narrative-nonfiction

Use when writing self-help books, memoirs, or prescriptive guides with story elements. Trigger on: 'self-help book', 'transformation arc', 'metaphor consistency', 'reader journey', 'exercise design', or narrative nonfiction projects.

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Install skill "narrative-nonfiction" with this command: npx skills add rhavekost/author-toolkit/rhavekost-author-toolkit-narrative-nonfiction

Narrative Nonfiction Workshop

Workflow for self-help and prescriptive nonfiction using narrative elements and metaphors to guide reader transformation.

Core concept: Prescriptive advice + storytelling. Reader is protagonist on a journey. Book provides map and tools.

When to Use

This skill is for:

  • ✅ Self-help and prescriptive nonfiction books
  • ✅ Memoirs with lessons or transformation arcs
  • ✅ Books using extended metaphors or narrative framing
  • ✅ Practical guides that include storytelling elements
  • ✅ Reader journey design (before state → after state)

When NOT to Use

This skill is NOT for:

  • ❌ Pure fiction (novels, short stories) - use fiction-workshop instead
  • ❌ Academic writing or research papers - different conventions
  • ❌ Straight journalism or reporting - no transformation arc
  • ❌ Technical documentation or how-to guides without story elements
  • ❌ Business books focused purely on data/case studies without reader journey

Stage 1: Foundation Building

Goal: Establish promise, metaphor system, and transformation arc.

Initial Questions

  1. Target reader? (Demographics + psychographics)
  2. Transformation promise?
  3. Central metaphor/framing?
  4. Reader's "before" and "after" states?
  5. Book's unique angle?
  6. How much outlined vs. drafted?

Core Components

Promise: What reader gains. "This book will help you [transformation] by [method]"

Metaphor: Central metaphor, how it maps to advice, where it helps/misleads

Reader's Journey: Entry point (where they start), pain points, resistance, transformation stages, exit point (who they become)

Twist/Reveal (if applicable): What's revealed, setup needed, how to earn payoff

Use assets/book-blueprint-template.md if needed.

Exit condition: Clear grasp of reader, promise, metaphor, arc.


Stage 2: Chapter Development

Goal: Draft or refine chapters balancing advice, story, and exercises.

Chapter structure: Hook (story/question) → Setup (why this matters) → Content (teaching) → Evidence (stories/research) → Application (exercises) → Bridge (to next)

Writing Modes

Switch between these as needed:

ModeInvocationFocus
Voice Editor"Check voice consistency..."Tone, metaphor alignment, author persona
Content Editor"Evaluate the teaching in..."Clarity, completeness, accuracy
Exercise Designer"Design exercises for..."Practical application, appropriate difficulty
Metaphor Consultant"Check metaphor consistency..."Extended metaphor alignment, avoiding confusion
Reveal Engineer"Set up the reveal..."Foreshadowing, misdirection, payoff

See references/ for detailed guidance on each mode.

Creation Workflow

  1. Purpose Check: Key takeaway? Where in arc? What must reader believe before next chapter?

  2. Outline Beats: Hook options, teaching points (2-4), stories/examples, exercises, bridge

  3. Draft: Write chapter. Use "write like you talk" voice.

  4. Layer Metaphor: Present but not forced.

  5. Add Exercises: Use references/exercise-design.md

  6. Polish: Check voice, pacing, reader energy

Editing Workflow

  1. Read as Target Reader: Engaged? Understand? Believe I can do this? Overwhelmed or ready?

  2. Diagnose: Confusion → clarify | Boredom → add story | Resistance → address objections | Overwhelm → simplify

  3. Invoke Mode: Load relevant reference file

  4. Implement: Use str_replace


Stage 3: Arc Integrity Check

Goal: Verify book works as complete transformation journey.

Read full outline/manuscript for:

  1. Promise Delivery: Book delivers promise? Transformation clear and achievable?
  2. Pacing: Change speed appropriate? Integration plateaus? Energy builds?
  3. Metaphor: Maintained throughout? Breaks or contradicts? Still serves at end?
  4. Reveal (if applicable): Twist earned? Seeds planted? Reframe lands emotionally?
  5. Exercise Progression: Build on each other? Difficulty matches stage? Variety?

Common Issues

SymptomCauseFix
"Too preachy"Not enough story/exampleAdd narrative
"Too abstract"Missing concrete adviceAdd specific how-to
"Overwhelming"Too much per chapterNarrow focus, add chapters
"Why should I care?"Missing pain point connectionOpen with reader's struggle
"I can't do this"Missing scaffoldingAdd smaller steps, examples

Self-Check: Is This Working?

Use these checkpoints to verify you're following the workflow correctly.

After Foundation Building:

  • Can you state the book's promise in one sentence?
  • Can you describe the reader's "before" and "after" states clearly?
  • Do you understand the central metaphor and how it maps to the advice?
  • Can you outline the transformation arc stages without looking at notes?

