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Middle Grade Made Easy(er) | Kidlit Writing Craft Podcast

Middle Grade Made Easy(er) | Kidlit Writing Craft Podcast

Hosted by Lou Piccolo

Episodes

23

Latest episode

Jan 2026

Language

EN-GB

About the show

Middle Grade Made Easy(er) brings you actionable writing craft advice on how to outline, write and revise a middle-grade novel for 8 to 12-year-old readers. Tune in twice a month to join developmental editor and author, Lou Piccolo, and learn the art of writing middle grade without the overwhelm. Whether you're trying to find a way into your novel, are stuck somewhere in the middle, need to revise but don’t know how, or are looking for tips to stay motivated to finish your novel, each episode offers practical guidance you can apply to your work in progress. Middle Grade Made Easy(er) is the right podcast for you if you have read all the craft books but need someone to guide you through the practical process of: → outlining a middle-grade novel → plotting your story → creating engaging characters → writing authentic dialogue → staying the course to finish your novel Here’s something I tell all my clients: Start here, start now, just start. Tomorrow’s you will be grateful that today’s you did.

Listen to episodes

23 recent
January 18, 20269 min

#21 Should You Write Your Middle-Grade Novel in Scenes or Chapters?

If you spend a lot of time worrying about how to write the perfect opening chapter for your middle-grade novel or whether you should end your chapters on a cliffhanger, then you're going to love writing in scenes!In this episode, we'll cover:the difference between scenes and chaptersthree reasons why it's best to write in a series of scenes rather than in chaptersThis episode is the first in a mini series on writing scenes in middle-grade novels, so stay tuned to the podcast over the next few episodes to learn:how to write a solid scenethe elements that all scenes need to workwhen to write in scene and when to write in summaryFor show notes, transcripts and links mentioned in the episode, visit my websiteYou can also connect with me on InstagramHave something to say? Send me a message!

December 17, 202510 min

#20 Does Word Count Matter in Your Middle-Grade Novel?

Word count may seem like the least of your concerns when you're thinking about writing a middle-grade novel. You've got story type, plot, theme, character development, pacing, and who knows what else to consider, right?But here's the thing: knowing industry-standard guidelines for the length of a middle-grade novel, and having a target word count in mind before you start drafting can actually help you to outline, draft, revise and publish. In today's episode, we'll cover:the guidelines for middle-grade novel word countfour reasons why word count mattersIn the end, every author has the choice to watch word count or not, but it's a fact that word count matters, so make each word count! For show notes, transcripts and links mentioned in the episode, visit my websiteYou can also connect with me on InstagramHave something to say? Send me a message!

December 3, 202511 min

#19 Middle-Grade Mindset: Why You’re Stuck and What To Do About It

You may have taken all the writing classes and read all the craft books on writing, and you may theoretically know everything you need to know to write your middle-grade novel, but if you have only managed the theory of writing without managing your mindset, you are going to encounter fear at some point. And that fear will stop you from writing.So, what's the solution?In this podcast episode, we cover:how fear is keeping you stuckwhat to do to about the fearWhat you believe about yourself impacts your success or failure. So, managing your beliefs leads to positive thoughts and feelings, which motivates constructive writing habits. Mindset matters! For show notes, transcripts and links mentioned in the episode, visit my websiteYou can also connect with me on InstagramHave something to say? Send me a message!

November 23, 202514 min

#18 3 Ways to Find Your Middle-Grade Novel's Theme

Books help kids make sense of the world through story, but they can only do that if the books they read have an underlying meaning to them.That's where theme comes in. In this episode, we're going to look at how theme can help you write your novel, and create a story that will send kids on a journey in which they can fall in love with characters they care about and feel emotions they can relate to.To do that, we'll cover:what theme ishow knowing your story’s theme can make writing your novel easierthree questions that will help you find your middle-grade novel’s themeTheme is one of the foundational elements of novel writing, as is story type which can help you uncover your novel's theme. If you'd like to find out more about story type, sign up for a workshop at: loupiccolo.com/storytypeBonus: You can find a free PDF download summarizing this episode.For show notes, transcripts and links mentioned in the episode, visit my websiteYou can also connect with me on InstagramHave something to say? Send me a message!

