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Generates comprehensive chapter outlines for books, including key topics, subtopics, learning objectives, and estimated word counts. Use this when the user needs help structuring a book chapter or creating a table of contents.

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Note: Please verify skill by going through its instructions before using it.

SKILL.md

name chapter-outline-generator
description Generates comprehensive chapter outlines for books, including key topics, subtopics, learning objectives, and estimated word counts. Use this when the user needs help structuring a book chapter or creating a table of contents.

Chapter Outline Generator

Purpose

This skill helps authors create detailed, structured chapter outlines for their books. It ensures logical flow, comprehensive coverage, and balanced chapter lengths.

When to Use

  • User is starting a new book and needs chapter structure
  • User wants to expand a single chapter into detailed sections
  • User needs to reorganize or rebalance existing chapters
  • User requests a table of contents or chapter breakdown

Instructions

Step 1: Understand the Context

Ask the user for:

  • Book title and genre/subject matter
  • Target audience (academic, general readers, children, etc.)
  • Overall book theme or main argument
  • Approximate desired book length (word count or page count)
  • Number of chapters desired (if known)

Step 2: Generate Chapter Framework

For each chapter, create:

  • Chapter Number and Title: Clear, engaging chapter titles
  • Chapter Summary: 2-3 sentence overview of what the chapter covers
  • Learning Objectives: 3-5 key takeaways readers should gain
  • Main Sections: 3-7 major sections within the chapter
  • Subsections: 2-4 subsections under each main section
  • Estimated Word Count: Based on overall book length and chapter importance

Step 3: Ensure Logical Flow

  • Check that chapters build upon each other logically
  • Ensure no major topic gaps
  • Verify balanced distribution of content across chapters
  • Confirm clear progression from introduction to conclusion

Step 4: Output Format

Present the outline in a clean, hierarchical format:

# Book Title: [Title]

## Chapter 1: [Chapter Title]

**Summary**: [2-3 sentence overview]

**Learning Objectives**:

- Objective 1
- Objective 2
- Objective 3

**Sections**:

1. [Section Title]
   - Subsection A
   - Subsection B
2. [Section Title]
   - Subsection A
   - Subsection B

**Estimated Word Count**: [X,XXX words]

---

## Chapter 2: [Chapter Title]

...

Examples

Example 1: Fiction Novel

User: "I'm writing a mystery novel about a detective solving art thefts. Can you outline the first 3 chapters?"

Output:

# Book Title: The Vanishing Canvas

## Chapter 1: The Empty Gallery

**Summary**: Detective Sarah Chen receives a mysterious call about a high-profile art theft at the Metropolitan Museum. She arrives to find not just one, but three priceless paintings missing without a trace.

**Learning Objectives**:

- Introduce the protagonist and her detective skills
- Establish the central mystery and stakes
- Set up the museum setting and key supporting characters

**Sections**:

1. The Midnight Call
   - Sarah's routine disrupted
   - Initial crime scene details
2. The Crime Scene Investigation
   - Missing paintings identified
   - Security footage review
   - First clues discovered
3. Meeting the Museum Director
   - Background on the stolen artworks
   - List of potential suspects
   - Political pressure mounting

**Estimated Word Count**: 3,500 words

Example 2: Non-Fiction Business Book

User: "Help me outline a book about remote team management."

Output:

# Book Title: Leading from Anywhere: The Remote Manager's Playbook

## Chapter 1: The Remote Work Revolution

**Summary**: Explores the shift to remote work, examining why traditional management approaches fail in virtual environments and what successful remote leaders do differently.

**Learning Objectives**:

- Understand the fundamental differences between in-office and remote management
- Identify common pitfalls of traditional management in remote contexts
- Learn the core principles of effective remote leadership

**Sections**:

1. The Great Remote Transition
   - Statistics and trends in remote work adoption
   - Case studies of companies that succeeded (and failed)
2. Why Old Management Models Don't Work
   - The visibility bias problem
   - Time zone challenges
   - Communication breakdowns
3. The Remote Leadership Mindset
   - Trust over surveillance
   - Output versus activity
   - Asynchronous-first thinking

**Estimated Word Count**: 4,000 words

Tips for Authors

  • Keep chapter lengths relatively consistent (unless intentionally varying for pacing)
  • Frontload crucial world-building/context in early chapters
  • Each chapter should have its own mini-arc while contributing to the overall narrative/argument
  • Consider ending chapters with hooks or cliffhangers (fiction) or actionable takeaways (non-fiction)
  • Review the outline as a whole to ensure comprehensive coverage and no redundancy

Validation Checklist

Before finalizing the outline, verify:

  • All chapters have clear, distinct purposes
  • Logical progression from chapter to chapter
  • No major gaps in coverage
  • Reasonable word count distribution
  • Each chapter has actionable sections and subsections
  • Learning objectives align with content