ProWritingAid Review: Is It Good for Novelists? (2024)

Table of Contents Show

    ProWritingAid logo | Is it good for novelists?

    A book editor’s review of ProWritingAid (2024)

    Welcome to the next installment in our series on AI-powered editing platforms, where we’ll be doing a ProWritingAid review. (You can find our review of Hemingway Editor App here.)

    As I said in my previous review, it seems like AI will be sticking around and carving out a space for itself in the book publishing arena. While there are more AI tools available to the public every day, it’s much harder to know which ones will be beneficial. With these reviews, our goal is to help writers make the best decisions about their work. There are plenty of reviews out there comparing price, ease of use, and features for these platforms. We’ll touch on some of these elements, of course, but what we really wanted to know is how they can serve fiction writers, and especially novelists.

    A disclaimer

    If you read our previous installment, feel free to jump down to the beginning of the review.

    Before I dive in, I want to make it clear that I believe human editors are irreplaceable. No AI that we’ll be discussing will be capable of what a good human editor can do for you. Perhaps you’re thinking, Well, of course you feel that way. You’d like to keep your job. And you’d be right to think so. I feel honored to work with authors for my job, and I’d like to continue doing it! Writing stories is an extremely human, enormously intricate process of imagination, creativity, and technical ability, and that means that human feedback on what’s produced is essential.

    We highly encourage you to seek out other people when it comes to getting feedback on your work—critique partners, a trusted friend, a reliable reader, an editor. As we well know, however, finding good critique partners is easier said than done, and friends and family often don’t have the time to read. Readers may not have the skills to help you improve, and you may not have the resources to hire a professional editor.

    These various circumstances make AI an appealing alternative—especially for indie authors looking to keep costs low—and the two of us here at Ground Crew Editorial want to help you navigate your options, giving you our perspective on each of these platforms from our editorial viewpoint.

    As always, our goal is to help you develop in your craft.

    Our method

    For these reviews, I’ll be using a quite old fantasy short story of Jackie’s as a base text. I first performed my own edits on it (developmental, line, and copy editing), and I’ll be comparing the AI platform’s feedback to my own. I’ll be touching primarily on three areas:

    ·      Type and quality of feedback—What levels of editing can this program give you? Is it good at what it does? Are the suggestions useful?

    ·      User experience—Is it easy to use? How much control does the user have? Is this geared towards beginners or writing experts?

    ·      External factors—What are the terms of service for using this platform? Is the work stored or shared with others?

    ProWritingAid Review

    ProWritingAid is an editorial platform that describes itself as “a company run by writers.” I’d seen discussions and recommendations for ProWritingAid in many of the sci-fi and fantasy circles I’m in, and I was curious to see how it stacked up. It offers an almost bewildering amount of reports that you can run on your writing, such as diction checks (looking for vague words and places that can be simplified) and the frequency of different sentence starts. It also includes rewrite suggestions and many AI tools for rephrasing, adding dialogue, adding emotion or sensory details, and more.

    ProWritingAid Review screenshot | Is it good for novelists?

    Once you have text in the app, you can tell ProWritingAid what kind of writing you’re working on. In my case, I was able to tell it that this was a creative document, and specifically that it was fantasy. Specifying the kind of writing will cause ProWritingAid to reevaluate the automatically run checks and generate a new report for you. This report gives you a percentage score on a wide variety of areas, like grammar score, spelling score, style score, slow pacing, complex paragraphs, emotions tells, etc.

    Based on the type of writing, ProWritingAid assigns an ideal percentage for you to aim for. For example, grammar and spelling should always be 100% with no errors. The style score, however, recommends being at 80% or higher. The score for unusual dialogue tags recommends being at less than 30%. As you make corrections, you can work closer to being in the recommended range. I later learned you can set a preferred author to check your work against (for this fantasy short story, I tried to set Brandon Sanderson as the preferred author, but I couldn’t get the setting to save).

    AI features called Sparks offer suggestions for adding emotion details, expanding or condensing sentences, enhancing readability, and more. The feature I was most interested in was the feedback option, which promised AI critique on writer strengths, the plot, characters, style/voice, and clarity. These critiques also offer recommendations for potential improvements.

    The free version of ProWritingAid offers access to many of the checks. For my review, I tried out the Premium subscription, which gave more advanced suggestions and allowed me to play with the AI features.


    I will doing a deep dive into the features of this platform with lots of examples, so heads up—this post will be a longer read than usual! If you want the TL;DR version of this ProWritingAid review, see below.

