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Review: StorySkeleton, an iPad story-planning app and Scrivener companion

skel

As you doubtless gathered from my recent Scrivener review, I’m a massive fan of the best Mac app I’ve ever used for creative writing. The TL;DR version is that I wouldn’t dream of attempting to write a novel in anything else. My only real grumble is that we’ve as yet seen no sign of the long-promised iPad version of the app.

I’ve used PlainText with a Dropbox sync as a way of working on Scrivener projects on my iPad, and that works well enough at the writing stage. At the planning, stage, though, I love the corkboard interface. I was thus really interested to see an iOS app that not only provides a very similar corkboard view, but which can export and import to and from Scrivener … 

Overview

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For those not familiar with the corkboard concept, what you have is a virtual board with a set of index cards. Each card can have a title and a synopsis of what happens in that section. Typically, when planning a novel or screenplay, each card will represent one scene.

In Scrivener, you can then double-click a card to open up a document to do your actual writing – and that’s the first thing to note about this app: it’s a pure planning tool. You get a corkboard, and you can title the cards and enter a synopsis, but that’s it: there’s no way to do any of your actual writing in the app. 

I’d ideally like to be able to double-tap on a card to open a document, just as I can in Scrivener, but then I guess what we’d have then is, well, the iPad version of Scrivener. There doesn’t, however, appear to be any limit on the amount of text you can have in the synopsis area of a card, so if you do get carried away and find dialogue springing immediately to mind, there’s nothing to stop you writing it in the synopsis area. You’d simply need to cut-and-paste it into the document once you export to Scrivener.

The app runs on both iPad and iPhone, but I suspect it may be rather cramped on an iPhone. I tested it on my iPad Air.

First impressions

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I have to say I’m not a fan of the aesthetics of the app. The developer has run with the ‘skeleton’ part of the name and tried to make the look & feel reflect that. So on the homepage of the app we get skeletal typography for the name, a skull icon and a color scheme largely comprising black and grey.

Tastes vary, of course, but personally I found this a bit oppressive in an app that’s all about fostering creativity. It also made for a rather unclear menu system, but more of this later.

Using the app

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When you tap New to create a new document, you’re asked for a title and then get a title page and one blank card. Tap in the title area of the card and you’re free to enter your own title, but you’re also prompted with a selection of preset ones. These are a pretty helpful way of ensuring that you cover off some of the essentials in your planning, and in providing a guideline structure.

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I accepted the hint of starting with Act 1 and an Inciting Incident, and was so pleased to see non-monochromatic colors that I chose to make this card yellow. I then set about planning the world’s most clichéd rom-com plot by writing a two-sentence synopsis for the scene.

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Once you’re ready for the next card, you just tap the plus icon and do the same thing again: either choose your own title or select one of the presets, then type your scene synopsis. Here I have three scenes. The first card is yellow as I selected that color, the second is grey – the default color for a card – and the third is white as that’s the currently-selected one.

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I was pleased to see a key feature borrowed from Scrivener: you can re-order cards both on the main corkboard view, and in the ‘list’ view (what Scrivener calls the Binder view). In either case, just tap-and-hold the card you want to move, then drag it to its new position.

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To insert a blank card, just tap on the card before it and then hit the plus icon: the new card is always created immediately after the selected card.

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To switch to the corkboard view, simply tap the obvious icon.

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This is the best place to get an overview of your story, and to restructure it by re-ordering cards. You can also insert new cards here by tapping the card you want it to follow. A plus sign and X appear at the bottom of the card: hit the plus sign to add a new card or the X to delete the card – all very intuitive.

This is not, unfortunately, true of the main menu, which you open by tapping the skull:

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My immediate impression was that I had two available buttons at the top – the left and right arrows, and three dimmed-out buttons. In fact, all are active buttons. The arrows are undo/redo – though as you lose the ability to undo your last edit if you switch between corkboard and binder view, I initially thought they were just prompts to swipe left and right through the cards. While iOS 7 has come in for complaints about buttons not always being obvious, this design scheme is far, far worse. This, in my view, needs an urgent fix.

Once you figure out that the three lower buttons are also active, the settings icon allows you to change the width of the binder column, change the text size and move the binder to the right (suggested for left-handed users). The home icon takes you back to the home screen, and the share icon allows you to export your plan in a range of formats.

