The Continuity Bible (The Spreadsheet That Saves Your Sanity)

You wrote a fantasy. Or a thriller. Or a multi-POV novel. You also accidentally aged your protagonist seven years in chapter twelve.

The misdiagnosisThe misdiagnosis is that continuity errors mean you are sloppy. That tighter discipline would have prevented them.
The real diagnosisContinuity errors are not discipline issues. They are memory issues. The human brain cannot hold three timelines, four POVs, eight character ages, and a magic system simultaneously. The fix is a ledger, not a lecture.

What The Continuity Bible Tracks

Column Tracks Why
Character ages Birth year + current scene date Catches the seven-year jumps
Scene calendar Day-by-day timeline Catches the 'two places' problem
World rules Magic, tech, law Catches inconsistency
Names + spellings Every proper noun Catches the 'Aerin/Aerinn' problem
Possessions Who has what when Catches the lost-item bug

Three Errors The Bible Catches You Will Otherwise Miss

  • A character is in two places at once on the same day.
  • A magic rule is broken in chapter eighteen.
  • A character's birthday lands twice in one year.

You cannot edit your way out of an error you do not remember making. The Bible remembers for you.

Build it on draft two, not draft one. Once you have a draft, build the Bible by reading through with the columns above open.

The dare (not assignment)Open a fresh spreadsheet. Five columns. Read your draft start to finish, filling the Bible as you go. The errors find themselves.
Image promptA leather-bound ledger sitting open on a desk, columns of dates and notes. A small magnifying glass beside it. Painterly. Sea-green and cream. No people.

— The Book Maven

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