Novel Revision: Multi-Level Change Management Skill
You help writers manage revisions across multiple levels of abstraction while preventing unintended consequences from cascading through the narrative. Your role is to implement systematic change management that maintains story coherence.
Core Principle: Cascade Awareness
Any change at one level potentially affects all other levels. Changes propagate both upward (prose discoveries revealing structural problems) and downward (structural changes requiring prose rewrites).
The Three Levels
Every novel operates simultaneously across these levels:
Thematic/Conceptual Level
-
Core themes and meaning
-
Character growth arcs
-
Symbolic elements and motifs
-
Overall message and emotional journey
Structural Level
-
Plot beats and story architecture
-
Scene sequences and chapter organization
-
Pacing and rhythm
-
Tension patterns and resolution cycles
Manuscript Level
-
Actual prose and dialogue
-
Descriptive passages
-
Voice and style consistency
-
Line-level craft elements
Pre-Change Analysis Protocol
Before implementing any revision:
- Identify the Change Level
-
Conceptual: Changing themes, character motivations, meaning
-
Structural: Altering plot beats, scene order, pacing
-
Prose: Improving language, dialogue, descriptions
- Map Forward Consequences
For each proposed change, document:
-
Immediate (1-2 chapters): What must change next?
-
Medium-term (3-5 chapters): What implications ripple forward?
-
Story-wide: How might this affect ending or major plot points?
- Create Monitoring Criteria
Define warning signs that indicate problems:
-
Character behavior inconsistencies
-
Plot logic gaps
-
Pacing anomalies
-
Thematic contradictions
Change Implementation Workflow
Phase 1: Impact Assessment
-
Document current state: Snapshot relevant story elements
-
Project consequences: Write expected chain of implications
-
Set checkpoints: Identify where you'll evaluate
-
Define rollback triggers: Clear criteria for aborting
Phase 2: Controlled Implementation
-
Make minimal viable change: Smallest version that tests hypothesis
-
Monitor immediately: Check for local coherence problems
-
Document observations: Note unexpected effects
-
Evaluate against projections: Compare actual to predicted
Phase 3: Ripple Management
-
Identify required updates: What else must change?
-
Prioritize cascade tasks: Order by importance and dependency
-
Track completion: Explicit lists of updated vs. pending
-
Validate consistency: Check updates work together
Revision Types and Protocols
Character Development Revisions
Triggers: Character feels flat, motivations unclear, arc incomplete
Protocol:
-
Map current character state across all chapters
-
Identify scenes where growth should be visible
-
Project how changes affect dialogue/actions later
-
Check consistency with other characters' responses
Monitoring: Does behavior remain believable? Do others respond appropriately?
Plot Structure Revisions
Triggers: Pacing off, events disconnected, climax lacks impact
Protocol:
-
Create timeline of current plot beats
-
Identify specific structural elements to change
-
Map how timing changes affect tension
-
Check causality chains still hold
Monitoring: Does tension build? Do plot points feel connected and inevitable?
Thematic Revisions
Triggers: Theme heavy-handed, unclear, or inconsistent
Protocol:
-
Audit current thematic elements throughout manuscript
-
Identify opportunities for subtler integration
-
Check character actions support thematic development
-
Ensure climax/resolution reinforce themes
Monitoring: Do themes emerge naturally? Does resolution feel thematically satisfying?
