In 2022, a quiet and unassuming creator named Jordie decided to publish a simple book. No big audience. No publishing contract. No marketing machine behind him. Just a genuine love for curious facts — and a hunch that others might enjoy them too.
Jordie’s idea? A fact book that blended fascinating, family-friendly knowledge across topics like science, history, pop culture, and more. It wasn’t flashy. It didn’t follow trends. It was just endlessly interesting — and deeply shareable.
Because the format was so easy to consume, the facts were so surprising, and the price point was affordable, the book took off. Readers bought it, talked about it, and recommended it to others.
The result? Today, that same fact book earns Jordie an estimated $15,923 per month in royalties on Amazon — and it continues to sell.
But here’s the twist…
Jordie did it the hard way.
No ChatGPT. No templates. No short cuts.
Every single fact had to be researched manually. Every chapter was outlined and rewritten over and over. Every piece of content took time, focus, and dedication. It took months to complete — and even longer to publish.
But now?
You don’t have to do it the hard way.
Thanks to the power of this carefully designed collection of 327 Super Prompts, you can create books like Jordie’s — even better ones — in just hours.
Each prompt gives you everything you need: a magnetic title, a commercial description, an SEO-ready keyword list, a stunning illustrated cover prompt, and 20 detailed chapter prompts ready to generate hundreds of real, jaw-dropping facts.
No writing experience.
No research team.
No endless drafts or edits.
Just copy, paste, and build a high-quality, marketable book — from scratch — faster than ever before.
This isn’t just a swipe file of random ideas. It’s a complete, ready-to-deploy system for creating full-length, commercially viable fact books — designed from the ground up to work seamlessly with ChatGPT-5.
Every one of these 327 Super Prompts is like a miniature publishing assistant. You paste in one prompt… and out comes a fully structured nonfiction book — filled with real, surprising, and endlessly shareable facts across dozens of captivating themes.
Each Super Prompt generates:
This prompt collection is inspired by a real book that earns an estimated $15,923/month on Amazon KDP — but with 327 unique prompts, you’re not copying one book, you’re unlocking the power to create hundreds of original ones.
You can target different niches. Experiment with wildly different tones. Focus on education, entertainment, or even controversy.
And because each book is rooted in real, surprising facts, they’re perfect for readers of all ages — from trivia lovers to homeschoolers to curious adults looking for a fun read.
No fluff. No filler.
Just smart, strategic, high-output prompts that do all the heavy lifting — so you can publish faster, easier, and better than ever before.
In a world overflowing with content, one type of book always grabs attention — the kind packed with short, surprising, and satisfying facts. People crave quick hits of knowledge they can share, remember, and talk about. And that’s exactly what fact books deliver.
Whether it’s a strange law, a mind-bending science detail, or a historical “wait, what?” moment… readers can’t get enough.
Here’s why fact compilations perform so well:
There’s already proven demand for these types of books — and now, with this library of AI-optimized prompts, you can create your own in hours, not months.
No writing experience
No design skills
No time to research
Just choose a prompt, and ChatGPT-5 will help you create a fact book readers will love — start to finish.
With 327 Super Prompts covering 41 unique categories, you’re not limited to just one type of book.
You can build an entire library of curiosity-driven titles — each with its own audience, voice, and theme.
From ancient mysteries to bizarre science, creepy history, and unexpected trivia, these prompts give you endless angles and fresh material to work with.
Here are the 41 fact book categories included:
Creating your own high-quality, illustrated fact book has never been this easy — or this fast.
With just one copy-and-paste prompt, you can generate everything you need to publish a full book using ChatGPT-5.
Here's how it works:
Step 1: Start with a Super Prompt
Pick any of the 327 included prompts and paste it into a new ChatGPT-5 chat.
In seconds, it will generate:
Step 2: Create the Cover and Full Chapters
In the same chat:
Step 3: Assemble and Publish Your Book
Review, organize, and format your content. You can assemble your book in a tool like Canva, Affinity Publisher, or your favorite editor.
Once everything looks great, publish your new book on platforms like Amazon KDP, Etsy, or your own store — and watch it become part of a wildly popular genre readers love to collect and gift.
Here’s the best part:
Once you’ve created one book, you can repeat the process again and again — each Super Prompt unlocks a completely new title, cover, and set of jaw-dropping true facts.
