The Scaffolding Readers Never See
A book takes 18 months to write. Readers experience it in 6 hours. What happened in the middle?
When you sit down with a book, you’re holding the finished object. The cover, the weight of it, the first sentence — everything has been compressed into a clean, presentable artifact. What you can’t see is the two years of walks, false starts, abandoned chapters, and 3am realizations that preceded it.
That gap — between the messy human process of making a book and the polished thing readers actually encounter — is the part that matters. And it’s the part the publishing world’s current argument about AI keeps skipping over.
Every book worth reading starts long before the first word is typed.









































