Writers typically use AIWriteBook to move from a working concept to a finished manuscript through a repeatable workflow. You either start a fresh project or bring in an existing draft (DOCX, PDF, EPUB, or TXT), then let the system adapt to your tone so new pages match your voice as you continue. Many authors begin by sketching an outline, then expand it chapter by chapter while the platform keeps earlier decisions in view.
For novels and series, the practical routine is to set up your cast and world details first, then write scenes with those constraints applied. As you draft, you can reference the story bible to avoid contradictions, track character goals, and keep plot threads consistent from book to book. When something feels off, you open the editor, ask for alternatives, compare revisions in a diff view, and accept only the changes you want.
For non-fiction projects, a common use is to upload notes or sources, turn them into a clean structure, and then generate sections that teach clearly. Authors use the tool to produce learning outcomes, add citations, and create end-of-chapter exercises or reflection prompts, then refine wording and flow in the same editor without switching apps.
After the text is solid, AIWriteBook is often used to finish the packaging and release steps in one place. You can create illustrations for specific chapters, produce a cover, generate audiobook narration, and prepare an Amazon KDP listing using keyword research and competitor checks. Finally, you export to the format you need—EPUB for KDP, print-ready PDFs in standard trim sizes, DOCX, or audiobook—then publish to Amazon KDP or distribute to stores like Apple Books, Kobo, Google Play, and Barnes & Noble.
Free
$0
Access to 25 free standalone author tools and 7-chapter book creation
Paid
From $12/month
Full access to AI writing, character builder, cover designer, KDP export, audiobook generation, illustrations, and all premium features
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