Writing tool

Write the opening without overthinking it.

Best when the thesis already exists and you need a clean opening that gets you into the paper quickly.

A strong intro earns the body paragraphs. It should set the frame, not waste space.

Your thesis is ready but your opening keeps stalling.

You need context and framing before the body paragraphs.

You want a draftable intro, not a dramatic overbuilt hook.

Public preview
0 / 2,000 charactersOne anonymous preview, then continue in the studio.

Simple flow

Use one preview, then keep moving.

This stays intentionally short on purpose. Try one pass here, then continue in the studio if you want to refine the same draft or switch tools.

1. Preview

Run one fast pass on this page.

2. Continue

Open the writing studio if you want to keep editing or switch modes.

3. Ground it

Jump into a book-specific essay kit when the assignment is already fixed and you need evidence, not guesswork.

Example

How students use this

Example input

The Great Gatsby; thesis: the American Dream is a performance; points: wealth, class, illusion.

Example output

In The Great Gatsby, aspiration looks glamorous only because it is staged. Fitzgerald presents wealth as a performance that promises reinvention while quietly exposing class limits and moral emptiness.

Use cases

Best times to open it

Draft the first paragraph after finishing the outline.

Rebuild a weak opening around a clearer thesis.

Create a fast first pass before polishing style.

FAQ

Questions students ask before using it

Should I write the intro first?

Usually after the thesis and outline. That keeps the intro aligned to the real argument instead of a vague beginning.

What should come next?

Move straight into body paragraphs while the framing is still fresh.