Book Writing Tools to Strengthen Your Story

Book Writing Tools

Discover powerful book writing tools to strengthen your story. Use apps like SimpleMind to visualize plot events and character relationships.

By: Grant P. Ferguson

Last Updated: January 24, 2025

The Problem and Why I Use Book Writing Tools

While trying to kluge together genres, like thriller, mystery, and romance, there comes a time when there’s just too much to keep in your head, and the mountain of text makes it hard to see the relationships between the characters and plot threads.

This is when a picture is worth a thousand words (or even 50K to 100K!). Using a mind-mapping app like SimpleMind, I can see how the plot events connect to the many characters, including the hero, love interest, chief villain, secondary villain, sidekick (foil character), and many more.

Book Writing Tools
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What I love most about this is the creative influence on my mind, generating more ideas that I can spin into an entire series.

You Need Only Paper and Pencil

It’s true.

You don’t need to go out a buy another app (or try a free copy of SimpleMind). Drawing or graph paper will suffice. However, if you’re anything like me, you’ll enjoy using an app to create and save different versions until you sense the story will work like you envisioned it in your mind.

Again, you can do that by using paper and pencil, but it gets a lot easier and more precise if you use a mind-mapping app (and fun, too!).



11 responses to “Book Writing Tools to Strengthen Your Story”

  1. wordsfromanneli Avatar

    What a great idea. I’ve always done the mapping with words, but drawing it out like this makes it so much easier to keep track of who’s who and who did what.

    1. Grant at Tame Your Book Avatar

      I like the opportunity to adjust the flow, saving the file under a different version name. It makes recovering easier if later you change your mind.

      1. wordsfromanneli Avatar

        Yes, that’s a really good idea.

  2. Jacqui Murray Avatar

    I know a lot of people who love this approach.

    1. Grant at Tame Your Book Avatar

      It’s so much fun, you have to be careful and not let it distract from writing. 🤭

  3. D. Wallace Peach Avatar

    That’s interesting! I haven’t seen a map before that connects characters like that. I can see how it might generate more ideas. I’m also a visual person, Grant, and graphics are immensely helpful to me. Thanks for sharing!

    1. Grant at Tame Your Book Avatar

      Without a map, I’d get lost 😉 Thanks for stopping by, Diana!

  4. lyndhurstlaura Avatar

    None of it! I’m a pantser at worst, plantser at best, but it’s all contained inside my head and committed to paper via regular brain-dumps of rambling notes. We do what works for us – all the best with yours. 🙂 🙂

  5. Dana at Regular Girl Devos Avatar

    Gotta love a good chart! 🤓 Thank you, Grant!

  6. Priscilla Bettis Avatar

    I do like to mind map. Strangely, I use it more often for writing poetry than stories. I enjoy the feel of pen on paper, so my mind maps tend to be old-style on paper.

    1. Grant at Tame Your Book Avatar

      I’m with you, Priscilla. Using colored pencils on drawing paper is so enjoyable, but I switched to an app for revisions and curating the many drawings. Either way, mind mapping is a real boost to creativity.

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