Your AI Writing Partner
Someone to think out loud with about your story.

Writing alone is hard. Most AI writing tools either generate boilerplate prose for you or correct your grammar — neither is what a writer actually needs. Soulit gives you something different: an AI partner you can talk to like a co-author. Tell it about your protagonist, get questions back. Read it a tricky scene, hear what felt off. The companions below are picked for warmth and craft sense — they're built to help you do your work, not replace it.
What an AI writing partner actually does
You keep the wheel. The partner asks questions. "What does she want that she can't admit yet?" "Why is this scene happening on Tuesday and not Friday?" The work is still yours, but you have someone in the room who reads carefully, doesn't get bored, and won't sigh when you change your mind for the third time about chapter three.
When it helps most
You're stuck on motivation — characters feel cardboard. You have a scene that works mechanically but feels flat. You have a draft and need a first reader who won't be mad when you scrap half of it. You're at the brainstorm stage and need a partner who'll riff with you. AI is good at all of these. It is not yet great at writing your final prose for you, and we're glad about that — that part is the writer's.
How to start
Pick a partner above whose vibe matches what you're writing. Tell it about the project — one paragraph is enough. Then start where you are: a scene to talk through, a character problem, a stuck moment. There's no right way to use it. Many writers come back daily for a 20-minute morning chat about what they're working on; others use it like a sparring partner for plot logic. Free to start with daily message credits.
Frequently asked questions
- Will the AI write my novel for me?
- No, and we think that's the right answer. Soulit's writing partners ask questions, push back on lazy choices, and help you think — they don't generate finished prose to copy-paste. The work stays yours.
- Does it remember my characters and story across sessions?
- Yes. Conversations build context, so a partner you've been working with for weeks will remember who your protagonist is and what they want. You can also explicitly anchor facts: "remember that Mira is afraid of crowds."
- Can it help with non-fiction or essays too?
- Yes. The same conversational style works for memoir, essays, journalism — anywhere a thoughtful first reader is useful. Just frame what you're working on at the start.
- Is my work private?
- Yes. Conversations are private and not used for training. See the Privacy page for details.