Fiction Writing Made Easy with Savannah Gilbo | How to Write a Novel & Writing Advice cover art

Fiction Writing Made Easy with Savannah Gilbo | How to Write a Novel & Writing Advice

Fiction Writing Made Easy with Savannah Gilbo | How to Write a Novel & Writing Advice

By: Savannah Gilbo
Listen for free

Fiction Writing Made Easy is your go-to creative writing podcast for practical, no-fluff tips on how to write, edit, and publish a novel—from first draft to finished book.


Hosted by developmental editor and book coach Savannah Gilbo, this show breaks down the fiction writing process into clear, actionable steps so you can finally make progress on your manuscript and write a novel you’re proud of.


Whether you’re a first-time author, an aspiring novelist, or a seasoned writer looking to strengthen your craft, each episode will help you understand what makes a story work at the deepest level—so you can stop second-guessing your ideas and start building a stronger novel from the inside out.


You’ll learn how to develop your premise, structure your plot, create compelling characters, write stronger scenes, world-build without infodumping, revise your draft, and navigate your publishing options with more clarity and confidence.


If you’ve ever wondered things like...


How do I write a novel if I’ve never done this before?

What’s the best way to structure a story that works?

How do I develop strong characters readers will care about?

How do I build an immersive world without info-dumping?

How do I write scenes that move the story forward?

How do I edit my first draft?

How do I know when my book is ready to publish?

Should I pursue self-publishing or traditional publishing?


…you’re in the right place.


New episodes drop weekly to help you simplify the novel-writing process, strengthen your storytelling skills, and get your book into readers’ hands.



Popular Episode Topics Include: Fiction Writing Tips, Story Structure, Plotting a Novel, Character Development, Writing Stronger Scenes, World Building, Novel Revision, Story Development, How to Outline a Novel, Character Arcs, Genre Fiction, Editing a Novel, Fiction Writing Mistakes to Avoid, Revision Strategies, Writing Advice

© 2026 Savannah Gilbo, Inc. | Fiction Writing Made Easy
Art Literary History & Criticism
Episodes
  • #255. Student Spotlight: How Grace Draven Learned to Write Faster (Without Sacrificing Quality)
    Jul 7 2026

    Can a lifelong discovery writer write faster and embrace structure without losing the magic? Bestselling author Grace Draven wrote 62,000 words in 21 days and says absolutely.

    In this episode, Grace shares how the tools and mindset shifts she picked up from The Fiction Writing Made Easy podcast helped her write faster, avoid massive rewrites, and finish one of her strongest books, The Moon Raven—drafting 62,000 words in just 21 days to hit a tight preorder deadline—and why that experience convinced her to join Notes to Novel.

    After publishing more than 20 books and hitting the USA Today bestseller list five times, Grace explains why even experienced authors benefit from refining their process, and why structure isn't the creativity killer so many writers fear it is.

    Whether you're a proud pantser, a frustrated discovery writer, or someone looking for a faster, more reliable way to finish your novel, this conversation shows what's possible when you pair your natural creative process with the right story structure tools that I teach in Notes to Novel.

    Here's what we talk about:

    [08:00] Why thinking in scenes instead of chapters completely changed Grace's writing process and helped her write more efficiently without sacrificing creativity.

    [12:55] How Grace fast drafted 62,000 words in just 21 days, met a high-pressure preorder deadline, and still delivered a solid book.

    [18:41] How structure became a safety net that let Grace write around interruptions and a demanding home life without losing her place (or her creativity).

    [23:30] What happened when Grace her antagonist first (before fleshing out her protagonist)—and how this helped raise the stakes and eliminate unnecessary rewrites.

    [29:38] How the tools from Notes to Novel gave Grace the confidence to commit to a delivery schedule with her new multi-book publishing deal.

    If you've ever worried that outlining will make your writing feel formulaic or that your discovery writing process slows you down, this episode will show you how to write faster and build a process that leaves room for the magic instead of squeezing it out.

    🔗 Links mentioned in this episode:

    • Get on the Notes To Novel Waitlist
    • The Moon Raven by Grace Draven
    • Grace Draven’s Website
    • Ep. 182 - Writing Romantasy: How to Balance Fantasy Elements and Romance in Your Novel
    • Ep. 224 - The Truth About Writing Faster: It's Not What You Think

    ⭐ Follow & Review

    If you loved this episode, please take a moment to follow the show and leave a review on Apple Podcasts! Your review will help other writers find this podcast and get the insights they need to finish their books. Thanks for tuning in to The Fiction Writing Made Easy Podcast! See you next week!

    Support the show

    Show More Show Less
    40 mins
  • #254. How to Outline Your Novel With the Hero’s Journey
    Jun 30 2026

    Learn how to outline your novel using the Hero’s Journey—without mistaking this classic framework for a complete story blueprint.