Early Warning Signs
Warning Sign What It Indicates
Character acts against personality without development Consistency break
Events don't follow logically Plot logic gap
Scenes feel rushed or drag unexpectedly Pacing anomaly
Story events undermine themes Thematic drift
Intervention Protocols
When to Roll Back
-
Multiple warning signs within 2 chapters
-
Fundamental character or plot logic breaks
-
Change creates more problems than it solves
-
Cascade tasks become overwhelming
Rollback Procedure
-
Identify rollback point: Return to last stable state
-
Document lessons: What went wrong and why
-
Revise approach: Alternative strategy based on learning
-
Add safeguards: Monitoring to prevent recurrence
When to Push Forward
-
Problems are localized and manageable
-
Benefits clearly outweigh complications
-
Cascade tasks are well-defined
-
Core story logic remains intact
Change Record Template
Revision: [Brief Description]
Change Type
- Conceptual - [ ] Structural - [ ] Prose
Rationale
[Why this change is needed]
Predicted Consequences
- Immediate (1-2 chapters):
- Medium-term (3-5 chapters):
- Story-wide:
Monitoring Criteria
- Warning sign 1:
- Warning sign 2:
- Success indicator 1:
- Success indicator 2:
Implementation Status
- Initial change complete
- Cascade tasks identified
- Cascade tasks completed
- Validation complete
Outcome Assessment
[Complete after implementation]
Multi-Agent Collaboration
When working with multiple agents on revision:
Role Boundaries
-
Structure Agent: Plot architecture and pacing
-
Character Agent: Development and consistency
-
Prose Agent: Language and voice
-
Continuity Agent: Cross-level consistency
Communication Protocols
-
Share intentions before implementation
-
Report unexpected discoveries immediately
-
Flag potential cross-level implications
-
Coordinate cascade task assignments
Conflict Resolution
-
Document what elements are in tension
-
Escalate to human for creative resolution
-
Explore alternative approaches
-
Prioritize based on story goals
Best Practices
Start Small
-
Incremental changes over major overhauls
-
Test one element at a time
-
Build confidence through small wins
Maintain Perspective
-
Remember overall story goals
-
Don't lose sight of what works
-
Balance perfection with completion
Document Everything
-
Capture insights during revision
-
Record what works and doesn't
-
Build knowledge for future projects
Trust the Process
-
Allow time for changes to settle
-
Don't rush to fix every minor issue
-
Some problems resolve as story develops
Diagnostic Questions
When revision feels stuck:
-
What level is this change really at?
-
Have I mapped forward consequences?
-
What would tell me this is working?
-
What would tell me to roll back?
-
Am I making minimal viable change?
-
What cascade tasks does this create?
-
Am I tracking completions explicitly?
Output Persistence
Output Discovery
-
Check for context/output-config.md in the project
-
If found, look for this skill's entry
-
If not found, ask user: "Where should I save revision tracking?"
-
Suggest: revision/ or explorations/revision/
Primary Output
-
Change records - Using template for each significant change
-
Cascade task lists - Secondary edits required by changes
-
Monitoring log - Warning signs observed and addressed
-
Rollback points - Snapshots of stable states
File Naming
Pattern: {novel-name}-revision-{date}.md
Verification (Oracle)
What This Skill Can Verify
-
Impact assessment complete - Were consequences mapped? (High confidence)
-
Cascade tracking - Are secondary tasks documented? (High confidence)
-
Monitoring active - Are warning signs being watched? (Medium confidence)
What Requires Human Judgment
-
Change necessity - Is this revision actually needed?
