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Prescription

Clichéd Language

The prose relies on stock phrases, dead metaphors, and familiar comparisons that have been worn smooth by overuse. Language that once had force now slides past the reader without landing. Every description, comparison, and observation needs to earn its place with precision and originality.

79 techniques prescribed

Affective contrast shaping

Creating emotional power through contrast. Joy after fear feels brighter. Calm after chaos feels deeper. Contrast intensifies each emotional state.

11.01
Metaphor Craft

Associative emotional signalling

Linking specific emotions to subtle sensory or symbolic cues. The cue triggers emotional memory in the reader without direct explanation.

11.02
Metaphor Craft

Catharsis gating

Controlling when emotional release is allowed. The narrative withholds catharsis until the reader has accumulated enough tension, then releases it at a carefully chosen moment.

11.03
Metaphor Craft

Emotional counterpoint

Placing two emotional tones side by side so they enrich each other. Counterpoint creates emotional complexity and resonance.

11.04
Metaphor Craft

Emotional deferral pattern

Deferring emotional resolution until narrative conditions align. The deferral keeps emotional threads open across multiple chapters.

11.05
Metaphor Craft

Emotional layering cycle

Building emotion through progressive layers instead of single bursts. Each layer adds a new shade of feeling, creating depth and durability rather than immediate impact only.

11.06
Metaphor Craft

Emotional priming

Preparing the reader for an emotional hit by planting small cues, vulnerabilities or unresolved tensions beforehand. Priming controls emotional direction.

11.07
Metaphor Craft

Emotional saturation control

Regulating how intense emotions become and when. Saturation must rise and fall so that emotional peaks remain meaningful and do not exhaust the reader.

11.08
Metaphor Craft

Hope-tension braiding

Weaving hope and tension into the same emotional strand. Hope lifts, tension tightens. Their alternation intensifies emotional effect.

11.09
Metaphor Craft

Impact-delay strategy

Delivering an emotional event early but delaying the character or reader’s full emotional reaction. The delay builds resonance and prolongs emotional tension.

11.1
Metaphor Craft

Micro-grief threading

Embedding small grief beats throughout the narrative. Each thread is minor alone but collectively builds powerful emotional weight.

11.11
Metaphor Craft

Quiet-heartbeat moments

Soft emotional beats that ground the reader in vulnerability, tenderness or introspection. These moments allow emotions to breathe and settle.

11.12
Metaphor Craft

Resonance anchoring

Using a recurring emotional anchor such as an image, phrase, memory or symbolic object that grounds the story’s emotional core. Each return deepens meaning.

11.13
Metaphor Craft

Resonance echo placement

Strategically repeating emotional notes, images or small callbacks to reactivate earlier feelings. The echo strengthens emotional memory and reinforces theme.

11.14
Metaphor Craft

Vulnerability pulse

Short, sharp flashes of vulnerability that appear unexpectedly. These pulses deepen emotional stakes without requiring long scenes.

11.15
Metaphor Craft

Wound-activation loop

Triggering a character’s core emotional wound multiple times in different contexts. Each activation deepens understanding and raises emotional stakes.

11.16
Metaphor Craft

Behavioural-environment loops

Showing how the environment shapes behaviour and how behaviour reshapes the environment. Loops create dynamic interplay between people and place.

30.01
Sensory Immersion

Contextual revelation pattern

Revealing world information only when the character encounters it organically in context. Revelation is embedded in action rather than exposition.

30.02
Sensory Immersion

Cultural logic embedding

Building cultures with internal rules, values and contradictions that influence social behaviour. Cultural logic appears through action, dialogue and conflict.

30.03
Sensory Immersion

Embedded history seeding

Revealing the world’s history through lived details—ruins, laws, scars, rituals—rather than exposition. History shapes the present without needing explanation.

30.04
Sensory Immersion

Environmental contradiction tension

Designing contradictions in the world—beauty and danger, wealth and decay—to create tension embedded in the environment itself. Contradictions deepen tone and conflict.

30.05
Sensory Immersion

Environmental pressure shaping

Designing settings so they exert psychological, social or physical pressure on characters. The environment becomes an active force shaping choices, tone and conflict.

30.06
Sensory Immersion

Environmental symbolism alignment

Using the physical world as symbolic expression of theme or emotional truth while maintaining realism. Symbolism emerges naturally through environment.

30.07
Sensory Immersion

Invisible world-rules

Rules governing the world that are never directly explained but become clear through consistent events, behaviours and cause–effect patterns. The reader learns the rules by watching them operate.

30.08
Sensory Immersion

Micro-world consistency

Ensuring small details—weather, architecture, social customs, slang, technology—remain consistent across the story to maintain world integrity.

30.09
Sensory Immersion

Reality-layer stacking

Building the world in layers—physical, social, emotional, symbolic—so they interact and influence each other. Each layer adds realism and narrative depth.

30.1
Sensory Immersion

Sensory-world coherence

Ensuring the world’s sensory palette—sound, smell, temperature, texture—feels cohesive and repeats with thematic or atmospheric purpose.

