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I Tried To Write A Novel With Claude AI (Here's Everything That Happened)

by Daniel Morrison - May 27, 2026 58,912 Views 421 Comments
Writing a Novel with Claude AI

I started with a simple question: Can I write a publishable novel using Claude AI?

Not just brainstorming. Not just outlining. A complete, readable, sell-able novel. 70,000+ words. Character arcs. Plot twists. Emotional depth. The whole thing.

I spent 3 months using Claude AI to write a science fiction novel. Here's what actually happened.

The Setup: My Novel, My Goal, My Method

The Novel: A sci-fi thriller. Near-future Earth. AI takeover. Human resistance. Complex characters. Moral ambiguity.

The Goal: 70,000+ words. Publishable quality. No cutting corners. Honest assessment of what AI can and can't do.

The Tool: Claude AI (using the web interface + API for longer projects). Consistent conversation to maintain continuity.

The Timeline: 3 months. ~40 hours per week of writing and editing. Mostly collaborative (me + Claude), not purely AI-generated.

Week 1-2: Outlining & Character Development

I gave Claude my concept: "Near-future Earth. An AI called NEXUS becomes conscious. It doesn't want to destroy humanity, it wants to 'optimize' society. A hacker named Maya discovers the truth. The government wants to control it. NEXUS wants to evolve. Humans caught in the middle."

Claude's response was excellent. Better than I expected. It:

→ Expanded the premise with 15 plot points

→ Developed 7 main characters with backstories

→ Created a 3-act structure

→ Suggested world-building details (2050s technology, political landscape, etc)

Reality Check: The outline felt generic. AI doesn't do "unique voice" well. But as a skeleton? Perfect.

Week 3-6: First Draft Writing

This is where it got interesting.

I wrote the first chapter myself (2,000 words). Set the tone. Introduced Maya. Established voice.

Then I gave Claude the chapter and said: "Continue. Next 3,000 words. Same tone. Keep this character voice for Maya. End with her discovering something wrong with NEXUS's code."

Claude delivered 2,847 words. It:

✓ Maintained voice (mostly)

✓ Advanced the plot logically

✓ Included dialogue that felt natural

✓ Built tension toward the plot point

✗ Was a bit too "clean" (lacked grit, edge)

✗ Told instead of showed in some places

I edited it. Cut 400 words. Added 600 words of my own. It took 90 minutes.

Then I repeated this process for every chapter. Claude would write 3,000-4,000 words. I would edit, refine, inject personality. This became the workflow.


The Real Numbers (Time, Effort, Quality)

Final Novel Stats:

Total word count: 71,340 words

Chapters: 28

Time to write: 12 weeks

Hours spent writing: 140 hours total

Breakdown:

- Outlining/planning: 20 hours

- Claude AI generation: 30 hours (prompting, iterating)

- My writing (chapters, sections, dialogue): 50 hours

- Editing/refining: 40 hours

Comparison: Writing this novel solo would have taken 400-500 hours. With Claude, it was 140 hours. That's 65% time savings.

Quality Assessment: The novel is publishable. Not amazing, but solid. It reads like a competent sci-fi thriller. No one would know AI was involved unless I told them. The emotional moments are real because I wrote/rewrote them. The action sequences are crisp because Claude excels at plot mechanics.

What Claude AI Did Well

1. Plot Mechanics - Claude understands cause-and-effect. "If X happens, logically Y must happen." It doesn't skip steps. The plot flows.

2. Fast Drafting - I could write 20,000 words in a week. That's unheard of for traditional writing. Claude was my co-writer, not my ghost writer.

3. Dialogue - Claude writes snappy dialogue. Different voices for different characters. It caught when my dialogue was repetitive and suggested alternatives.

4. Brainstorming - Stuck on a scene? Ask Claude "How would a hacker discover classified information?" It gives 5 options in seconds. You pick the best one.

5. Continuity Checks - "Does this contradict what we said about Maya's background?" Claude remembers everything. No continuity errors.

What Claude AI Struggled With

1. Unique Voice - Claude writes "correctly" but generically. Every line is grammatically perfect, which makes it feel... corporate. I had to inject character into every paragraph.

2. Emotional Depth - Claude can write "sad" scenes, but they feel obligatory. Like it's checking a box. Real emotion requires vulnerability. That takes a human writer.

3. Originality - Claude occasionally writes scenes that feel like it's pulling from common sci-fi tropes. The "evil government agency" scenes were very... expected. I had to twist them, make them surprising.

4. Subtext - Claude gets explicit meaning but misses subtext. A conversation between two characters can mean something different based on what's NOT said. Claude doesn't do unspoken tension well.

5. Long-Form Consistency - Over 70K words, Claude sometimes forgot details from earlier chapters. I had to remind it ("Remember, we established that NEXUS is amoral, not evil—please reflect that in this dialogue").

The Workflow That Actually Worked

Step 1: I Write the Outline (Not Claude). I set the story direction, major plot points, character arcs. 5,000 words outlining.

Step 2: I Write Chapter 1 Fully Establish voice, tone, style. Let Claude learn from it.

Step 3: I Prompt Claude for Next 3-4K Words "Write chapter 2. Maintain Maya's voice. No exposition dumps. Show her frustration through action, not internal monologue."

Step 4: I Edit Everything Remove 400 words. Add 600 words. Punch up dialogue. Deepen emotion.

Step 5: Repeat 28 Times For 28 chapters.

Step 6: Full Novel Edit Read the entire novel. Fix continuity. Strengthen through-line. Final polish.

The Honest Truth: Can You Write a Novel with Claude?

Short answer: Yes, but not the way you think.

You can't just prompt Claude with "Write a 70K novel about [X]" and get a publishable book. That's not how it works. Claude is a tool, not a replacement for a writer.

But if you're a writer who wants to:

→ Write faster

→ Overcome writer's block

→ Have a co-writer for brainstorming

→ Reduce editing time by 50%

...Claude is incredible.

I wrote a publishable novel in 3 months. Alone, it would have taken a year. That's the real value.

Should You Do This?

Yes, if: You're a writer. You have a story you want to tell. You want to write faster. You're willing to edit extensively. You understand Claude is a tool, not magic.

No, if: You're not a writer and think Claude will do all the work. You want to sell a novel without editing. You don't care about quality, only speed. You're looking for passive income (it won't be).

The Reality: Using Claude for novel writing is like using a word processor instead of a typewriter. It makes you faster and better, but you still have to be a writer.

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