Posted in 2025

Setting My 2025 Writing Goals

I don’t tend to do annual writing goals, but thanks to this post by Christine Evans and Vicky Fang at their Kidlit Survival Guide Substack, I decided to give it a try this year. I’m feeling the need to add a bit of structure to my life, anyway, and this seems a possible starting point. The important piece of their post, for me, is that the goals need to be things I actually have some control over. So even though getting an agent stays at the top of my wish list, I am not setting it out as an actual goal.

So, working under the premise that, if I say it out loud, I actually have to do it, here are my current writing goals for 2025.

  • Revise my current PB WIP to the point where I think it’s ready to query, then actually start querying it. I’d like to say that this is going to be easy, since I’ve already been revising it for the past six months or so, but…if it were easy, everyone would be doing it!
  • Write a first draft of at least one picture book that feels, to me, like it’s worth revising to the query stage. This means I have to love the story premise and/or character, I need to be able to see a path to revision, and the story includes multiple elements that will make it stand out in agent and editor inboxes. One qualifier: I can go back through earlier drafts of stories I’ve let go because they didn’t meet these criteria, in case I see something new and exciting in any of them.
  • Start writing a chapter book. For several years, I’ve been calling myself a picture book writer with aspirations of writing chapter books. Well, time to quit aspiring and actually try to do it. I have some VERY loose ideas, and of course I’m letting myself jot those down. But before that, I need to make some definite headway toward reading 100 chapter books AND breaking them down, chapter by chapter, into each of the main story elements.

Do you set writing goals for the year? Feel free to share in a comment!

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Author:

Becky Levine is a children's book writer, working hard to strengthen her picture-books skills. She is the author of The Writing & Critique Group Survival Guide, a book to help you get started with a critique group, learn to revise from a critique, and strengthen your own critiquing powers. She has also published two nonfiction children's books with Capstone Press. She is currently seeking representation. Becky lives in California's Santa Cruz mountains, where she spends a lot of time sitting on the couch, knitting needles in hand, thinking through the next revision. At her day job, she writes grants for a nonprofit healthcare organization.

One thought on “Setting My 2025 Writing Goals

  1. Best wishes in going forward on these goals. Changing your genre to a chapter book might give you new insight into your picture books. Or so they say…

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