“Now You See Me: History’s Greatest Vanishing Acts”
Unraveling the World’s Most Baffling Disappearances — From Lost Planes to Explorers Who Walked Off the Map
From the Bermuda Triangle to Amelia Earhart, this book plunges into the eerie silence left behind when people, ships, and entire expeditions simply vanish. Now You See Me is an investigative fact book that fuses verified history, cutting-edge theories, and chilling coincidence. Each case is meticulously unpacked with official reports, eyewitness accounts, and scientific analyses — while also spotlighting the wild theories that still fuel debate today.
Perfect for fans of mysteries, true crime, and historical oddities, this collection explores disappearances that defy logic, challenge science, and refuse closure. Whether it’s the inexplicable loss of Flight MH370, the doomed Franklin expedition, or the ghost ship Mary Celeste, these stories share one haunting thread: something real vanished, and nobody can say how.
Prompt for AI image generation:
Create a visually compelling illustrated book cover for “Now You See Me: History’s Greatest Vanishing Acts.” The design should combine mystery, exploration, and eeriness with a modern factual tone. Depict a collage-style scene featuring a faded globe, a compass, a ghostly outline of an airplane disappearing into fog, and the shadow of a lone explorer fading into the horizon. Include subtle symbols of famous cases — a ship adrift, a cracked watch, a vintage camera half-buried in sand. The color palette should be deep navy, antique gold, and ghostly white with soft gradients. The typography should be bold, sans-serif, and cinematic, with the title dominating the top third of the cover. The mood: intelligent curiosity meets haunting enigma. Ensure it feels both historical and modern — visually engaging for true-crime and mystery readers.
Each of the following 20 prompts should instruct ChatGPT-5 to generate 20–25 factual, verifiable, and well-sourced entries under the given theme.
Generate 20–25 factual, verifiable, and well-documented facts about Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, covering the timeline, flight data, last communications, search efforts, satellite findings, ocean drift models, official reports, and main theories. Clearly label which details are confirmed and which remain speculative.
Produce 20–25 real, documented facts about Sir John Franklin’s 1845 Arctic expedition. Include crew details, ship logs, discoveries from wreck sites, forensic findings, Inuit oral histories, and leading theories about starvation, lead poisoning, and hypothermia.
Generate 20–25 accurate, verifiable facts about Amelia Earhart’s final flight, including technical data, last transmissions, weather conditions, search missions, recovered artifacts, and leading disappearance theories. Distinguish between confirmed facts and conjecture.
Compile 20–25 verified facts about the ghost ship Mary Celeste — its last voyage, discovered condition, crew manifest, official inquiries, maritime theories, and enduring myths. Clarify which explanations (mutiny, piracy, alcohol fumes) are unsupported or plausible.
Present 20–25 factual accounts of disappearances within the Bermuda Triangle region, referencing ship and aircraft logs, Coast Guard data, weather records, and navigation anomalies. Note where evidence disproves supernatural theories.
List 20–25 solid historical facts and archaeological findings about the Lost Colony of Roanoke, including primary documents, tree carvings, theories of integration with Native tribes, and modern DNA or site analyses.
Detail 20–25 verified facts about the 1971 DB Cooper hijacking — the ransom, the jump, FBI evidence, found money, witness accounts, and all major suspects. Label conjectures separately from confirmed data.
Generate 20–25 verifiable facts about explorers who vanished while searching for legendary places — including Percy Fawcett (the Lost City of Z), Michael Rockefeller, and others. Include contextual history, last sightings, and credible modern findings.
Produce 20–25 thoroughly researched facts on the Dyatlov Pass tragedy: expedition timeline, autopsy data, environmental factors, Soviet-era investigations, and contemporary scientific analyses. Flag which theories are still debated.
Chapter 10: Vanished Ships and Ghost Fleets
Compile 20–25 real-world cases of ships found abandoned or vanished entirely. Include maritime logs, weather conditions, recovered wrecks, and verified data distinguishing accident from mystery.
Generate 20–25 facts about polar explorers who disappeared in pursuit of the North or South Pole, such as George W. DeLong or Roald Amundsen. Include navigation routes, last communications, and recovered evidence.
