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Story typing
  • 5/30/2026
  • Updated 5/30/2026

Typing Treasure Island by Chapter: How Story Library Book Mode Works

Learn how Treasure Island chapter typing works on Type Faster: pick chapter 1–34, choose a part within the chapter, and track completion chunk by chunk without losing novel context.

Illustration. Typing Treasure Island by Chapter: How Story Library Book Mode Works — Story typing — Type Faster

Chapter first, then parts

Book collections in the Story library show a chapter grid after you select Treasure Island. Chapter numbers map sequentially (1 through 34) even when the original Gutenberg headings use Roman numerals.

Within a chapter, parts list titles like “The Old Sea-dog at the Admiral Benbow · Part 1”—each part is one timed chunk, not the whole chapter at once.

If accuracy collapses on essay excerpts, drop back to Aesop fables for a week before retrying formal commas.

Teachers: share library URLs with collection and passage params so every student types identical homework text.

Interactive Practice

Try this treasure island · chapter 2 tool right here

Practice in the panel below—the same timed test as on the dedicated test page.You are typing “Black Dog Appears and Disappears · Part 1” from the Story library—the same passage opens in the full library view.

Prefer a full-screen run? Open this same passage in the Story library

Loading test...

URL parameters teachers can reuse

The address bar updates as you pick chapters and parts: `?collection=treasure-island&chapter=3&passage=ch03-c02&duration=180`. Bookmark or paste that URL for repeatable assignments.

Changing chapter clears the selected part so you never accidentally mix chapter four text with chapter three progress.

Open the Story library from blog embeds when you want the full collection picker instead of the default Aesop sample.

If accuracy collapses on essay excerpts, drop back to Aesop fables for a week before retrying formal commas.

Progress without a separate novel mode

Signed-in members mark each chunk complete the same way as Aesop fables—one slug per part. There is no second “novel progress bar”; your chapter shelf fills as you finish parts.

If you lose your place, return to the chapter picker and look for the next unfinished part rather than shuffling random story text.

If accuracy collapses on essay excerpts, drop back to Aesop fables for a week before retrying formal commas.

Teachers: share library URLs with collection and passage params so every student types identical homework text.

Continue practicing

You are typing “Black Dog Appears and Disappears · Part 1” from the Story library—the same passage opens in the full library view.