November 9, 20258 min

#17 The #1 Reason Agents Reject Your Middle-Grade Novel

What's more important for your novel: great language or great story? If you answered 'great story', you've got it right! While great language is important too, it won't carry your story idea through a full-length middle-grade novel and, by itself, it's not a story. If you submit a novel to an agent without solid story structure, it will be rejected. If you think your novel lacks structure, in this episode, I cover:why so many writers make the mistake of choosing language over storywhat to do if you realize you've made this mistakehow to build solid structure into your novel a workshop on how adding structure to your novel can sell your bookYou can sign up for the workshop at: loupiccolo.com/storytypeFor show notes, transcripts and links mentioned in the episode, visit my websiteYou can also connect with me on InstagramHave something to say? Send me a message!

October 29, 202515 min

#16 Use Story Type to Unlock Your Middle-Grade Novel

You have a great story idea but you don't know how to turn it into a fully developed middle-grade novel that publishers want to buy and readers will love.What to do?This episode on the ten universal story types will help you:identify your novel's story typefind a way into your storyget past your story's murky middlecraft an effective character arcdraft effective scenes and events for your storywrite a story that satisfies readersBonus: get access to a free PDF handout on story type and why you should use it to draft your middle-grade novel.Workshop:  Join me on November 29, 2025 for a workshop on the ten universal story types.For show notes, transcripts and links mentioned in the episode, visit my websiteYou can also connect with me on InstagramHave something to say? Send me a message!

October 21, 202511 min

Bonus: Get to Know Your Ideal Reader with Kate DiCamillo's Because of Winn-Dixie

In this bonus episode, I will take the eight key questions we looked at in the last episode on how to get to know the ideal middle-grade reader for your novel, and apply them to Kate DiCamillo's middle-grade novel Because of Winn-Dixie. This episode will show you what the process of fleshing out your ideal middle-grade reader looks like in action, and how it can connect your readers to your protagonist and the theme of your story, turning them into your book's biggest fan. If you haven't already listened to episode #15, here is the link.You can also download a free PDF worksheet that lists:reasons why it's important to get to know your ideal reader8 questions you can ask to get to know them how this will help you outline, draft, revise, publish and market your book For show notes, transcripts and links mentioned in the episode, visit my websiteYou can also connect with me on InstagramHave something to say? Send me a message!

October 10, 202512 min

#15 Getting to Know Your Ideal Middle-Grade Reader

If you want to be the type of middle-grade writer who creates books with characters who feel like real people, and transports kids out of their own world into the imaginary one you have created in such a way that they lose themselves and actually feel some sort of grief when the book ends… … then you need to start with understanding who middle-grade readers are, in general, and who the ideal reader is for YOUR  book.In this episode, I cover:reasons why it's important to get to know your ideal reader8 questions you can ask to get to know them how this will help you outline, draft, revise, publish and market your bookI've created a PDF handout you can download that sums up the episode: loupiccolo.com/readerFor show notes, transcripts and links mentioned in the episode, visit my websiteYou can also connect with me on Instagram Have something to say? Send me a message!

September 28, 202510 min

#14 Writing Middle Grade: How Do I Start?

So, you want to write a middle-grade novel. Maybe you have an idea that just won't let you be. Or maybe you've spent years writing picture books, and you'd like to try something different?But when you sit down in front of your computer… well, you don't quite know how to start. That's why, in this episode, we're taking a deep dive into how reading like a writer will help you:learn about middle-grade guidelinesunderstand why something isn't working in your own bookincrease your chances of being publishedcreate a protagonist kids can relate togrow as a writerremember what it felt like to be a childI've created a PDF handout you can download that sums up the episode: loupiccolo.com/readFor show notes, transcripts and links mentioned in the episode, visit my websiteYou can also connect with me on InstagramHave something to say? Send me a message!

September 17, 202513 min

#13 How to Nail Middle-Grade Voice

Strong voice is important in all fiction, but it's vital in middle grade. Why? Because kids between 8 and 12, who are almost ready to leave early childhood behind and embark on big adventures, need a safe way to do so. How do they do it? Through the characters in middle-grade novels who are living the life they want to live.If your characters have strong voice, your book becomes memorable because voice helps the story flow with just the right amount of emotional complexity a kid can connect with and relate to.  This means that voice in a middle-grade novel is closely related to how engaged your readers will be with your story. In this episode, we look at:what middle-grade voice is why middle-grade voice mattersan example of strong voice in Home of the Brave by Katherine Applegatetips for developing strong middle-grade voiceI've created a PDF handout you can download that sums up the episode: loupiccolo.com/voiceFor show notes, transcripts and links mentioned in the episode, visit my websiteYou can also connect with me on InstagramHave something to say? Send me a message!

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