After drafting a chapter:

  • Does the chapter have all six elements: hook, setup, content, evidence, application, bridge?
  • Is the metaphor present but not forced?
  • Is the voice consistent with previous chapters?
  • Would the target reader understand and believe they can apply this?

After designing an exercise:

  • Does the exercise difficulty match where the reader is in their journey?
  • Can the reader complete it with the knowledge they have so far?
  • Is it specific enough to be actionable (not "improve your productivity" but "track your time for three days")?
  • Does it build on previous exercises?

After invoking a mode:

  • Did you explicitly request "Voice Editor" or "Metaphor Consultant" or specific mode?
  • Is the feedback focused on that mode's domain?
  • Did you avoid mixing concerns (voice + content + exercises all at once)?

Before claiming "done":

  • Does the full arc deliver on the promise made in chapter 1?
  • Is the metaphor consistent throughout (or intentionally evolved)?
  • Do exercises progress logically from simple to complex?
  • If there's a reveal/twist, are seeds planted in earlier chapters?

If you answered "no" to any checkpoint, return to that stage before proceeding.


Common Mistakes

MistakeWhy It HappensFix
Skipping Foundation Building"I just want to start writing"Without clarity on promise, metaphor, and arc, chapters drift. Spend 30 minutes on blueprint—saves hours of rewriting.
Forcing the metaphorTrying to make every sentence fit the frameMetaphor should illuminate, not constrain. Use it where it helps understanding, skip where it doesn't. Natural beats forced.
Too much teaching, not enough storyWanting to share all your knowledgeReaders connect through story first. Aim for 40% story/example, 40% teaching, 20% application. Adjust per chapter needs.
Exercises that don't match reader readinessCopying exercise formats from other booksExercise difficulty must match where reader is in arc. Early chapters = simple reflection. Later chapters = bigger challenges.
Losing voice consistencySwitching between academic and conversational tonePick one voice (usually conversational for self-help) and maintain it. Use "Voice Editor" mode to check consistency. See example below.
Ignoring reader resistanceAssuming reader agrees with premiseAddress objections explicitly. "You might be thinking..." shows you understand their skepticism and builds trust.
Reveal without setupPlanning twist ending but not planting seedsIf book has reframe/reveal, every chapter needs subtle foreshadowing. Use "Reveal Engineer" mode to plant and track seeds.

Example: Voice Consistency

Inconsistent voice (Chapter 1 conversational, Chapter 4 academic):

Chapter 1: "You know that feeling of finishing a 'productive' day without accomplishing anything important? That's your brain telling you something's off."

Chapter 4: "Empirical research demonstrates that individuals who engage in time-blocking methodologies exhibit significantly higher levels of task completion and subjective productivity (Chen et al., 2019)."

Consistent voice (both conversational):

Chapter 4: "Here's what the research shows: people who use time-blocking finish more important work. One study tracked 500 knowledge workers for six months and found time-blockers completed 60% more high-priority projects. Your instinct was right."

The difference: Conversational voice maintains "you/your" address, uses plain language, and connects research to reader experience.

Example: Forced vs. Natural Metaphor

Book metaphor: "Think Like an Architect"

Forced: "When you wake up in the morning, draft your day's blueprint. Pour your foundation coffee. Every moment is a chance to design your life's structure."

Natural: "Architects plan for what they need before breaking ground. When you start a project, identify your requirements first—don't just start building and hope it works out."

The difference: Natural metaphor illuminates specific advice. Forced metaphor tries to shoehorn every detail into the frame.

Example: Exercise Design with Scaffolding

Early chapter exercise (reader just learning concept):

EXERCISE: Track Your Time
This week, log what you actually do for three full workdays.
Just notice. Don't judge yourself or try to optimize yet.
Write down: Where did your time go? When were you most focused?

Later chapter exercise (reader has practiced basics):

EXERCISE: Block Your First Deep Work Session
Choose one morning this week (not your busiest day—start manageable).
1. Identify your most important task
2. Block 90 minutes using the protocol from Chapter 3
3. Practice saying it out loud three times before the actual conversation
4. Deliver the boundary
5. Journal: What happened? How did you feel? What would you do differently?

The difference: Early exercises are observation-only with no pressure. Later exercises build on established skills and ask for action.


Quick Reference Commands

NeedCommand
Start new project"Let's build a blueprint for [project]"
Voice check"Check voice consistency in [chapter]"
Content edit"Evaluate the teaching in [chapter]"
Design exercises"Design exercises for [concept]"
Metaphor check"Check metaphor consistency across [chapters]"
Setup the reveal"Help me plant seeds for [reveal] in [chapter]"
Arc review"Review the transformation arc in [outline/draft]"

Files

  • references/transformation-arc.md - Reader journey structure
  • references/metaphor-consistency.md - Extended metaphor management
  • references/exercise-design.md - Practical application design
  • references/reveal-engineering.md - Twist/reframe setup and payoff
  • references/voice-editing.md - Tone and persona consistency
  • assets/book-blueprint-template.md - Book planning document
  • assets/chapter-template.md - Chapter structure template

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narrative-nonfiction | V50.AI