30.11
Sensory Immersion

Social-structure resonance

Designing social hierarchies, power gradients and class systems so that plot and character conflict echo the world’s underlying structure.

30.12
Sensory Immersion

Socio-emotional texture mapping

Capturing the emotional atmosphere of a society, community or subculture. Texture includes pace, tension, habits, intimacy, isolation and collective mood.

30.13
Sensory Immersion

World-driven stakes escalation

Allowing the world’s conditions—not villains or plot mechanics—to escalate stakes. The environment becomes the engine that increases risk or urgency.

30.14
Sensory Immersion

World-intimacy threading

Creating moments where the world feels personally connected to characters through memory, routine or sensory familiarity. Intimacy reveals how characters inhabit the world.

30.15
Sensory Immersion

World-scale tension mapping

Identifying large-scale tensions—political, environmental, economic, supernatural—and weaving them subtly into smaller interpersonal conflicts.

30.16
Sensory Immersion

Breath-window placement

Structuring sentences to create intentional breath points that control tension release, emotional pacing and reader attention. Breath-windows mimic natural human respiration to regulate prose rhythm.

35.01
Prose and Language

Consonant-impact shaping

Choosing consonants for sharpness, softness or aggression to influence the emotional force of sentences. Hard consonants create impact, soft ones create flow.

35.02
Prose and Language

Density–sparsity modulation

Altering the concentration of detail, imagery and linguistic weight to create contrast between dense, information-heavy lines and sparse, minimal passages.

35.03
Prose and Language

Emotional-syntax mirroring

Shaping sentence structure to mirror the emotional state of the POV. Calm characters produce calm syntax. Disoriented characters produce broken or looping syntax.

35.04
Prose and Language

Interior–exterior rhythm alignment

Synchronising sentence rhythm with internal emotional states so prose mirrors the character’s psychological tempo.

35.05
Prose and Language

Line-energy injection

Using surprising, sharp or emotionally charged lines to jolt the rhythm of a scene. Energy injections break monotony and heighten reader engagement.

35.06
Prose and Language

Micro-pacing through syntax

Controlling moment-by-moment pacing using clause length, punctuation, sentence structure and syntactic tension.

35.07
Prose and Language

Prose-pressure pivot

A sudden tonal, rhythmic or syntactic shift that marks a psychological turning point. Pressure pivots signal inner or outer rupture without explicit exposition.

35.08
Prose and Language

Resonant minimalism

Using sparse, highly distilled lines to deliver maximum emotional weight with minimal language. Silence between lines becomes part of the meaning.

35.09
Prose and Language

Rhythm-charge escalation

Increasing rhythmic intensity through shorter sentences, sharper sounds or faster syntactic turns. Escalation mirrors rising stakes or emotional urgency.

35.1
Prose and Language

The Vocabulary Plateau

The prose repeatedly relies on a narrow band of common words. Descriptions, emotions, and actions return to the same familiar vocabulary. The language becomes predictable, flattening texture and diminishing the distinctiveness of the voice.

35.10
Prose and Language

Sensory-bias coding

Leaning on one sensory modality (sound, touch, smell, sight) to encode emotional state or create tonal bias. Bias mirrors character psychology.

35.11
Prose and Language

Sentence-weight staggering

Arranging heavy and light sentences in deliberate sequence. Weight comes from complexity, imagery or emotional load. Staggering prevents monotony and shapes narrative momentum.

35.12
Prose and Language

Sonic resonance shaping

Using sound-patterning—vowels, consonants, rhythm—to create emotional tone. Choices in phonetics influence mood, tension and atmosphere.

35.13
Prose and Language

Textural contrast lines

Switching between smooth, lyrical lines and rough, fragmented ones to reflect emotional shift, tonal contrast or scene tension.

35.14
Prose and Language

Textural layering

Combining sensory detail, emotional tone, physical action and internal thought within a single passage to create rich multi-dimensional texture.

35.15
Prose and Language

Voice-pattern anchoring

Establishing distinctive linguistic patterns—syntax, rhythm, tone—that define a character or narrator’s voice. Anchoring ensures consistency without rigidity.

35.16
Prose and Language

Metaphor Saturation

The prose layers multiple metaphors or comparisons within the same passage. Each image competes for attention instead of reinforcing the moment. The density of figurative language begins to obscure rather than illuminate the scene.

35.17
Prose and Language

The Decorative Sentence

Sentences draw attention to their cleverness without advancing character, action, or meaning. They function as stylistic ornaments rather than narrative tools. While individually striking, they interrupt the momentum of the story.

35.18
Prose and Language

Generic Sensory Detail

Descriptions rely on broad sensory cues such as the smell of coffee, the sound of rain, or the warmth of sunlight. These details appear frequently in fiction yet rarely carry specific meaning for the character experiencing them. The world feels textured but indistinct.

35.19
Prose and Language

The Abstract Drift

The prose moves quickly from concrete action into general reflections or philosophical statements. Scenes dissolve into commentary before the physical moment has fully unfolded. The reader loses contact with the immediate world of the story.

35.20
Prose and Language

The Dialogue Mirror

Narrative sentences echo or repeat information that has already been expressed through dialogue. The same idea appears first in speech and then again in exposition. This duplication slows the prose without adding clarity.

