What is Inkett?
Inkett is a set of four tools for people who write book-length fiction. A visual story planner. A pair-writing partner that works alongside you in your draft. A developmental editor that reads a finished manuscript the way a freelance editor would. And a native publisher where readers subscribe and writers earn a share of the revenue.
The tools are separate surfaces, but they share one thing: a private model of how you, specifically, write. You build it once. Every tool in the stack uses it. The Editor reads your manuscript against your own voice rather than a generic standard. The Co-Writer suggests lines that sound like you, not like everyone. The Planner reflects your genre and rhythm. That shared model is the whole idea.
Why does Inkett exist?
Writing a novel is not one job. It is at least four: planning the book, drafting it, revising it, and getting it to readers. Today each of those steps lives in a different tool, and none of those tools know anything about the others. Your outline doesn't know your prose. Your editor doesn't know your plan. Nothing in the chain has a model of how you actually write.
There is also a cost wall. A developmental edit from a freelance editor runs into the thousands of dollars, which means most writers never get one. They query agents or self-publish without ever seeing the structural read that would have made the book stronger. Inkett exists to close both gaps: to put the whole arc of a book in one place, and to make the developmental read something a working writer can actually reach.
What is in the writing stack?
Four tools, one shared voice model. Each one works on its own; together they carry a book from a blank page to a reader.
Inkett Planner
A visual story planner. Acts, chapters, scenes, characters, settings, and plot threads as real objects you can drag, link, and rearrange. Plan as deep or as loose as you want.
Inkett Co-Writer
A pair-writing partner. You draft; it works alongside you with slash commands, continuity flags, and line-level suggestions in your voice. It never prefills the page. The words stay yours.
Inkett Editor
A developmental editor for a finished manuscript. Upload a draft and get back a structured editorial letter, a pacing curve, voice-drift detection, continuity flags, and chapter-anchored notes. The shape of feedback a freelance editor would give you.
Inkett Publisher
A native publisher. Readers subscribe, and writers earn a share of the revenue their books pull. Publish from Inkett without an exclusivity lockout, with a contractually published royalty rate.
What Inkett believes about AI and writing
The tools are AI-assisted, and the line we hold is simple: the book is the writer’s. A few principles follow from that.
The page stays yours.
The Co-Writer answers when you ask and lines up suggestions in the margin when you pause. It never types prose you didn't request. Accept it, ignore it, or keep writing.
AI does not make creative decisions.
It surfaces data, flags drift, and generates options. Which option is right, and whether any of them are, stays with the writer. That is the job.
Voice is the asset.
Tools that protect a writer's voice are worth more than tools that average it toward a smoothed median. Inkett's voice model exists to keep your prose sounding like you.
Help belongs in the margin.
Feedback, ideas, and flags live beside the work, not inside it. The writer reads them and decides. Nothing rewrites the manuscript on its own.
Who is Inkett for?
Working novelists. Plotters and discovery writers. Authors of romance, romantasy, fantasy, science fiction, thriller, mystery, and literary fiction. Memoirists and screenwriters who work at book length. Anyone who writes book-length fiction and would pay for a developmental editor if the price were within reach.
If you want to understand how the tools think about craft before you try them, the Inkett Notebook has long-form writing on developmental editing, story structure, voice, pacing, and the business of finishing a book.
The bet
Every step of writing a book currently lives in a different tool, with no shared sense of how this particular writer writes. Inkett is the bet that the writer should only have to teach that once. Learn the voice a single time, then use it everywhere: from the first node on the planning canvas to the colophon on the published book.
Start with the tool your book needs first.
Plan a book, draft beside the Co-Writer, or run a finished manuscript through the Editor. The voice model you build carries across all of it.