Writes and revises long-form nonfiction using patterns for structure, clarity, narrative flow, and editorial polish. Active when drafting or tightening chapters.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/claude-skills-library:excellence-book-writingThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
> How to write non-fiction that reads like it was written by a master, not generated by AI.
How to write non-fiction that reads like it was written by a master, not generated by AI.
The reader discovers. The author disappears.
Great non-fiction doesn't announce insights — it creates conditions for the reader to have them. The author is a guide, not a performer. The writing serves the idea, not the writer's ego.
Wrong: "This was a revolutionary insight that changed everything."
Right: Describe the insight. Let the reader conclude it's revolutionary.
The moment you tell the reader how to feel, you've lost them. Trust your material. If it's genuinely important, the reader will recognize it.
Wrong: "The moment I understood everything was 2 AM on a Wednesday. I sat back and felt something shift."
Right: Present the pattern. Ground it in observable phenomena. Let the logic build until the conclusion becomes inevitable.
Personal anecdotes serve as evidence, not as the main event. The story isn't about you discovering something — it's about the something.
Wrong: "I built a system with eleven agents. Here's what I found."
Right: "Consider how a film gets made. A director doesn't operate every camera..."
Start with recognizable patterns. Ground abstract ideas in concrete analogies from domains readers already understand. Then reveal the new application.
Every claim needs one of:
If you can't ground it, cut it.
Structure arguments so each point makes the next inevitable:
Observation → Principle → Implication → Evidence → Conclusion
The reader should arrive at your conclusion a half-second before you state it. That's when insight lands.
❌ "The moment I understood everything..."
❌ "I sat back and felt something shift..."
❌ "Here's what I discovered..."
❌ "The same philosophy I'd stumbled into..."
The pattern exists independent of you discovering it. Write about the pattern, not your relationship to it.
❌ "In this chapter, we'll explore..."
❌ "Here's what you need to understand..."
❌ "There are three key points..."
❌ "Let me explain why this matters..."
Just do the thing. Don't announce you're about to do it.
❌ Bold claim → elaborate → bold claim → elaborate → repeat
❌ "First... Second... Third... In conclusion..."
❌ Identical paragraph structures throughout
Vary rhythm. Some paragraphs are one sentence. Some are five. Let the content dictate form.
❌ "This is incredibly important..."
❌ "The implications are profound..."
❌ "This changes everything..."
If it's important, demonstrate importance through substance. If implications are profound, show them. Never assert significance — earn it.
❌ "Let's dive in..."
❌ "It's worth noting that..."
❌ "Importantly..."
❌ "In essence..."
❌ "At its core..."
❌ "This is not just X, it's Y"
❌ Perfect parallel structure in every list
These phrases signal generated content. Humans don't actually talk this way.
Start with something that demands resolution:
Don't start with context-setting or definitions. Drop the reader into tension.
Each section should:
Transitions emerge from logical necessity, not from transition phrases.
Wrong: "In conclusion, we've seen that..."
Right: Open a door. Leave the reader with momentum, not summary.
The best endings make the reader want to start thinking, not stop reading.
Long sentences build complexity and draw the reader through multiple connected ideas that accumulate meaning as they progress.
Short sentences land.
One word? Sometimes.
Mix them. Let content dictate length.
Wrong: "The pattern was discovered by practitioners." Right: "Practitioners discovered the pattern."
Passive voice has uses (emphasizing the object, varying rhythm), but active is the default.
Wrong: "The implementation of orchestration methodologies enables enhanced collaborative outcomes."
Right: "Teams that orchestrate AI specialists produce better work than teams that don't."
Prefer: nouns you can picture, verbs that describe action, specifics over generalities.
Useful for introducing new ideas:
Not X. Y.
Not [old way]. [New way].
Example: "Not humans using AI. Humans conducting AI."
Use sparingly. Powerful when earned.
After writing any section, ask:
Could this have been written by anyone who understood the material?
If I removed all first-person references, would anything be lost?
Does the reader discover, or are they told?
Would a thoughtful reader arrive at my conclusions before I state them?
Before any chapter is complete:
Intelligence with empathy. Rigorous thinking delivered with humanity. Never cold, never sentimental.
State truths directly. Don't hedge unnecessarily. But acknowledge limits and uncertainties where they exist.
Accessible to intelligent readers without dumbing down. Trust readers to follow complex ideas when clearly presented.
Evidence-based and practical, but capable of vision. Facts enable rather than constrain imagination.
Read your writing aloud.
If it sounds like a person talking to another person about something they genuinely understand and care about — it works.
If it sounds like content — rewrite.
The goal isn't to sound smart. The goal isn't to impress. The goal isn't even to inform.
The goal is to create conditions where the reader has genuine insight.
Everything else is noise.
"The reader discovers. The author disappears."
npx claudepluginhub frankxai/claude-skills-library --plugin claude-skills-libraryProvides patterns for structuring non-fiction content: learner personas, evidence hierarchy, argument structure, and chapter templates. Useful for writing clear, evidence-backed documentation or educational material.
Routes writing problems to the right technique for fiction, non-fiction, or professional writing. Diagnoses issues like flat characters, clunky prose, weak arguments, or tonal shifts.
Provides structured guidance for writing blogs, research articles, fiction, essays, and marketing copy, including audience analysis, outlining, drafting, revising, and polishing.