    The Hero’s Journey is one of the most widely recognized story frameworks out there. But knowing the twelve stages—like the Ordinary World, the Call to Adventure, the Ordeal, and the Return with the Elixir—isn’t the same as knowing where those stages belong in a full-length novel.

    In this episode, I’m walking you through how to outline your novel with the Hero’s Journey framework, including how to divide your word count into acts, break those acts into scenes, and map the twelve stages across a novel-length manuscript.

    You’ll also learn what the Hero’s Journey can and can’t do on its own—because while it’s a powerful way to track your protagonist’s external adventure and internal transformation, it’s not a substitute for developing your genre, premise, character, conflict, theme, and stakes.

    You'll hear me talk about things like:

    [02:40] What the Hero’s Journey is and how to use its three acts and twelve stages as a tool for outlining a novel

    [05:15] How to split your word count across the three acts (and the percentage breakdown that tells you how long each one should be).

    [07:45] A complete walkthrough of all twelve stages of the Hero's Journey, and the job each stage does for your plot and your character.

    [14:00] The death-and-rebirth moment at the center of the Hero's Journey, and why it's one of the most powerful ideas in storytelling.

    [17:45] Why your draft loses steam even when all twelve stages are in place, and the foundation that's usually missing underneath them.

    And so much more…

    If you've been curious about using the Hero's Journey to plan your novel, or if you've tried it before and felt like something was missing, this episode will help you understand both the strengths and limitations of this classic framework.

    🔗 Links mentioned in this episode:

    • Get on The Notes to Novel Waitlist
    • Take Author Success Quiz (FREE)
    • Ep. 30 - Novel Length: How Long Should Your Book Be?
    • Ep. 244 - How to Create Characters Readers Will Love
    • How to Outline Your Novel with Save the Cat!
    • The Writer's Journey by Christopher Vogler

    ⭐ Follow & Review

    If you loved this episode, please take a moment to follow the show and leave a review on Apple Podcasts! Your review will help other writers find this podcast and get the insights they need to finish their books. Thanks for tuning in to The Fiction Writing Made Easy Podcast! See you next week!

    Support the show

    Show More Show Less
    25 mins
  • #253. 5 Common Mistakes That Make Your Character Feel Flat
    Jun 23 2026

    If your protagonist feels vivid in your head but flat on the page, this episode will help you diagnose what’s missing—and fix the specific piece of character development that will make readers care.

    You know your main character. Their backstory, their childhood, the exact way they take their coffee. You could talk about them for an hour. So why do they still feel flat on the page?

    When this happens, most writers assume they need to know more—a deeper backstory, more personality details, another character questionnaire. So they add more. Or they go the other way and try to make the character more likeable.

    But here's the thing: knowing a lot about your character isn't the same as developing the specific pieces that make them work in a story. And making a character likeable isn't the same as making them compelling. When a protagonist feels flat, the fix usually is more character development—just not the kind most writers reach for.

    And that's what I'm talking about in this episode. The five most common mistakes that make characters feel flat, and the specific pieces to strengthen so your protagonist feels compelling, active, and worth following.

    You'll hear me talk about things like:

    [01:55] Why a vague story goal is the reason your draft stalls out, and the small shift that makes your protagonist's goal specific enough to write forward with ease.

    [05:25] Why your story may have huge, world-ending stakes but still feel like nothing is actually threatening what your protagonist stands to lose.

    [09:30] The reason a frictionless protagonist feels thin on the page even when the goal is clear, the plot is moving, and the stakes are personal.

    [13:40] Why a protagonist the plot keeps happening to—instead of one whose choices drive what happens next—keeps readers at a distance, and how to put them back in the driver's seat.

    [17:05] The simple scene-level test that shows whether your protagonist is filtering the story through a distinct worldview, or just reporting what happened.

    If you've got a folder full of drafts that stalled because your characters kept reading thin on the page, this episode will help you see the pattern differently. Once you know which of these five pieces is missing, you can fix it, build a character strong enough to carry the whole story, and finally understand how to make readers care about your characters.

    🔗 Links mentioned in this episode:

    • Get on The Notes to Novel Waitlist
    • Take Author Success Quiz (FREE)
    • Ep. 244 - How to Create Characters Readers Will Love (5 Essential Elements)
    • Ep. 240 - 10 Writing Mistakes That Make Readers Put Down Your Novel
    • Ep. How to Reveal Your Character’s Inner Life on the Page

    ⭐ Follow & Review

    If you loved this episode, please take a moment to follow the show and leave a review on Apple Podcasts! Your review will help other writers find this podcast and get the insights they need to finish their books. Thanks for tuning in to The Fiction Writing Made Easy Podcast! See you next week!

    Support the show

    Show More Show Less
    24 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet