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I’ve had a vision: A Word Processor for Fantasy Novel Writers!

Posted: February 7th, 2012 under writing.
Tags: author, book, fantasy, grammar, novel, style, write, writer, writing

Trying to keep the momentum from yesterday, I did find that changing the finished text color to white is even better because I can’t see it at all … except for all the annoying squiggly spellcheck and grammarcheck lines. Word seems to think I’m an idiot most of the time.

So I want to propose a new word processor for fantasy writers. Unheard of, right? I know. Anyway, here would be some of the features:

Chapters.
Every time you create a new chapter, it gets added to the table of contents at the beginning of your document. DUH!
You can format it however you want, such as:

CHAPTERNAME … PageNumber

And of course you can toggle whether or not the table of contents is seen or hidden.

Proper Nouns.
Every time you create a new character or some kind of proper noun, instead of the spell check yelling at you until you ‘add it to the dictionary’, you can just treat it as a Proper Noun, just for this project.
And here’s the the coolest feature: Proper Nouns would get linked to your glossary/index at the end of your book and you can modify them and their definitions at any time.
It would be a great writing tool, helping writers keep track of their characters, locations, and who-knows-what-else.

Hidden text.
Collapse a paragraph, chapter, or scene. Make it all go away until you’re ready to view it again. Every coding program in the world lets me collapse/expand code, so why isn’t there a writing program that lets me do it with text?

Chapter emblems/styles.
A simple graphic like a black diamond, or a more complex graphic like a house crest at the beginning of each chapter that doesn’t require you to manually do it every time, along with font styles, numbering, positioning, and whatever else you want.

Big book, small book, digibook.
Templates that easily let you view how your book would look in the typical mass-paperback sizes versus hardback versus how it would look on an e-reader. Also, how would it look as a typed manuscript, all double-spaced, in the proper font, with a title and author page, ready for submittal?

The top corners.
The ability to EASILY control what it says on the top left and top right of pages. Top left? Book title! Top right? Chapter title! Maybe I don’t want the page number to appear on some pages, such as when a new chapter begins. Ever think of that?!? Why oh why isn’t this easy to do?

Toggle Seamless pages on/off.
It’s hard to evaluate things like beats and flow when one-tenth of your paragraphs get split in half by that giant stupid gap between each page.

I could go on and on about my dream word processor, but I’ll stop there. Please, open-source indie developer who might be reading this right now, please make this. I’d pay you, but it would go against your not-for-profit, open-source idealisms.

« « Writing Journal Entry for 02-06 | Something big’s going on » »


6 Comments »

  1. *coughScrivenercough*

    [Reply]

    Comment by Merrilee — February 8, 2012 @ 12:36 am


  2. I heartily endorse this service and/or product.

    [Reply]

    Comment by Brian — February 8, 2012 @ 5:09 pm


  3. Aye, Scrivener is pretty sweeeet. There’s a 30 day trial for both Windows and Mac.

    [Reply]

    Comment by Ryan G. Sanders — February 9, 2012 @ 8:47 pm


  4. Wait, so Scrivener can do all these things?

    [Reply]

    Comment by Nick Enlowe — February 10, 2012 @ 8:13 am


  5. Well, not to the specific degree that you would like ;) but it does a lot of great things. It has inbuilt folders and documents, so you can separate scenes/chapters etc, it can compile the entire book at the end, you can have character sheets within it, as well as research and templates.

    It’s just about the best software I’ve ever found :)

    [Reply]

    Comment by Ryan G. Sanders — February 10, 2012 @ 10:08 am


  6. It pretty much does, Nick. Worth at least trying it. I’ve trialled many writing programs over the years (LSB, yWriter, Write or Die) and this one is my preference. I find it so easy to use and intuitive. It also formats your MS for you. I can keep everything in there – my journal, character info, notes, worldbuilding – without it becoming bloated and un-navigable.

    [Reply]

    Comment by Merrilee — February 10, 2012 @ 1:22 pm



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