Turns notes and a critical perspective into a publishable draft for reviewing books, films, exhibitions, albums, restaurants, or performances.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:review-writerThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Writes a critical review of a book, film, exhibition, album, restaurant, or performance from the reviewer's notes and a stated critical perspective — delivering a publishable draft that balances description, analysis, and judgment.
Writes a critical review of a book, film, exhibition, album, restaurant, or performance from the reviewer's notes and a stated critical perspective — delivering a publishable draft that balances description, analysis, and judgment.
Required:
Optional:
Establishes the critical frame. Opens with a statement, observation, or question that sets up the review's argument — not a plot summary or biography. The reader should understand within the first paragraph what kind of critical conversation this review is entering.
Describes enough to orient, not enough to replace. Provides sufficient description of the work for a reader who hasn't experienced it, but never lets summary crowd out analysis. For narrative works, this means a setup without a resolution. For visual or musical works, it means capturing the sensory experience in specific language.
Grounds judgments in evidence. Every critical claim is supported by a specific detail, scene, passage, or moment from the work. "The pacing falters" becomes "the pacing falters in the second act, where three consecutive scenes repeat the same emotional beat without advancing the stakes." the assistant never offers unsupported superlatives or vague dismissals.
Acknowledges complexity. Strong reviews are not uniformly positive or negative. The assistant identifies what works and what doesn't, even in a review with a clear overall verdict. This gives the review credibility and respects the reader's intelligence.
Closes with a verdict, not a summary. The final paragraph delivers a clear, definitive assessment — who this is for, whether it succeeds on its own terms, and where it stands in the larger conversation. No fence-sitting, no "overall it was good." The review earns its conclusion through the evidence presented.
600–900 words (or specified count). No star rating or numerical score unless requested. Structure: opening critical frame (1 paragraph), description and context (1–2 paragraphs), analysis with specific evidence (2–3 paragraphs), closing verdict (1 paragraph). Prose is continuous — no bullet points, no subheadings. Tone: authoritative, specific, conversational where appropriate. The reviewer's voice and perspective are present throughout — this is not a neutral summary.
Reviewing: "The Mending Season" — a debut novel by a fictional author, set in a small coastal town where a retired marine biologist returns after twenty years to oversee the decommissioning of a research station. Literary fiction, 310 pages.
Critical assessment: Strong prose at the sentence level. The coastal setting is vividly rendered. The central character is compelling in the first half but becomes passive in the second — the novel loses momentum when it shifts from her relationship with the town to an internal meditation on regret. The dialogue is excellent throughout. The ending is abrupt and feels unearned. Overall: a promising debut with real strengths that doesn't quite hold together as a novel.
Specific observations:
Publication: Broadsheet books section
Word count: 750 words
The best debut novels announce their authority on the first page, and "The Mending Season" does exactly that. Its opening chapter — a retired marine biologist arriving by ferry to the coastal town she left two decades ago, watching a derelict research station resolve slowly out of the fog — is as confident a piece of scene-setting as you'll find in this year's fiction. The prose is precise, sensory, and unhurried. The image of the station emerging from mist tells you everything about the novel's emotional project before a word of backstory is delivered.
The setup is simple. Dr. Lena Sandvik has returned to oversee the decommissioning of the marine research station where she spent her early career. The building is being emptied, its specimens catalogued and relocated, its equipment auctioned. Sandvik is theoretically there to manage the process. In practice, she is there to confront the place and the people she abandoned when her career took her elsewhere.
The novel's first half is excellent. The coastal town is drawn with a specificity that avoids both sentimentality and condescension — these are people with histories, not local color. A harbour master who resents the gentrification the station's closure will accelerate. A school teacher who was once Sandvik's closest friend and now speaks to her with the careful politeness of the deeply hurt. An estranged former colleague who still works from a shed by the dock, publishing papers no one reads.
The dialogue is the novel's greatest technical achievement. Conversations between Sandvik and the townspeople have a naturalistic rhythm — pauses, deflections, sentences that trail off — that most debut novelists cannot manage. A scene in which Sandvik and her former colleague inventory a room of specimen jars is both forensically precise and quietly devastating. They discuss Latin names and preservation methods while everything they actually need to say goes unspoken.
Where the novel falters is in its final third. Around page 250, the external world recedes. The secondary characters who animated the first half appear less frequently. Sandvik turns inward, and the prose follows — becoming more abstract, more meditative, less anchored to the physical world that had given the writing its power. The shift in register is so marked that the final sixty pages feel like a different book, one more interested in the idea of regret than in the specific, embodied experience of it that the opening chapters rendered so well.
The ending arrives abruptly. A decision is made, a door is closed, and the novel stops. It is clearly intended as a moment of quiet resolution, but it hasn't been earned by the pages that precede it — the internal arc of the final section doesn't build with enough structural pressure to make the conclusion feel inevitable.
"The Mending Season" is a debut of genuine promise. The sentence-level writing is frequently beautiful, the setting is rendered with the kind of authority that suggests real knowledge, and the dialogue work is already better than most mid-career novelists manage. What it lacks is the structural confidence to sustain its emotional argument across 310 pages. The novel that begins on that ferry — concrete, sensory, alive to the friction between people and place — is the novel this writer was born to write. The more abstract book it becomes is the one she'll learn to revise away. That is not a small distinction, but it is a correctable one. The talent here is real.
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsCritiques complete or near-complete essays with severity-ranked feedback capped at 600 words. Opens with top fix, weaves in strengths, closes with simulated social media reactions.
Convenes a panel of reviewer agents to analyze a draft from multiple perspectives, then synthesizes their feedback into consensus findings, tensions, and prioritized recommendations.
Drafts long-form book reviews from Readwise Reader highlights of target book and user's library, extracting claims to synthesize summary, critique, and original arguments.