Exporting your plan

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While I was critical of the usability of the main menu, there is a lovely touch here where touching any of the six file formats displays a brief summary of what the format is for and how to import it at the other end. Since I wanted to import into Scrivener, I selected .scriv as the format.

The first time you export, you’re prompted to enter your Dropbox credentials to authorise the app. That done, export is a very simple two-touch operation: touch the format you want, then touch the Send to Dropbox button and it’s done. (You can also email if you prefer.)

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Here again, though, we’re back into poor user-interface territory: the app does indeed save to Dropbox but doesn’t tell you where! Some googling was required to find that exports are sent to Dropbox > Apps > StorySkeleton > Exports. A simple mention of this in the confirmation message is all that is needed here.

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The app zips .scriv files, so you have to unzip first and then can simply double-click the file to open it in Scrivener.

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Once in Scrivener, you can then double-click a card in the usual way to write the scene.

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Importing from Scrivener

While exporting is done to the native .scriv format, StorySkeleton can’t import .scriv files as it has no way of processing the contents of any of the documents, only the card titles and synopses. For this reason, you have to export from Scrivener in the .opml format, which is a standard file format used by a lot of mind-mapping software. This is as simple as going to File > Export in Scrivener and selecting the OPML format.

Again, rather unintuitively, to import the .ompl file into StorySkeleton, you have to place it in Dropbox > Apps > StorySkeleton > Exports. You then open StorySkeleton and tap the Import button on the home screen.

That little niggle aside, both imports and exports worked flawlessly.

Conclusions

I found it quite hard to make my mind up about this one. I really dislike the color scheme, and the user-interface definitely falls a long way short of intuitive in a few areas.

But once you’re familiar with it, the app does exactly what it claims, and it does it well. I used it in real life to plan the next section of my novel during a journey across London, and it is definitely very handy being able to do that on an iPad rather than on my MacBook Air when hopping between different forms of transport where the form-factor and instant on/off of the iPad makes it king.

So here’s the bottom-line for me. If you’re not a Scrivener user, and just want AN Other planning app, I probably wouldn’t recommend this one. The color scheme and UI glitches make it a 5/10, and there are likely better options around.

But if, like me, you’re a hard-core Scrivener fan, I would say that for $9, this is a very worthwhile companion app. The overall corkboard interface will immediately be familiar, and the ability to very quickly and easily transfer your work back-and-forth between the two apps  is extremely handy. My complaints about the app still stand, but they are a relatively small price to pay for the increased productivity and convenience StorySkeleton delivers until the official Scrivener iPad app is released.

StorySkeleton costs $8.99 and is available on iTunes

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

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Comments

  1. degraevesofie - 10 years ago

    I sense trouble at Literature & Latte :-( It’s been nearly two years since they started work on the iOS version: Surely they could have released something useful after all that time?

    • Ben Lovejoy - 10 years ago

      From what I understand, they took on an iOS developer to do it, but something major went wrong with that arrangement resulting in another developer having to pretty much start from scratch.

    • Carey Waite - 10 years ago

      I’m bored to death of waiting. I wonder if they’ve done their research. I’m guessing that most people won’t use an ipad as their first tool to use Scrivener. Therefore forget all the bells and whistles and have a much simpler import export medium. Great software, hopeless development plan.

  2. Jake - 10 years ago

    The App looks good but I will wait for the iOS version of scrivener.
    Only uses iOS to write when I am not on my Mac. For writhing the best is the Mac itself.

  3. D.G. Chichester - 10 years ago

    Scrivener already has a send to dropbox, work in another format, import back from dropbox feature…

    It is not elegant, but works well with Simplenote and a few other apps.

    Is there an advantage to this that’s not already covered there?

    • Ben Lovejoy - 10 years ago

      Yeah, I’ve done this with PlainText when writing, but this is the first app I’ve seen that offers a corkboard view with direct export to .scriv format.

  4. Joel Zarley (@jzarley) - 10 years ago

    I haven’t used Scrivener, but have been an avid user of Storyist…at least on the surface the two Mac applications don’t look that different to me, and Storyist has had a fully compatible Mac/iPad/iPhone version available for well over a year.