Provide 20–25 factual accounts of people or expeditions that vanished in desert environments (Sahara, Gobi, Mojave). Cover survival factors, forensic recoveries, and environmental causes vs. unknowns.
Compile 20–25 well-documented modern missing persons cases (1990–2020) notable for unexplained or contradictory evidence. Include investigative data, timelines, and unresolved aspects.
Generate 20–25 factual cases of small-vessel disappearances and vanishing divers. Include maritime records, GPS data, search outcomes, and scientifically sound causes.
Present 20–25 historical cases of vanished planes (from WWII to the present), including the Star Dust, Flight 19, and others. Provide technical and environmental data plus modern explanations.
List 20–25 documented cases of scientists, inventors, or intellectuals who disappeared under odd or suspicious circumstances. Include verified biographical data and possible motives or explanations.
Generate 20–25 factual explorations of legendary vanishings like the Ninth Roman Legion, Atlantis seekers, or explorers tied to mythical lands. Distinguish folklore from archaeology.
Compile 20–25 verified cases of political figures, spies, or whistleblowers who disappeared — including Cold War defectors, secret agents, and diplomats. Verify all available data and note gaps in record.
Produce 20–25 scientifically grounded cases of people vanishing in wilderness or national parks. Focus on environmental, geological, or psychological explanations rather than the supernatural.
Present 20–25 factual explorations of lost societies and cities (e.g., the Maya collapse, Angkor, the Indus Valley, Nan Madol). Use archaeological, linguistic, and climate evidence, clarifying what remains unproven.
A single Super Prompt delivers the entire foundation for a compelling fact book — from title and keywords to chapter prompts and cover design direction — all optimized for ChatGPT-5.
Designed to spark curiosity, each Cover Prompt helps you generate a vibrant, attention-grabbing design that stands out on Amazon, Etsy, or anywhere you sell.
Here are verified, historically accurate, and well-documented facts about the disappearance of D.B. Cooper, along with clearly labeled conjectures and unresolved points.
The hijacking occurred on November 24, 1971, the day before Thanksgiving, aboard Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 305 — a Boeing 727 traveling from Portland, Oregon, to Seattle, Washington.
The hijacker bought his ticket under the name “Dan Cooper” for $20 cash. A journalist’s error later misreported it as “D.B. Cooper,” the name that stuck in popular culture.
Witnesses described Cooper as a white male, aged mid-40s, around 5'10" to 6'0" tall, wearing a dark suit, white shirt, black tie, and sunglasses.
He was calm, polite, and soft-spoken throughout the flight — not aggressive or erratic.
Shortly after takeoff, Cooper handed a note to flight attendant Florence Schaffner, stating he had a bomb.
He demanded $200,000 in cash, four parachutes, and a fuel truck ready to refuel the plane in Seattle.
Cooper briefly showed Schaffner the “bomb,” consisting of eight red cylinders wired to a battery inside a briefcase.
The authenticity of the device was never confirmed — it was never recovered.
The FBI arranged for $200,000 in $20 bills, mostly with serial numbers starting with “L” (issued by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco).
The money was photographed and recorded before delivery.
When the plane landed in Seattle, 36 passengers were released in exchange for the money and parachutes.
Cooper kept four crew members on board — two pilots, one flight engineer, and one flight attendant.
The four parachutes were sourced from a local skydiving school. Two were main chutes, and two were reserves.
One reserve was an older, sewn-shut training chute — Cooper accidentally or deliberately took it.
Cooper ordered the pilots to fly toward Mexico City at a low altitude (10,000 feet) and slow speed (about 170 knots) with the landing gear down and rear stairs deployed — an unusual and dangerous configuration.
At approximately 8:13 PM, over southwestern Washington State, the plane’s aft stairs were lowered, and a sudden pressure bump indicated that Cooper had jumped.
No one witnessed the jump directly.
Conditions were dark, rainy, and cold — around 40°F (4°C) with strong winds and low visibility.
Cooper’s clothing was unsuited for prolonged exposure or a parachute landing in rough terrain.
Initial search efforts focused on wooded areas near Ariel, Washington, based on the flight path and wind patterns.
The dense terrain made recovery efforts extremely difficult.
13. The Money Found in 1980
In February 1980, an 8-year-old boy named Brian Ingram discovered $5,800 (three packets of $20 bills) buried along the Columbia River near Tena Bar, north of Portland.
