Authors
Fiction drafts that keep your prose
In fiction, voice is most of the point. Inksong rewrites AI-assisted passages back into prose that sounds like the novel you're actually writing.
Plenty of authors quietly use AI now — to break through a stuck chapter, to draft a scene they'll rewrite anyway, to push past the blank page. What comes back is competent and dead. The sentences are correct. The voice is gone.
Inksong rewrites those passages against a voice profile trained on your own published or drafted prose. The structure of the scene survives. The cadence, the choices of verb, the texture that makes the page sound like yours — those come back.
Scenarios
When Inksong helps
Dialogue passes
AI-written dialogue all sounds the same — competent rhythm, no character. Voice cloning trained on a chapter of your own dialogue restores the variation between speakers.
Description rewrites
A descriptive paragraph the model produced is technically vivid and stylistically generic. The creative tone at humanness 70 rewrites it into something that fits the rest of the book.
Chapter polish
A draft chapter that's been through AI assistance — partly yours, partly the model's. Run it through and the seams disappear.
Example
A before-and-after from this domain
She entered the dimly lit apartment, observing the various items scattered throughout the space. The atmosphere was characterised by a sense of melancholy, as evidenced by the disorganised state of the furnishings. Additionally, the ambient lighting created a contemplative mood that resonated with her current emotional state, prompting her to reflect upon the events of the preceding day.
She let herself in. The lamp by the window was still on, and the rest of the flat was the kind of dim you get when nobody bothered with the overhead light. A jacket on the sofa, two mugs on the coffee table, the second one not hers. She stood in the doorway for a second longer than she meant to, thinking about the morning, and then she shut the door behind her.
Recommended preset
What to use for authors
Tone
creative
Domain
Humanness
70
Fiction can take an aggressive rewrite — there's no formal register to preserve. Humanness 70 reshapes sentences freely, which is what you want when the goal is voice rather than precision.
Features
Built for this workflow
Voice Cloning
Train a profile on five thousand or more words of your existing fiction. Inksong applies your sentence-length distribution, vocabulary, and stylistic fingerprint to every humanisation.
Learn moreFormat preservation
DOCX in, DOCX out — italics, em-dashes, smart quotes, scene breaks, and your Word styling all pass through. Works cleanly with Scrivener exports.
Learn moreFAQ
Questions from authors users
- Does it understand my style across a novel?
- Voice cloning trained on a long sample — five thousand words or more of your existing fiction — is the right move. Inksong extracts an n-gram fingerprint, sentence-length distribution, and vocabulary specificity from that sample and applies it as a style guide on every run.
- What about dialogue voice consistency for different characters?
- Today, a voice profile captures the narrator voice. Per-character profiles are on the roadmap. For now, you can manually segment a chapter, humanise the narration pass, then leave dialogue lines alone in the diff.
- Does it preserve italics, em-dashes, and quotation styles?
- Yes. DOCX and Markdown formatting passes through cleanly — italics, bold, em-dashes, en-dashes, smart quotes, scene-break markers, and any direct Word styling are preserved.
- Can I use it on a 90,000-word manuscript?
- Per-document caps are 5,000 words on Pro and 10,000 on Enterprise — a chapter or two at a time. For a full novel, split by chapter (which is usually how you'd want to humanise anyway, so each chapter can carry its own voice settings).
Start humanizing today
5 documents free a month, no card needed. Three minutes to your first humanized doc.
- 5 documents/month on the free tier
- No credit card required
- Cancel or upgrade anytime