Write your novel your way, with comprehensive and personalizabile tools, and absolute privacy:
Enjoy absolute privacy by encrypting your books on your devices until you're ready to publish.
Organize your manuscript in any way you please - your manuscript, research, characters, ideas, etc., all kept in one place, while only your actual book gets published.
Write your book split in as many small, manageable sections as you want.
Use a bespoke rich text editor that can take simple text or web content just as well.
Have your text spell-checked as you type, in real-time.
Enjoy the full-screen distraction-free (focus) mode, with configurable font size, paragraph style and column width.
Set a theme to suit your mood, besides just one “day” and one “night” theme (more themes to come).
Set readability targets as well as word count targets for your book.
Track your work (word count and time spent writing) and set goals.
Export your books at any stage of their completion, in EPUB, HTML or text (more formats to come).
Back up your books, and even individual sections (with snapshots and versions). This includes simply downloading your book as a file.
Write on any device, anywhere—Novelitist runs wherever there’s a browser, be it a Mac, a PC, a tablet or a phone.
Write offline and get in sync when you’re online again.
Ask for features: asking for new features is a built-in feature.
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Based on our record, Editsaurus should be more popular than Novelitist. It has been mentiond 3 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Editsaurus is covered by the MIT License. https://editsaurus.tylerwalters.com/. Source: about 2 years ago
I use google docs and a mixture of editors. ProWritingAid is my favorite and has a free version (limited to 500 words at a time). I also use a few free editors on occasion: Editsaurus, Typely and Hemingway Editor. Editors are good for finding errors, but also just breaking your text down for you to help you find any weird patterns, overused words, etc. Source: over 2 years ago
You can also use ProWritingAid free (which limits the word count of what you can put in and review). I prefer it to Grammarly, personally, and use it before and after sharing fics with my beta reader. They also have some blog posts that aren't bad. Hemingway Editor and Editsaurus have also been useful to me. Source: over 2 years ago
We built a book authoring web app, a one-stop shop for writers. We cater to them from the basic writing stage to exporting a publishable e-book, which makes it ideal for publishing all sorts of materials in this medium, including marketing stuff. Source: almost 2 years ago
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