Serial numbers matched the ransom money.
Forensic analysis showed the money had likely been in the ground for several years.
However, its location did not align perfectly with wind drift models or the presumed jump zone, deepening the mystery.
Despite thousands of man-hours of searching, no parachute, clothing, or body conclusively linked to Cooper was ever recovered.
Dozens of partial fingerprints were lifted from the aircraft, but none matched any suspect.
A black clip-on tie left behind was analyzed decades later for DNA and metal particles consistent with Boeing aircraft manufacturing.
The rear stairway of the Boeing 727 (used by Cooper to jump) was accessible only when the aircraft was in flight — a rare feature later modified by airlines after the incident (“Cooper vane” device).
The FBI’s NORJAK (Northwest Hijacking) case lasted nearly 45 years, involving over 1,000 suspects and tens of thousands of pages of documentation.
It was officially closed in 2016.
Suspects including Richard Floyd McCoy, Duane Weber, and Kenneth Christiansen were investigated and ultimately ruled out due to lack of physical evidence or mismatched profiles.
The FBI released all ransom bill serial numbers, enabling public tracking.
No other bills have ever surfaced in circulation or deposits — suggesting Cooper never spent the money, or it was destroyed or lost.
The case inspired over 50 books, documentaries, and films, and became a cultural legend representing the “perfect mystery” — the only unsolved air piracy in U.S. history.
Some theorists claim Cooper survived, citing the found money as evidence of deliberate disposal.
However, no proof exists of survival — and experts argue the conditions made it almost impossible.
The most accepted theory: Cooper died in the wilderness due to hypothermia, injury, or drowning.
No body has ever been found, and no survival evidence exists.
A few investigators proposed Cooper had aviation or military knowledge — the choice of aircraft and parachutes suggests training.
However, no verified military record has tied any suspect conclusively.
Following the incident, several copycat hijackings occurred in the early 1970s, prompting major aviation security reforms (including mandatory passenger screening).
✅ Summary:
Despite extensive searches, no definitive trace of D.B. Cooper — alive or dead — has ever been found. The case remains the only unsolved air piracy in U.S. history, suspended by the FBI in 2016 but still actively studied by independent investigators and enthusiasts.
Every Chapter Prompt guides ChatGPT to generate 20–25 real, surprising facts on a specific topic — giving your book depth, variety, and irresistible trivia content.
These Super Prompts aren’t just for creating a single book — they’re a repeatable, scalable system that lets you build a growing library of engaging, educational, and evergreen titles.
Each prompt gives you everything you need to produce a professional-quality fact book from start to finish — and because every topic and theme is unique, you can use them to create dozens of marketable titles that stand out in any niche.
Here are just a few ways to use them:
And best of all?
You can do it all without writing a single paragraph from scratch.
Once you own these prompts, you can mix, match, and regenerate as many variations as you want — each with its own title, theme, structure, and market.
This is how you build a real, creative publishing business — powered by curiosity, fueled by AI, and scaled with ease.
A quiet creator named Jordie released a simple but brilliant fact book — and now that single book earns an estimated $15,923/month in royalties on Amazon KDP.
He didn’t have AI.
But you do.
With 327 Fact Book Super Prompts, you have everything you need to create your own attention-grabbing, evergreen books — fully written, fully structured, and ready to publish.
Whether you want to build a full-time publishing business or just create a few wildly fun titles that sell themselves, this is your launchpad.
No writing.
No research.
No guesswork.
Just one copy-paste and you’re on your way.
Click below to get instant access to 327 Prompts for Fact Books — and start building your own catalog of curiosity-powered books today.
If you have any questions or comments, please write to my email [email protected] and I will gladly help you.
All the best,
Paulo Gro
P.S. The demand for fun, fast, and fascinating fact books has never been higher — and with one single title pulling in an estimated $15,923/month, it’s clear this is more than just a trend.
These books are irresistible to curious readers, highly shareable, and incredibly easy to create when you have the right tools.
With 327 expertly crafted super prompts, you don’t need to research, write, or even brainstorm — just copy, paste, and start building your publishing catalog.
Click here and secure your copy of '327 Prompts for Fascinating Fact Books' NOW!