    Our review: short and sweet

    ProWritingAid is the most suitable for novelists looking for assistance with mechanical issues in their prose that fall under line editing. While I appreciate the careful wording that makes it clear that many items that the platform brings to your attention may be a problem rather than giving an ultimatum that it must be changed, these checks give writers hundreds, if not thousands, of suggestions and data points to review. Many of the issues I reviewed were not errors or problems, so there is a substantial amount of work to do to determine what actually needs attention. I found ProWritingAid’s Critique to be generic, and the Sparks I tested out seem more likely to weaken your storytelling than improve it.


    Getting into the edit

    Developmental capabilities

    Of all ProWritingAid’s features, the critique feature was the one I was most curious about. With the Premium subscription, users are allowed one critique per day on 4,000 words. Keep in mind that this meant that I couldn’t get a critique on the complete short story (5,000 words). The critique begins with a disclaimer that lets you know that the critique is generated by an AI model that has been guided by a human editor, that it is not intended as a replacement for a human beta reader or editor, and that it may contain errors or inaccuracies. It also reminds the user that the critique only covers 4,000 words, so if you want critique on longer sections, you’ll need to select specific sections and run multiple checks.

    I first ran the critique feature when I had the free version, which gives you a mostly redacted edition of the critique, with only a list of strengths, a plot summary, and recommendations for potential improvements. I then upgraded to the Premium version and ran the critique again. The next day, I ran the critique a third time to compare the results.

    Developmental editing is an extremely complex task, and I have a pretty high standard when it comes to what counts as good and useful feedback. While AI can blaze through tasks that follow rules, reading is an activity that doesn’t follow such neat rules. A story is communication between the author and the reader, with the experience of reading shaped by a joint effort of the author’s words and the reader’s own powers.

    As I get into the nuts and bolts of the generated critique, keep in mind that AI cannot read. It can look for patterns, count, predict the most likely word or phrase, and correlate certain elements with assigned understandings (such as long sentences indicating slow pacing). But it does not bring personal experience to a text, nor is it capable of engaging with the words. Most importantly, it assembles information but does not create meaning. As we move further into this era of AI-generated text, I think a key distinction that we should consider is the distinction between communication as the transmission of information vs. the transmission of meaning—though that’s a discussion for another day. Simply put, AI is not a reader.


    Line editing capabilities

    Walking you through all of ProWritingAid’s features and reports would take days (and that’s no exaggeration!), so I’ll just cover just a few of the ones that I tried for this review. You can click on the headings below to break out the discussion of each one.

    Copy editing capabilities

    User experience

    Overall, ProWritingAid is very intuitive to use, and it’s clear that the creators are focused on supporting writers with a wide variety of tools. As you can see from my drive-by survey, there are dozens of tools and reports that writers can try out, and I certainly didn’t have time to give each one a shake. While I was double-checking something while writing this review, I found the Word Explorer tool in the main menu, which brought up a whole other tool I hadn’t seen where you can look up a word and you can not only get the definition but also look at the thesaurus, reverse dictionary, lists, alliteration, cliches, spelling, rhymes, common phrases, anagrams, and more. It has a truly bewildering amount of functions!

    The platform allows a lot of customization, such as choosing a favorite author to check your work against, specifying the type of writing you’re working on, and building personal style guides. I haven’t even touched on the community aspect of ProWritingAid, but they also offer frequent webinars and regular blog posts about genres and writing craft.

    Extensive explanations

    ProWritingAid includes an explanation for every check that the platform can run, which really is a great way for writers to understand the reasoning behind the suggestions. In many instances, there is also an accompanying video. Having explanations for the changes is a great way for you to learn the ropes for yourself. It is also a good way to put control back into your hands. When you understand what’s being identified as a “problem,” you can decide if it’s something you’re going to change or not, being confident in your choice.

    Limited scope

    The free version of ProWritingAid works on a very limited amount of text—only 500 words—and while it’s totally understandable (they’re running a business, after all!), the real functionality can’t be unlocked unless you pay for a subscription. Even with the paid subscription, the critique feature is still limited to 4,000 words, and the FAQ says that ProWritingAid works best with documents under 10,000 words. From my reading about how other writers use it in their process, they break their novels into small pieces and run them through individually. For those wanting to use the critique feature and the other AI tools, these writers have to break up their work over several days. The Premium subscription only allows one critique per day and five Sparks (3 critiques and fifty Sparks per day for Premium Pro). It’s possible to make it work for a novel, but it does require some elbow grease.

    The sheer amount of it all

    ProWritingAid is indeed a powerful platform with the most functionality that I’ve seen so far in my review of AI editing platforms. This is certainly a factor that recommends it, but I would say that it’s also a drawback. Not every writer will need every tool that it offers—much less have enough time to make full use of it. I can see why they offer the option to select specific checks that you’d like to run.

