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Tips for writing kids books
- Board books: Newborn to age 3
- Picture books: Ages 3-8
- Coloring and activity (C&A) books: Ages 3-8
- Novelty books: Ages 3 and up, depending on content
- Early, leveled readers: Ages 5-9
- First chapter books: Ages 6-9 or 7-10
- Middle-grade books: Ages 8-12
- Young adult (YA) novels: Ages 12 and up or 14 and up
– WRITING CHILDREN’S BOOKS FOR DUMMIES CHEAT SHEET
Category | Age | Word Count | Pages | Illustrations |
---|---|---|---|---|
Picture Book | 0-3 | 0 | 32 | Every Page |
Young Picture Book | 2-5 | 200-400 | 32 | Every Page |
Trade Picture Book | 4-8 | 400-800 | 32+ | Every Page |
Picture Story Book | 6-10 | 1,000-3,000 | 32+ | Every Page |
Chapter Book | 6-10 | 3,000-10,000 | 32+ | Almost Every Page |
Middle Grade Book | 8-12 | 15,000-40,000 | 82 | 12+ Illustrations |
– HOW TO WRITE A CHILDREN’S BOOK IN 9 EASY STEPS
Do you want to use:
- Fruits and vegetables
- Inanimate objects
- … etc.
The sky is the limit, be creative!
Make sure it is relatable to kids and appropriate to children.
Where does your take place?
Past- or present-tense?
Past-tense is more natural; present-tense is more engaging to children.
Write in both, and see which one you like better.
Don’t change tenses mid-way.
First person or third person?
Is the main character the main focus on every page? Does it make sense to do it through the main character’s eyes? Then first-person is a good pick.
Otherwise, third-person could be good as you can zoom out and maybe have more flexibility.
Has the character gone through an experience and changed in end?
Character should learn/grow.
Beginning, middle and end.
Can you describe your book in three sentences? Describe beginning, middle and end.
Questions to ask yourself to figure out beginning, middle and end:
- What happens to make this a story. What is life like before change; what is the conflict or change that makes story go in a new direction?
- What does your character do or not do about; what happens because of their actions or inactions. What are the end results that wrap up conflict and resolve things?
- If your character talks to self, consider giving them a friend (even imaginary friend).
- If you are bored with the story, they the reader will be too.
No words
A co-worker (thanks Nic!) gave this advice:
Write your story with no words; does it work on it’s own?
Add words to enhance.
Hone your writing! Here’s some tips:
- If a sentence does not contribute to plot, arc or character (etc.) then delete it!
- If you have a huge page of dialog, just cut a bunch! Be really strict as to what you allow on page; find words that replace multiple.
- If you have lots of puncuation (exclamation, italics, bold, uppercase), then replace it as you can prob find words to describe those feelings
- Extremes RULE! For kids, the world is pretty black and white; they’ll take things very literally.
- Read it out loud; you’ll hear those weird akward parts
A good story will take time.
Always edit and re-write.
It will take time.
- Make it as detailed as possible; kids love reading books where they discover new things
- Run your book by actual kids to see how they respond