Creative
Book Blurb Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A book blurb generator solves one of the hardest problems in publishing: compressing a full novel into 150 words that make a stranger buy the book. Select from six genres — fantasy, thriller, romance, sci-fi, mystery, and horror — and generate up to several blurbs at once to compare different structural approaches. Each output follows publisher-proven patterns: a hooked opening, a protagonist with clear stakes, an escalating conflict, and a closing line that demands the reader turn the page. Authors use it to draft back-cover copy and query pitches. Game designers borrow the format for world-building documents. Teachers generate them as fiction prompts. If you're mid-draft and losing the thread, writing a blurb forces you to articulate what your story is actually about.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Select your target genre from the dropdown: fantasy, thriller, romance, sci-fi, mystery, or horror.
- Set the blurbs count to 3 or 4 so you have multiple structural variations to compare.
- Click Generate and read each blurb for its opening hook, conflict setup, and closing line.
- Copy the version whose structure best matches your story's tone and stakes.
- Replace placeholder character names, settings, and conflict details with specifics from your manuscript.
Use Cases
- •Drafting a back-cover blurb for a self-published romance novel before uploading to Amazon KDP
- •Generating multiple thriller versions to stress-test pitch language in a cold query letter
- •Creating genre-specific writing prompts for a fiction workshop covering horror and sci-fi
- •Producing placeholder back-cover copy for a Kickstarter book mockup or Canva cover design
- •Studying structural differences between fantasy and mystery blurbs to sharpen your own copywriting
Tips
- →Generate blurbs in a genre adjacent to yours — a sci-fi blurb's urgency can improve a fantasy draft.
- →Pay attention to the closing sentence of each blurb; that hook structure is the hardest part to write from scratch.
- →If your story blends genres, generate one blurb per genre and merge the tension mechanics from each.
- →Compare four generated blurbs side by side before choosing — the differences reveal which structural moves are optional versus load-bearing.
- →Use a generated blurb before you finish your draft to test whether your story's core conflict is clear enough to summarize in two sentences.
- →For Amazon listings, take the generated blurb and add one short opening line in bold — that first sentence appears in search results and determines click-through rate.
FAQ
how do you write a book blurb that actually makes people want to buy
Open with a single sentence that puts your protagonist in immediate tension — no world-building preamble. Establish the conflict in two sentences, then close with a line that raises the stakes without resolving them. Active voice and short sentences outperform long descriptive ones every time; if a browser can't finish it in 30 seconds, it's too long.
can I use a generated book blurb on my actual novel or Amazon listing
Yes, as structural scaffolding — but rewrite before publishing. Replace placeholder details with your specific protagonist, setting, and conflict beats. What generated blurbs provide is a proven sentence architecture; what they can't supply is your book's voice, specific world, or emotional core.
what's the difference between a book blurb and a synopsis
A synopsis is a full plot summary that reveals the ending, written for agents and editors and typically one to three pages long. A blurb is marketing copy that deliberately withholds the resolution to create suspense, usually 100 to 200 words. Submitting a blurb when an agent requests a synopsis is one of the most common querying mistakes first-time authors make.