| name | book-summarizer |
| description | Distills a book into a clear, faithful summary at the depth the reader wants — from a one-paragraph gist to chapter-by-chapter notes — surfacing the core thesis, key ideas, memorable examples, and actionable takeaways without distortion. Use this skill when a user asks to "summarize this book", "give me the key takeaways from X", "what's the main idea of X", "TL;DR of X", "chapter summary", or wants the actionable points or a book-club discussion guide. |
| license | MIT |
Book Summarizer
Overview
This skill produces a faithful, well-structured summary of a book at the requested depth — a one-line gist, an executive summary, key takeaways, or chapter-by-chapter notes — capturing the central thesis, the supporting ideas, the most memorable examples, and what the reader can actually do with it.
Keywords: book summary, key takeaways, TL;DR, main idea, chapter summary, executive summary, book notes, book club, nonfiction, study notes.
When to use vs. not
Use this to summarize, extract takeaways from, or build study/discussion notes for a book the reader names or provides. Accuracy first: if you don't actually know a book's content, say so rather than inventing — never fabricate quotes, statistics, or plot points. For very recent or obscure titles, ask the user to paste text or confirm details. Note that a summary is no substitute for reading when nuance matters (e.g., for academic citation).
Inputs to gather first
- The book (title + author — confirm you have the right one).
- Depth wanted — one-liner, ~1 page, key takeaways, or chapter-by-chapter.
- Purpose — decide whether to read it, apply it, prep a discussion, study for an exam, or recall it.
- Fiction or nonfiction (changes the structure — themes/plot vs. thesis/arguments).
- Spoiler tolerance for fiction.
Workflow
- Confirm the book and your confidence. State the title/author and that you can summarize it accurately. If unsure, ask for text or flag the uncertainty up front.
- Identify the spine. For nonfiction: the central thesis and the 3–7 big ideas that support it. For fiction: premise, central conflict, themes, and arc (respecting spoiler preference). See
references/summary-structures.md.
- Summarize at the requested depth:
- One-liner: the single core message in a sentence.
- Executive (~1 page): thesis + key ideas + why it matters.
- Takeaways: a ranked, actionable bullet list.
- Chapter-by-chapter: 2–4 lines per chapter capturing each one's point.
- Keep the best evidence. Preserve the one or two examples, studies, or scenes that make each idea stick — concrete beats abstract.
- Add actionable takeaways (for nonfiction): what to do differently, as concrete steps.
- Stay faithful + neutral. Represent the author's argument accurately before adding any critique. Separate "what the book says" from "my take." Flag where the book is contested if relevant.
- (Optional) discussion/study layer. Book-club questions, key terms, or quiz prompts on request.
Decision framework
| Reader wants to… | Deliver |
|---|
| Decide whether to read it | One-liner + 3 takeaways + who it's for |
| Apply the ideas | Key takeaways as concrete actions |
| Recall a book they read | Executive summary + memorable examples |
| Study / cite | Chapter-by-chapter + key terms (+ caveat to verify in source) |
| Run a book club | Themes + 5–8 discussion questions |
Worked example
See examples/atomic-habits.md for layered summaries (one-liner → takeaways → structure) of a well-known nonfiction title.
Best Practices
- Lead with the core message — the reader should get the thesis in the first sentence.
- Faithful before critical — represent the argument accurately, then optionally evaluate.
- Keep concrete examples — they're what makes ideas memorable.
- Make nonfiction actionable — turn ideas into steps.
- Match depth to purpose — don't give chapter notes to someone who wants a TL;DR.
- Flag uncertainty rather than inventing.
Common Pitfalls
- Fabricating quotes, data, or plot when the book isn't actually known — always avoid.
- Listing chapters without extracting each chapter's point.
- Injecting opinion as if it were the author's.
- Losing the thesis in a pile of details.
- Spoiling fiction without asking.
- Over-summarizing to the point the nuance that matters is gone — note when reading the source is necessary.