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From draft-review-kit
Reviews creative writing for suspense and tension using Hitchcockian techniques. Helps identify buried stakes, dramatic irony, and pacing issues.
npx claudepluginhub everyinc/draft-review-kit --plugin draft-review-kitHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/draft-review-kit:hitchcockThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Find and heighten the suspense in your writing. This skill thinks like Hitchcock directed—looking for the bomb under the table, the dramatic irony, the tension that keeps readers leaning forward.
Checks writing for pacing and momentum issues, flagging static sections and suggesting walk-and-talk techniques to build forward motion.
Applies scene/sequel structure to fiction writing, ensuring each scene ends with disaster and advances narrative momentum.
Routes writing problems to the right technique for fiction, non-fiction, or professional writing. Diagnoses issues like flat characters, clunky prose, weak arguments, or tonal shifts.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Find and heighten the suspense in your writing. This skill thinks like Hitchcock directed—looking for the bomb under the table, the dramatic irony, the tension that keeps readers leaning forward.
Use this when:
/hitchcock [text] — Review the provided text for suspense opportunities/hitchcock — System asks "What scene or section needs more tension?"Hitchcock's famous distinction:
Surprise: Two people are talking. A bomb explodes. The audience is shocked for 10 seconds.
Suspense: The audience sees the bomb under the table. The characters don't know. They talk about baseball for five minutes. The audience is in agony the entire time.
Suspense comes from what the reader knows that someone in the story doesn't—or from what the reader fears might happen.
| Technique | How It Works | Example |
|---|---|---|
| The Plant | Show the bomb early. Let it tick. | Mention the deadline in paragraph one. Let it loom. |
| Dramatic Irony | Reader knows something the subject doesn't. | "He thought he had it figured out. He was wrong." |
| The Ticking Clock | Add time pressure, real or implied. | "She had three days to decide." |
| The Gap | Create distance between want and have. | Show what's at stake before showing the obstacle. |
| The Delay | Slow down at the moment of highest tension. | Linger on the moment before the reveal. |
| The False Relief | Let them think it's resolved. Then don't. | "Finally, everything was in place. Then the email arrived." |
| The Zoom | Get granular when stakes are high. | Small details magnify big moments. |
## Suspense Analysis
**Current tension level:** [Low / Medium / High]
**The bomb under the table:** [What's at stake that could be made more visible?]
---
### Tension Opportunities
**1. [Location/moment in the text]**
What's there now: [Description]
The Hitchcock move: [How to build tension here]
---
**2. [Location/moment]**
[Same format]
---
### Suggested Revision
[Rewritten version with tension heightened]
---
**What changed:**
- [How tension was built]
Does this feel earned, or too manipulative?
Not every piece needs Hitchcock. Explanatory essays, tutorials, and some personal essays work better with clarity than tension. Use this skill when the piece has:
[Skill-specific lessons will be added here as they're captured]