
Feedback that knows
your voice.
Paste up to 500 words from any draft. Get a scored rubric graded not against a generic standard — but against your voice, your themes, your natural rhythm. One-time, $14.
$9 if you already own a voice report · No subscription · Instant delivery
Generic feedback is not feedback.
Most AI writing tools tell every writer the same things. This one knows who you are.
✗You finish a draft and have no idea if it's working
✓Get a scored rubric tied to your specific voice — not a generic checklist
✗Generic AI feedback tells you to 'show don't tell'
✓Feedback grounded in your actual intake answers and voice profile
✗You can't afford a developmental editor for every draft
✓Professional-level craft feedback for $14 — one time, no subscription
✗You don't know which craft skill to focus on next
✓One clear, specific focus area identified from your actual writing
Five dimensions. One honest score.
Unlike grammar checkers that scan for surface errors, this rubric measures the things that actually matter in literary writing — and ties every score back to your specific voice profile.
Voice Consistency
Does this draft sound like you — the writer your intake revealed? Not a generic voice, but yours.
Thematic Resonance
Are the themes you care about present in this draft, or are you writing around them?
Sentence Rhythm
Does your prose move the way you naturally think? Cadence is a fingerprint.
Emotional Honesty
Are you writing into the hard thing, or away from it? This dimension measures courage on the page.
Craft Development
Specific strengths worth keeping, and one focused area to work on next.

Sample Score
Not Sudowrite. Not ProWritingAid.
Those tools help you write better in general. This tool helps you write more like yourself — which is the only kind of better that matters for literary writers. The rubric is calibrated to your voice report, your themes, your stated goals. If you haven't completed a voice report yet, the feedback is still grounded in the internal consistency of your draft.
Graded against your voice
Your intake answers and voice report become the benchmark. The rubric asks: is this draft authentically you?
Specific, not generic
Every score comes with 2–3 sentences that reference actual moments in your text. No boilerplate.
One focus area
Instead of a list of things to fix, you get one clear, high-leverage thing to work on next.
Submit your draft
Paste 100–500 words from any draft — an opening scene, a chapter excerpt, a paragraph you keep returning to.
You need to be signed in to submit a draft.
Sample Result
What your feedback looks like
A real example of the rubric output — personalised to a writer's voice profile.
Draft Feedback Report
Opening chapter · 847 words · Voice profile: Path
Your narrator's wry detachment comes through clearly in the opening paragraphs. The shift to direct address in line 14 feels slightly out of register — consider pulling it back toward the observational tone you established.
The theme of inherited silence is present from the first sentence. The detail about the kitchen clock is doing real work here — it earns its place.
Your natural cadence favours short declarative sentences followed by a longer observational one. Paragraphs 3 and 5 break this pattern without apparent intent. Worth revisiting.
You're writing toward the difficult thing, not away from it. The restraint in the final paragraph is earned. Don't over-explain it.
Strongest work: the sensory grounding in the first 200 words. One area to develop: the dialogue attribution — 'she said' is doing more work than it needs to.
Primary Direction
Your voice is already present in this draft — the work is not to find it, but to trust it more consistently. The moments where you second-guess the restraint are the moments that need attention. Write toward the silence, not away from it.
Your draft deserves honest feedback.
Not "great job" from a friend. Not grammar notes from a bot. Feedback that knows your voice and tells you the truth.
