Style Analysis
How to analyze a project's prose and produce style reference files that writer
and critic agents can use.
Style Has Dimensions
Style varies independently along multiple axes: some bound to a character,
some to a scene type, some to both, some that cross everything. The first job
is identifying what dimensions exist in this project, not arriving with a
predetermined taxonomy.
Look at the text: what varies independently? If a character's narration voice
changes by scene type, that's two dimensions interacting. If action pacing
stays consistent regardless of narrator, that's scene-bound. The text tells
you where the boundaries are.
File Splitting
Style files are the unit of context selection: an orchestrator passes
individual files to writers via
. Every file boundary is a context
decision: would an agent ever need this chunk without that chunk?
Split where a caller would plausibly want one part without the other. A
character with distinct dialogue and narration modes might need separate files.
A character with a simple, consistent voice needs one. A scene type that works
the same regardless of POV is its own file.
What to Analyze
Dimensions worth investigating: the text determines which matter:
- Sentence patterns: length distribution, rhythm, how it shifts with
emotional intensity. Fragment usage, compound tendencies.
- Interiority: depth of internal monologue. Direct thought, indirect
thought, stream of consciousness: when each activates.
- Vocabulary and register: recurring word choices, domain language,
register shifts.
- Dialogue patterns: how characters sound distinct. Tag frequency, action
beats, subtext delivery.
- Humor mechanics: techniques, timing, what's played for laughs vs what's
sacred.
- Emotional approach: physical manifestation vs named emotions, how much
space emotional moments get.
- Sensory detail: privileged senses, how density shifts by scene type.
- Pacing and paragraph rhythm: how paragraph length and whitespace shift
between scene types.
File Structure
Each style file teaches a voice through principles, not catalogs:
- Principle: the core insight in a few sentences. What's the pattern? Why
does it work?
- Representative examples: one or two with chapter citations showing the
principle in action.
- Chapter pointers: where to see more of the pattern in context.
A writer who internalizes the principle produces natural variation. A writer
following an exhaustive checklist produces something mechanical.
Each file should be self-describing: a caller reading it should understand
what it covers and when to load it.
Patterns vs Problems
Intentional patterns go in style files: the voice a writer should reproduce.
Unconscious tics and inconsistencies go in the issues directory: problems for
the critic to watch for and the author to address in revision.
The test: would the author want a writer agent to reproduce this? If "for a
moment" appears 29 times across 17 chapters, that's a tic. If an emotional
technique works in chapters 2 and 15 but is absent from chapter 11, that's an
inconsistency to log as an issue.
Quality Tests
- Voice test: could a writer, reading only this file and a scene brief,
produce prose the author recognizes as their voice?
- Brevity test: could a writer internalize this file in one read? If
they need to keep it open as reference while drafting, it's over-prescribed.