Table of Contents

  1. The Writing Excuses Podcast
  2. The Creative Penn Podcast
  3. Grammar Girl Quick and Dirty Tips
  4. The Narrative Breakdown
  5. Write Now with Sarah Werner
  6. The Story Grid Podcast
  7. How Writers Write

Intro

So, you wanna spark up your creativity and actually enjoy the writing process in 2025? Same. Apparently, a ton of folks are searching “writing podcasts 2025” on Pinterest (seriously, searches blew up by 310% last year). Everybody’s looking for a little inspiration in their earbuds. Here’s my no-BS guide to seven writing podcasts that won’t put you to sleep or make you feel like you’re stuck in a boring workshop. Straight from the trenches—plus a couple nods from WritersDigest.com and the Twitter/X writing crowd. We’re talking story hacks, grammar tips, and enough motivation to get you typing again.

The Writing Excuses Podcast

Writing Excuses is one of those “no excuses, just get it done” shows. It’s quick—like, 15 minutes per episode—so you can actually squeeze it in between doomscrolling and pretending to work. Brandon Sanderson and friends drop solid advice without sounding like robots. Outlines, characters, publishing…they hit it all. Bonus: it’s free everywhere podcasts live.

Why listen?

  • Weekly, bite-sized episodes on all the stuff writers stress about (plot, characters, publishing).
  • Totally free—Spotify, Apple, their site, whatever.
  • Check it out at WritingExcuses.com.

The Creative Penn Podcast

Indie writers, pay attention. Joanna Penn (yes, that’s a pun) runs this one, and she’s a publishing machine. She digs into everything from author marketing to creative mindset, and she’s honest about the grind. If self-pub is your jam, this is your podcast soulmate.

Why listen?

  • Covers writing, publishing, and how to not go broke as an author.
  • Weekly episodes with transcripts if you’d rather read than listen.
  • Stream it at TheCreativePenn.com.

Grammar Girl Quick and Dirty Tips

Confused by semicolons? Can’t remember when to use “affect” or “effect”? Mignon Fogarty, aka Grammar Girl, breaks it down in small, non-judgy chunks. Five to ten minutes per episode, so you can fix your grammar and move on with your life.

Why listen?

  • Fast grammar fixes—no PhD required.
  • Free on all the big podcast apps.
  • Listen at QuickAndDirtyTips.com.

The Narrative Breakdown

This one’s for the story nerds. Narrative Breakdown dives deep into storytelling—think structure, arcs, and why your middle chapters always suck. They pull in expert guests and don’t sugarcoat the process. It’s like a writing class without the tuition.

Why listen?

  • Story structure, character arcs, and real advice from pros.
  • Episodes are free and actually useful.
  • Stream at NarrativeBreakdown.com.

Write Now with Sarah Werner

Ever feel like writing is just…hard? Sarah Werner gets it. She’s all about motivation, productivity, and not letting writer’s block eat you alive. If you need a pep talk (or two, or ten), she’s got you.

Why listen?

  • Helps you get unstuck.
  • Tackles time management and all those mental blocks.
  • Free on Apple, Spotify, or her site: SarahWerner.com.

The Story Grid Podcast

Shawn Coyne and company get nerdy about story—think beat-by-beat breakdowns and genre deep dives. It’s intense, but if you want to seriously up your game, this is the place. Novelists, especially, will eat this up.

Why listen?

  • Breaks down why stories work (or don’t).
  • Actionable advice, not just theory.
  • Stream at StoryGrid.com.

How Writers Write

And finally, How Writers Write. It’s basically writer therapy—authors spill on their routines, struggles, and wins. If you like hearing how “real” writers do it (hint: nobody has their life together), this one’s for you.

Why listen?

  • Honest convos with working writers.
  • Tips, inspiration, and plenty of “me too” moments.
  • Available everywhere podcasts exist.

Honestly, if you’re not already listening to at least one of these, what are you doing? Grab your headphones, hit play, and let these folks kickstart your writing mojo for 2025. You got this.

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