Craft Articles

Join us in exploring others’ craft and building our own.

Here you will find explorations of mentor texts – articles that dive into specific craft elements in published books, interviews with authors, and tips on growing and improving as a writer.

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Crafting Characters: Getting to Know Your Non-Fiction Characters and By Working Outside In
Middle Grade, Picture Books, Young Adult Anne-Marie Strohman Middle Grade, Picture Books, Young Adult Anne-Marie Strohman

Crafting Characters: Getting to Know Your Non-Fiction Characters and By Working Outside In

It's CRAFTING CHARACTERS post number 5! Today we've got something for everyone--working from the outside in, and special tips for getting to know your non-fiction characters. Whether it's asking "what if"? or interrogating a character's economic circumstances, whether diving into research or interviewing a real live person, in this post you'll find wisdom for taking your characters--both fictional and real--to the next level.

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Crafting Characters: Getting to Know Your Character Through Writing Your Story
Middle Grade, Picture Books, Young Adult Anne-Marie Strohman Middle Grade, Picture Books, Young Adult Anne-Marie Strohman

Crafting Characters: Getting to Know Your Character Through Writing Your Story

It's our fourth installment of our CRAFTING CHARACTERS series, and today, we check in with writers who work their characters out on the page as they draft. Some of these authors do use some freewriting techniques, but usually after they've seen their character in action on the page, or during the revision process. Read on for some excellent insights!

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Crafting Characters: Getting to Know Your Character By Thinking and Listening
Middle Grade, Picture Books, Young Adult Anne-Marie Strohman Middle Grade, Picture Books, Young Adult Anne-Marie Strohman

Crafting Characters: Getting to Know Your Character By Thinking and Listening

Welcome to our second post in our Crafting Characters series. For some people, working out character before putting pen to paper is the best way forward. Others have characters show up nearly fully formed, or at least with enough substance to have something to say. Those people often make efforts to listen to their characters--whether through freewriting, through scenes, or through meditative daydreaming. These authors and our contributors share their favorite ways to develop their characters. Read on for some mindful strategies for uncovering character and letting the characters speak.

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Crafting Characters: Getting to Know Your Character Through Freewriting
Middle Grade Anne-Marie Strohman Middle Grade Anne-Marie Strohman

Crafting Characters: Getting to Know Your Character Through Freewriting

Welcome to our first post of our April 2022 series, Crafting Character. Character is the driving force of the story, but actually letting character drive our stories can be tricky. That's where KidLit Craft comes in. We've asked authors and our contributors to share their favorite ways to develop their characters--by getting to know them, exploring character desire, and focusing on core relationships.

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KidLit Craft's Comprehensive Guide to Character
Middle Grade, Picture Books, Young Adult Anne-Marie Strohman Middle Grade, Picture Books, Young Adult Anne-Marie Strohman

KidLit Craft's Comprehensive Guide to Character

Looking at voice, interiority, internal arc, character relationships, and more, our writers have analyzed mentor texts in all categories to discover strategies for creating characters that leap off the page and into readers' hearts. This list is one you can return to over and over to find just the post you need in the moment.

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The Heroine’s Journey in The Beast Player by Nahoko Uehashi
Middle Grade, Young Adult Jen Jobart Middle Grade, Young Adult Jen Jobart

The Heroine’s Journey in The Beast Player by Nahoko Uehashi

The Heroine’s Journey celebrates the gifts of the matriarch. It explores themes of family, community, collaboration, cooperation, and love. As an author, and as a person, it’s important to me to write books that support those values, so everyone who reads them can be inspired to evolve toward a more feminine, collaborative, resilient society. To illustrate the points I make in this post, I’ll be examining the Heroine’s Journey of Elin in The Beast Player, a Japanese YA fantasy by Nahoko Uehashi. Elin’s story is an excellent example of the Heroine’s Journey.

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Heroine Super Powers: Cece Rios and the Desert of Souls
Middle Grade Jen Jobart Middle Grade Jen Jobart

Heroine Super Powers: Cece Rios and the Desert of Souls

In order to understand how a heroine grows into her superpowers, I followed the heroine’s journey closely in three movies: Elsa in Frozen, Rey in Star Wars: The Force Awakens, and Meg in A Wrinkle in Time. I identified a common pattern for a superheroine’s recognition of and acceptance of her superpowers. Then I applied what I learned to analyze CeCe Rios and the Desert of Souls, a middle grade novel by Kaela Rivera to translate what I found in films to what might work in a novel.

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Emotional Resonance Is Key: A Q&A with Tanita S. Davis
Author Interview, Middle Grade Kristi Wright Author Interview, Middle Grade Kristi Wright

Emotional Resonance Is Key: A Q&A with Tanita S. Davis

A lot of people want to be allies, or seen as friendly and open to the idea of friendship across races, cultures and social strata. This idea of “just talk to each other” may seem like it’s wildly oversimplified, but it turns out that if you want to know someone, it really is that simple. You may be nothing like a diehard gardener or wide-eyed tween, but if you’re willing to see a potential connection between the two of you, it will be there.

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KidLit Craft Goes to the Movies: The Emotional Antagonist in Eddie the Eagle
Middle Grade, Picture Books, Young Adult Anne-Marie Strohman Middle Grade, Picture Books, Young Adult Anne-Marie Strohman

KidLit Craft Goes to the Movies: The Emotional Antagonist in Eddie the Eagle

Some great stories make use of what Melanie Jacobson calls the emotional antagonist. The emotional antagonist is on the protagonist’s side, but the protagonist doesn’t have their approval or support.Jacobson believes emotional antagonist can be a powerful addition to a book because it gives a story an extra satisfying ending–a resolution with the emotional antagonist. We can see the emotional antagonist in action in Eddie the Eagle (2015).

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Taking Poetic Risks: A Q&A with Margaret Chiu Greanias
Author Interview, Picture Books Anne-Marie Strohman Author Interview, Picture Books Anne-Marie Strohman

Taking Poetic Risks: A Q&A with Margaret Chiu Greanias

Since I began writing picture books, I've longed to tell the story of my relationship with my Amah (grandmother, in Taiwanese). Even though we saw each other infrequently, I adored her. But like Kylie, my main character in Amah Faraway, I always felt a bit shy at the start of our visits--due to my own cautious nature, the distance, language barrier, and cultural differences.

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What We Read in 2021: Middle Grade
Middle Grade Anne-Marie Strohman Middle Grade Anne-Marie Strohman

What We Read in 2021: Middle Grade

This blog grew out of a middle grade book group for writers, held in Menlo Park, California, and we're still going strong. Each month, we discuss a middle grade book with an eye to craft. (Last year, I wrote about strategies for starting your own craft book group.) Here's our list of books from 2021, with a sneak peek at our first few books of 2022. We hope they inspire your reading!

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Creating a Character Readers Love: Luck of the Titanic by Stacey Lee
Young Adult Kristi Wright Young Adult Kristi Wright

Creating a Character Readers Love: Luck of the Titanic by Stacey Lee

Since Lee uses first-person point of view to tell her stories, it’s her main character’s voice that’s in the driver’s seat. Reading her novels is a masterclass in how to do first-person narration well. However, you can use these techniques with third-person and even with omniscient narration. It’s all about elevating your prose to do more than just tell the reader what’s happening.

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