| 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