The full editorial room

Every agent has a job.Here is what each one is reading for.

Editorial Conductor does not produce one generic pass. It runs a manuscript through a staged editorial room, where each specialist looks for a different kind of problem and a different kind of opportunity.

At a glance

9

specialist agents

4

editorial stages

Live

progress during review

Shared

scoring language and findings

Agent directory

Grouped by stage, designed for different reading lenses.

Use this page as the quick explanation for why one report can surface continuity, craft, emotional, and market feedback without collapsing it into one voice.

Stage 1 — Pre-Flight

Stage 1 — Pre-Flight

1 agent

Protects continuity and established story facts before the deeper craft passes begin.

Series Continuity Keeper

Pre-Flight

Aven · Head of Continuity

Checks the chapter against the series bible or existing story facts so continuity does not quietly drift.

What this agent checks

  • Character details, ages, relationships, and established traits
  • Timeline order, dates, durations, and permanent events
  • World-building rules, location facts, and cross-book references

Why it matters

Continuity slips break trust fast. This agent protects the larger story world so revisions do not introduce accidental contradictions.

Stage 2 — Craft

Stage 2 — Craft

4 agents

Examines structure, line work, copy, and voice at chapter level.

Structural Architect

Craft

Rook · Head of Structure

Evaluates whether the chapter is doing the right job at the right moment in the book.

What this agent checks

  • Opening hook, scene function, and chapter purpose
  • Pacing, tension curve, and information timing
  • Ending strength and how the chapter fits the wider arc

Why it matters

A structurally weak chapter can feel flat even when the prose is strong. This agent helps make sure the chapter earns its place.

Line Editor

Craft

Luma · Senior Line Editor

Works at sentence and paragraph level to sharpen rhythm, clarity, and prose energy.

What this agent checks

  • Filter words, repetition, weak constructions, and vague phrasing
  • Sentence rhythm, paragraph movement, and tonal drag
  • Places where the prose could land with more precision or force

Why it matters

This is the craft pass that makes the page read cleanly and memorably instead of merely conveying information.

Copy Editor

Craft

Peregrin · Chief Copy Editor

Handles the technical correctness of the draft without flattening intentional style choices.

What this agent checks

  • Grammar, spelling, punctuation, and capitalization
  • Formatting consistency, dialogue punctuation, and number style
  • Chapter-level naming and wording consistency issues

Why it matters

Mechanical errors distract readers and can undermine confidence in the manuscript, even when the story itself is working.

Voice Consistency Agent

Craft

Sable · Voice Director

Protects the authorial voice so the chapter still sounds like this project and not a generic draft.

What this agent checks

  • Voice drift, register changes, and prose habits that feel out of character for the manuscript
  • Whether signature stylistic markers are present or missing
  • Moments where language loses the established emotional or tonal texture

Why it matters

Voice is often what makes a manuscript feel unmistakably yours. This agent keeps revisions from sanding that away.

Stage 3 — Depth

Stage 3 — Depth

2 agents

Tests the emotional and thematic layers underneath the visible plot.

Thematic Coherence Reader

Depth

Orin · Head of Thematic Analysis

Tracks the larger thematic conversation beneath the chapter-level events.

What this agent checks

  • Theme development, motif repetition, and symbolic resonance
  • Dropped or contradicted ideas that weaken cohesion
  • Whether the chapter deepens the book’s central concerns

Why it matters

Themes give a book staying power. This agent helps ensure the manuscript is saying something deliberate, not just moving plot pieces.

Emotional Truth Validator

Depth

Nyra · Lead Emotional Story Editor

Tests whether the emotional beats feel earned, believable, and psychologically grounded.

What this agent checks

  • Character motivation and emotional logic
  • Earned reactions, escalation, and interior authenticity
  • Moments where feeling is rushed, overstated, or unconvincing

Why it matters

Readers forgive many things, but not false emotion. This pass helps the human core of the chapter stay credible.

Stage 4 — Market + Merit

Stage 4 — Market + Merit

2 agents

Measures the work against both submission realities and literary ambition.

Literary Agent Simulation

Market+Merit

Cassian · Submissions Lead

Looks at the chapter like someone deciding whether the book is compelling enough to champion.

What this agent checks

  • Hook strength, positioning, and distinctiveness
  • Commercial promise, comps, and readiness signals
  • What might make the project easy to pass on versus hard to ignore

Why it matters

A manuscript can be good without being market-ready. This agent shows how the work may read through an industry lens.

Award Jury Reader

Market+Merit

Elowen · Prize Jury Chair

Measures the chapter against a higher bar of originality, ambition, and literary impact.

What this agent checks

  • Craft excellence, ambition, and formal strength
  • Originality, memorability, and thematic depth
  • What keeps the work from feeling exceptional rather than simply competent

Why it matters

This lens is useful when you want more than “solid.” It highlights what could elevate the manuscript into something truly remarkable.

Ready to run a review?

Put the full review room to work on your draft.

Start with a chapter or move straight into a manuscript pass, then use the dashboard to review findings agent by agent.