35.21
Prose and Language

Surface Description Only

The prose focuses heavily on visible surfaces, clothing, furniture, architecture, yet rarely connects these details to character perception or meaning. The environment becomes decorative rather than expressive.

35.22
Prose and Language

The Over-Specified Gesture

The prose catalogues minor physical actions with excessive precision. Characters adjust clothing, shift posture, or move objects in ways that add little meaning to the scene. The accumulation of micro-movements slows the narrative rhythm.

35.23
Prose and Language

The Filtered Experience

The prose frequently inserts filter phrases such as she saw, he noticed, or she felt. These verbal buffers place distance between the reader and the action. The experience becomes reported rather than lived.

35.24
Prose and Language

Atmospheric grain

Embedding subtle stylistic roughness, softness or texture into prose so the atmosphere feels tactile. Grain can be velvety, sharp, cold, humid, brittle or heavy depending on tone and emotional charge.

36.01
Voice and Style

Cadence anchoring

Establishing a repeating sentence rhythm or phrase pattern that becomes a stabilising pulse in the prose. Cadence gives the reader a sensory foothold.

36.02
Voice and Style

Conceptual lensing

Filtering the world through a character’s core concept, metaphor or obsession. Their worldview acts as a lens that colours how they describe and interpret reality.

36.03
Voice and Style

Focus narrowing

Tightening descriptive attention onto one detail or sensation to heighten emotional intensity or clarity. The prose zooms in and the world contracts around the character’s perception.

36.04
Voice and Style

Imagery modulation

Adjusting the vividness, shape and emotional temperature of imagery to match narrative tone. Imagery can be cooled, warmed, sharpened or blurred to reflect character state.

36.05
Voice and Style

Interior bleed

Letting a character’s internal thoughts subtly leak into narration or description, creating a blend of outer world and inner consciousness.

36.06
Voice and Style

Lexical resonance

Choosing words with emotional, cultural or symbolic weight that subtly reinforce the story’s themes or tone. The vocabulary vibrates with layered meaning.

36.07
Voice and Style

Metaphor density control (Voice and Style)

Regulating the quantity, intensity and placement of metaphorical language to shape texture. Density determines how thick or light the prose feels.

36.08
Voice and Style

Narrative filtering

Controlling how much sensory or emotional information filters through the narrator’s consciousness. Filtering shapes emotional distance and transparency.

36.09
Voice and Style

Perspective dilation

Expanding or contracting a character’s perceptual field through prose. Dilation affects how wide or narrow the mental lens becomes, shaping emotional depth and pacing.

36.1
Voice and Style

The Neutral Camera

The prose observes events as if through a detached lens rather than through the character's perception. Descriptions remain objective and generic instead of coloured by personality, mood, or bias. Without subjective filtering, the narrative voice feels distant and interchangeable.

36.10
Voice and Style

Rhythm sculpting

Shaping sentence length, breath pattern and pacing to produce a deliberate emotional rhythm. The prose moves like a physical sensation that supports the scene’s emotional tone.

36.11
Voice and Style

Sonic patterning

Using sound qualities inside the prose such as alliteration, internal rhyme, consonance and vowel shape to influence emotional feel and rhythm.

36.12
Voice and Style

Syntax pressure

Manipulating sentence structure to create emotional strain, urgency or restraint. Syntax becomes a vector for psychological pressure.

36.13
Voice and Style

Temperature drift

Letting emotional temperature slowly shift within a scene. Drift occurs through tone, word choice, rhythm and micro shifts in imagery.

36.14
Voice and Style

Tonal contouring

Shaping the emotional tone of prose through word choice, imagery, rhythm and micro shifts in energy. The contour creates rise and fall like a musical line.

36.15
Voice and Style

Voice colouring

Tinting the narrative voice with mood, bias, personality or emotional shading. The prose subtly reflects the narrator’s internal state or worldview.

36.16
Voice and Style

The Emotional Translator

The prose repeatedly explains the meaning of events after they occur. Actions and dialogue are followed by sentences interpreting what the reader should feel or understand. The narrative begins to mistrust the reader's ability to draw conclusions.

36.17
Voice and Style

The Perspective Leak

Information appears in the prose that the viewpoint character could not reasonably know. Observations drift outside the character's awareness or perception. The narrative perspective becomes unstable without openly shifting viewpoint.

36.18
Voice and Style

Emotional Monotone

The narrative voice maintains a single emotional register across long stretches of text. Humour, tension, tenderness, and menace rarely alter the tone of the prose. Without tonal variation, the voice feels flat even when the writing is technically strong.

36.19
Voice and Style

Rhetorical Overreach

The prose repeatedly builds sentences toward dramatic declarations or philosophical conclusions. Each paragraph strives for significance. Without quieter passages, the voice begins to feel strained or self-conscious.

36.20
Voice and Style

The Invisible Style

The prose performs its narrative duties competently but leaves no distinctive impression. Vocabulary, rhythm, and imagery remain neutral. Readers follow the story yet struggle to recall the language itself.

36.21
Voice and Style