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Here's a fun skill you can teach your OpenClaw/Hermes, just paste it and find a book and it'll give you hours of fun Book Mirror — How It Works What it does: Takes any book + everything the AI knows about the reader → produces a personalized chapter-by-chapter analysis. Left column: what the author says (detailed, preserving stories and frameworks). Right column: how it applies to this specific person (using their actual words, situations, people, dates from memory). The pipeline: 1. Get the book — PDF or EPUB 2. Split into chapters — one text file per chapter 3. Build context pack — pull everything relevant about the reader: bio, patterns, recent conversations, relationships, active projects, emotional landscape 4. Per-chapter analysis — for each chapter, produce a two-column table: | What the Author Says | How This Applies to You | | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | [Preserve the actual stories, stats, quotes, frameworks — detailed enough you could skip the book] | [Name real people, dates, situations from the reader's life. Read like a therapist who knows them writing notes in the margins.] | 5. Fact-check — verify every personal claim against source material 6. Generate PDF — deliver The quality bar: • Left column: you shouldn't need to read the original book • Right column: should feel like someone who actually knows you read it first • If a chapter doesn't apply, say so — never force connections • No generic advice ("consider reflecting on...") — only specific mirrors What makes it work: The right column is only as good as the context. A book-mirror for a stranger is just a book summary. A book-mirror for someone whose memory system has years of conversations, therapy notes, relationship patterns, and exact quotes — that's a different thing entirely. Example output: A philosophy book about ego and identity → mapped to the reader's specific shame patterns, family dynamics, work style, and therapy breakthroughs, using their own words back at them.