Character emotional arcs per scene
- •20+ pages total
Pacing Considerations
The skill evaluates pacing by:
- •Scene/Chapter Length Variation: Mixing short punchy chapters with longer ones
- •Tension Escalation: Building toward climactic moments
- •Breather Moments: Placing quieter scenes after intense sequences
- •Information Distribution: Spreading reveals and developments evenly
Output Format
Outlines should be structured markdown with:
- •Clear hierarchical headings
- •Consistent formatting for scene/chapter entries
- •Metadata annotations (POV, timeline, word count targets)
- •Cross-references to corpus entries
See outline-template.md for the standard template structure.
Specialized Techniques
Fiction Outlining
See fiction.md for:
- •Plot arc structures
- •Scene tension patterns
- •Character development tracking
- •Subplot integration
Nonfiction Outlining
See nonfiction.md for:
- •Argument flow structures
- •Evidence organization
- •Reader journey mapping
- •Chapter types and purposes
Validation Steps
Before finalizing an outline:
- •Verify each chapter has clear purpose
- •Check arc progression is smooth
- •Confirm pacing has appropriate rhythm
- •Validate timeline consistency
- •Ensure themes are woven throughout
- •Check word count distribution is balanced
Iteration Support
Outlines should be treated as living documents:
- •Store in corpus for later reference
- •Update as book evolves
- •Track major structural changes
- •Maintain version history for rollback if needed