    • Ben Lovejoy - 10 years ago

      Storyist is fairly basic compared to Scrivener. I’ve introduced a few Storyist users to Scrivener, and most have been a bit bemused at first but then come to love the flexibility and power of it. I don’t know anyone who’s gone back to Storyist after using Scrivener.

  5. Tin Fish (@TinFishApps) - 10 years ago

    StorySkeleton developer here — thanks for the feedback, I hope to clear up a lot of these UX issues with the next redesign. One note is that those ‘left/right’ arrows in the Main Menu are actually undo/redo buttons — they were disabled because there were no undo operations available. Navigating to or from the Corkboard clears the undo queue, otherwise they’ll activate after you edit or delete a card.

    • Ben Lovejoy - 10 years ago

      Ah, thanks, will update. I was switching views a lot, so that explains why they did nothing.

  6. Mark Berela - 10 years ago

    I too am longing for the Scrivener iOS app. For the time being, I have been using the Index Card iOS app for syncing with Scrivener (via DropBox). L&L has a posted a tutorial posted on YouTube on how to do the syncing. This arrangement is working fine, but is certainly not ideal. It is best suited for the earlier devleopment stages of a writing project.

  7. Edison McDaniels - 10 years ago

    Interesting article. I have written many short stories, several novels, and numerous other letters and papers with Scrivener. Hands down, the best word software out there. I have never really quite bonded with the cork board feature though. Will have to give that another look.

    However, I have found something useful that works well for me on the iPad. I write a chapter (a few thousand words) on my mac using Scrivener, usually at night. The last thing I do is email the latest version of my novel to myself as a pdf. The next day, say at lunch, I open the pdf in NOTETAKER HD, where I can write in various pens annotating the pdf. I edit the work I did the night before, using essentially the same editing marks an editor would use. Later, I look at those edits (you can even import the pdf to Scrivener and open it alongside your document to see the edits, or read them off the iPad) and make the changes to the actual Scrivener document. This primes me for my next writing session, which continues at the heels of the editing and the process starts over again. Very productive.

    I sometimes handwrite entire passages this way, then put them into Scrivener later.

    The advantage of this approach is you can mark up the handwritten pdf on the iPad all you want without any pressure to actually make a change in the real story until you have just what you want. By the time my story is finished, I have eyeballed every part of it many, many times and know it well. This allows me to catch simple typos, grammatical errors, and other technical errors of the writing, as well as make changes/additions to the characterization, plot, theme, dialogue, etc. I write tons of fiction and, as other fiction writers will know, the secret to writing a good story is rewrite and editing. The more of this you do, the better you know your story, and the more likely you are to get it out of your head and onto the paper in one piece (like pulling a fossil out of the ground as intact as possible).

    The combo of Scrivener and NoteTaker HD allows me to write in layers like this and gives me at least three opportunities to review what I have written at every step of the way.

    The PDFs also can act as a record of my work and I can see how a story or novel evolves over time. This is helpful when the story appears to be veering off in an odd direction or you get stumped. Or your computer crashes.

    One other advantage: when I do sit down at my Mac to write, the writing time is very productive because the editing is largely done and I can move on to the next part of my story.

    Some will see this as redundant and intensive, but that’s what good writing requires IMHO. I too have been waiting for an iPad version of Scrivener forever, but I’ll probably continue this workflow because it works so well for me.

    • Ben Lovejoy - 10 years ago

      Sounds like you have a system that suits you well. I do my editing in the document itself, and love Scrivener for that as, when I spot say an inconsistency, I can very quickly check for the same issue in other scenes. I shall be very happy indeed when the iPad version of Scrivener finally arrives!

    • You can´t imagine how useful is has been your comment to me. I´ve tried hard to sync Scrivener with IndexCard, Simplenote or StorySkeleton and… let´s be honest. No one of them works for a real writer. How can anyone say that index card is a 5 star app. no way. They don´t work. The only reasonable workflow I´ve read for months is yours Edison. I suspect that the reviews of those apps have been made by non real writers. (sorry about my English, my mother tongue is not English

Author

Avatar for Ben Lovejoy Ben Lovejoy

Ben Lovejoy is a British technology writer and EU Editor for 9to5Mac. He’s known for his op-eds and diary pieces, exploring his experience of Apple products over time, for a more rounded review. He also writes fiction, with two technothriller novels, a couple of SF shorts and a rom-com!


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