Carry the whole world without holding it all.

Every serious novel asks you to remember more than a mind can hold, then punishes the one fact you drop. Creader keeps your world as structured memory and checks your draft against it — so you spend your attention on the writing only you can do.

What breaks today

The world lives in your head, and heads leak
By chapter thirty you're tracking hundreds of established facts across a year of writing. The contradiction you'll ship isn't carelessness — it's arithmetic. No memory holds it all.
Most AI wants to write it for you
The tools on offer mostly generate prose — and generated prose is slop in your book's voice, not yours. Handing the writing to a model gives away the one thing that makes the book worth reading.
The threads slip
The setup you planted in chapter three, the arc you promised a side character, the rule your magic obeys — these are easy to lose across a long draft, and a reader feels every dropped one.

How Creader helps

Structured world memory
Your characters, locations, rules, timeline, and threads live as connected entities — not buried in a notes doc. The world is a record you can query, not a thing you have to remember.
AI that checks, not writes
Guardian reads your draft against your canon and surfaces the contradictions — the changed eye colour, the impossible age, the unpaid setup. It offloads the mechanical vigilance so your judgement stays on the prose.
Support that respects your voice
The AI here is built to help you think, not to replace your sentences. It retrieves, checks, and reminds — the cognitive load a long book imposes — and leaves the writing, the part that's yours, to you.
You're deep in chapter twenty-eight and the words are flowing. Creader quietly notes that the heirloom blade you just described as silver was bronze in chapter five. You keep writing; the catch is waiting when you surface.

Tools for authors

FAQ

Frequently asked

Does Creader write my novel for me?
No — by design. It refuses the part that should be yours. The AI retrieves, checks consistency, and reminds you of open threads; the prose stays your own. That's the whole posture: a model as support, not a ghostwriter.
How is this different from a notes app or a wiki?
A notes app holds facts but can't read your draft back. Creader's world memory is structured so the AI can check your actual chapters against it — catching the contradiction a static document would just sit beside.
I write by the seat of my pants. Is this only for outliners?
No. Discovery writers arguably need it more — when you're not working from an outline, the world memory is the only thing keeping chapter thirty honest about what chapter four established. It records what you've written, however you got there.