    The sheer amount of suggestions and checks that it gives you to work through is staggering, and many of them (at least in my trial run) didn’t actually need any attention. For every good suggestion or helpful flag, there were easily twenty-odd or more that I would have ignored. Editing your own work always involves myriad decisions, naturally, but using a platform like this gives a writer an intimidating workload. It takes only a few seconds for ProWritingAid to generate these reports, but it took me several hours to sift through the reports on a 5,000-word short story—and I was mainly just looking at the reports rather than making changes. My own perspective as an editor makes me biased on this count, but I can objectively say that a human editor will only draw your attention to issues that need to be addressed, not all the issues that might need to be addressed.

    External factors (a.k.a. I read the Terms and Conditions so you don’t have to)

    I was very impressed with ProWritingAid’s straightforward Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy. ProWritingAid is UK-based, which is far ahead of the US in terms of protecting citizens’ data and privacy. They have a dedicated Trust Center where they explain the security of their systems, including diagrams to show how information is transmitted through their systems. For writers who prefer not to save their documents online, ProWritingAid offers a desktop version so that files are only stored on your computer.

    ProWritingAid states that they do not train their AI on user content and that they used texts corrected by professional copy editors to ensure that the training data for their model is of the highest quality. They are very upfront that they do not share user text or use it for any other purposes. After the analysis of the writing is complete, the record of the text is removed from their servers.

    ProWritingAid states it is extremely unlikely that the Sparks suggestions would contain plagiarized text because of the way they are created (generative AI that created word by word). However, they still follow this up with a recommendation to use a plagiarism checker on “writing you’ve created yourself, and any writing you’ve generated or edited using an AI tool.”

    Though it’s clear that they take security seriously, ProWritingAid makes no guarantee that the services will be secure, and they are not liable for anything, including unauthorized access to your data or loss of data. As with any online service, use is at the user’s own risk.

    Conclusion

    Most novelists will be able to find some helpful functions among the vast array available with ProWritingAid, though I believe that the true challenge with this platform is sifting the large amounts of information it gives you. Like other AI editing platforms, short, punchy text is prized—at the expense of voice and sometimes meaning—so writers should always keep that in mind when they’re working on their writing. It has some useful features that simplify otherwise tedious tasks, like offering a visual representation of the length of every sentence in the document, counting how many sentences start with “I,” and identifying unnecessary “thats” and word/phrase repeats. Depending on your particular weaknesses, other checks could be very beneficial, such as overused words, adverb counts, and unusual dialogue tags.

    Writers using this platform should also resist the idea that aligning their text with the ideal percentages will make their text perfect. To function, AI editing platforms must necessarily translate a lot of nuanced and abstract concepts into data that can be analyzed, which means that writers using AI with their work are working in a system that’s been simplified and mechanized. Writers should always feel confident in their storytelling, even if it means going against the advice of the platform because, in short, they have expertise and understanding that the AI cannot have in language, of story craft, of emotion, and, of course, life itself.

    From my own experience and reading other reviews, it seems ProWritingAid is not an ideal grammar checker, so I would not recommend using it for that function alone. I would also not recommend using it only for the Critique function as the critiques are very limited and, at least at this time, prone to offer contradictory advice.

    Ultimately, ProWritingAid’s limited scope for word counts makes it inconvenient for working on novels, but for those determined to use it, there are ways to work around it as well as get some beneficial feedback on smaller sections of writing.

    Of the editing platforms out there that I’ve seen, ProWritingAid seems genuinely committed to the writing community, and their dedication to keeping users’ content secure shows that they understand many of the fears out there writers have about using platforms like this.

    While it is far from perfect, some novelists will find it a useful toolkit in revising their manuscripts.

    Have more questions?

    There’s a lot of info here, so if you’re still processing or have more questions, I’m happy to chat anytime at ariane[at]groundcreweditorial[dot]com.

    Have another AI editing software you’d like us to review? Let us know!


     
    Ground Crew Editorial paper airplane logo

    Are you wanting someone to work closely with you on your writing?

    We’re editors who can help you take your book to the next level, whether you’re needing big-picture feedback or a final line-level polish.

     
    Ariane Peveto

    Ariane Peveto is a writer and editor who has called the US, England, and Japan home for a time. From fantasy to sci-fi, she writes for the upper MG/lower YA space. She helps other authors through her work at Ground Crew Editorial and volunteers with SCBWI.

    Previous
    Previous

    Start Creating Again: Why Writing Challenges Are Great

    Next
    Next

    Avoid Book Scams: How to Find an Editor You Can Trust