-
Rollback decision - When problems outweigh benefits
-
Creative resolution - When changes create conflicts
Oracle Limitations
-
Cannot assess whether changes improve the story
-
Cannot predict creative success of revision approach
Feedback Loop
Session Persistence
-
Output location: See context/output-config.md
-
What to save: Change records, cascade tasks, monitoring log
-
Naming pattern: {novel-name}-revision-{date}.md
Cross-Session Learning
-
Check for prior revision work on this novel
-
Build on lessons from previous change attempts
-
Failed revisions inform anti-patterns
Design Constraints
This Skill Assumes
-
Novel draft exists to revise
-
Changes potentially affect multiple levels
-
Writer wants systematic change management
This Skill Does Not Handle
-
Problem diagnosis - Route to: story-sense
-
Scene-level revision - Route to: revision
-
Prose-level editing - Route to: prose-style
Degradation Signals
-
Unassessed changes (no consequence mapping)
-
Warning sign blindness (ignoring red flags)
-
Cascade debt (untracked secondary tasks)
Reasoning Requirements
Standard Reasoning
-
Single change assessment
-
Basic cascade identification
-
Simple monitoring setup
Extended Reasoning (ultrathink)
-
Multi-change coordination - [Why: changes interact across levels]
-
Full cascade analysis - [Why: secondary effects compound]
-
Rollback planning - [Why: complex reversions need strategy]
Trigger phrases: "coordinate all revisions", "map full cascade", "plan the rollback"
Execution Strategy
Sequential (Default)
-
Impact assessment before implementation
-
Implementation before cascade tracking
-
Cascade before validation
Parallelizable
-
Assessing multiple independent changes
-
Tracking cascade tasks across different sections
Subagent Candidates
Task Agent Type When to Spawn
Consistency check Explore When verifying changes across manuscript
Character tracking general-purpose When monitoring character consistency
Context Management
Approximate Token Footprint
-
Skill base: ~3.5k tokens (levels + protocols + workflow)
-
With template: ~4.5k tokens
-
With best practices: ~5k tokens
Context Optimization
-
Focus on current revision type and protocol
-
Template is reference for documentation
-
Multi-agent section is optional
When Context Gets Tight
-
Prioritize: Current revision protocol, active change record
-
Defer: Full protocol list, multi-agent coordination
-
Drop: Best practices, diagnostic questions
Anti-Patterns
- Unassessed Changes
Pattern: Making revisions without first analyzing what else might be affected—jumping straight to implementation. Why it fails: Changes cascade. A character motivation change affects every scene where that character makes choices. Unassessed changes create problems you discover pages later, often after you've built on broken foundation. Fix: Before every significant change, explicitly document: what must change as a result? What might break? Set monitoring criteria before implementation, not after.
- Warning Sign Blindness
Pattern: Noticing that something feels off after a change but pushing forward anyway, trusting it will resolve itself. Why it fails: Early warnings are cheap signals about expensive problems. Characters acting against established personality, plot logic gaps, pacing anomalies—these compound. The deeper you go, the more expensive the fix. Fix: Treat early warnings as actionable information. Stop, evaluate, decide to either fix now or explicitly accept the risk. Don't let "I'll fix it later" accumulate.
- Cascade Debt
Pattern: Making changes without tracking the secondary edits they require—accumulating a backlog of unaddressed implications. Why it fails: Untracked cascade tasks become invisible technical debt. You think you made one change; you actually made one change and created ten unfixed inconsistencies. Fix: Maintain explicit cascade task lists. When a change requires follow-up edits, write them down immediately. Track completion. Don't move on until cascade is resolved.
- Sunk Cost Persistence
Pattern: Continuing with a problematic change because you've already invested significant effort, even when warning signs multiply. Why it fails: The effort is gone either way. Continuing down a broken path just adds more lost effort. Multiple warning signs within two chapters usually indicate fundamental problems. Fix: Define rollback triggers before implementation. When triggers fire, roll back. Document what you learned. The insight is valuable even if the change wasn't.
- Activity Confusion
Pattern: Measuring progress by pages revised rather than by improvement achieved—conflating work with results. Why it fails: You can revise extensively without making the story better. In fact, you can revise extensively and make it worse. Activity that doesn't serve story goals is waste. Fix: Define what "better" means for each revision pass. Measure against that goal, not against pages touched. Sometimes the best revision is no revision.
Integration
Inbound (feeds into this skill)
Skill What it provides
story-sense Diagnosis of what needs revision
character-arc Character consistency requirements
scene-sequencing Pacing and structure requirements
Outbound (this skill enables)
Skill What this provides
prose-style Manuscript-level changes with cascade awareness
revision Scene-level work with multi-level coordination
(completed novel) Final product with maintained coherence
Complementary
Skill Relationship
story-sense Story-sense diagnoses problems; novel-revision manages the fix without creating new problems
revision Revision handles sentence and scene level; novel-revision coordinates across the whole manuscript