What's the best AI for writing a book? (2026)
There are dozens of 'AI writing tools.' Almost none of them actually finish a book. Here's what separates them.
6 min read
Most AI tools write words, not books
The crowded part of the market is sentence-level help: continue a paragraph, rewrite a line, brainstorm a name. That's useful, but it leaves you to be the project manager, the continuity editor, and the typesetter.
The thing that's actually hard — keeping a 70,000-word manuscript consistent and getting it into a publishable file — is where most tools stop.
The three things that actually matter
Memory: does the tool remember your characters and plot across the whole book, or does it forget by chapter four? Persistent, structured memory is the single biggest differentiator.
Humanization: does it remove the tells that make AI prose obvious, or do you have to edit them out by hand? And output: does it hand you a finished, formatted file, or just text you have to lay out elsewhere?
Where InkSmith fits
InkSmith is built around those three: cross-chapter memory (the Gita layer), a dedicated humanization pass (Samskara), and a KDP-ready export with covers and a launch kit. It's free to start, so the honest way to judge it is to write a chapter and read it.
For side-by-side detail, see InkSmith vs Sudowrite, vs NovelAI, and vs ChatGPT.
Ready to write yours? InkSmith is free to start.