The Lightning Thief Writing Prompts | Light Up Literature
Light Up Literature™ Curriculum
The Lightning Thief
Chapter-by-Chapter Writing Prompts
88 structured writing prompts across all 22 chapters — summaries, research, personal connections, mythology, and more. Built for middle school readers who need real writing practice woven through every page of the novel.
Why This Resource Exists
Reading The Lightning Thief is the fun part. Writing through it is where the real learning happens.
Most novel studies hand students a basic comprehension quiz and call it done. This resource goes further — it treats every chapter as an opportunity to practice real writing skills: how to summarize, how to form an opinion and defend it, how to research and report findings, how to make a personal connection and articulate it clearly.
Each set of chapter prompts includes a structured summary task plus additional prompts drawn from the chapter's specific themes — Greek mythology, ethics, identity, belonging, and more. Students who complete this resource alongside the novel will have practiced seven distinct writing genres by the time they reach Chapter 22.
Covers the whole novel
Every one of the 22 chapters has its own prompt page — no gaps, no skips.
Multiple writing genres
Students practice summarizing, researching, comparing, persuading, and connecting — not just answering questions.
Mythology woven throughout
Research prompts guide students to explore the real mythology behind characters in Chapters 4–22.
Flexible for any setting
Works in a traditional classroom, a co-op, or a one-on-one homeschool environment without modification.
What's Included
One prompt page for every chapter — all 22 of them.
Each chapter page includes a structured summary prompt plus additional writing tasks specific to that chapter's content. Below is the full chapter-by-chapter breakdown of what students will work through.
Writing Genres Covered
Seven types of writing — practiced across the entire novel.
Every prompt is tied to something that happens in that specific chapter, so students are always writing with meaningful context rather than in a vacuum.
Summarization Writing
Every chapter includes a structured summary prompt with required elements: characters, chronological events, main ideas, supporting details, setting, and time of day.
Research Writing
Students research Greek mythology, real historical topics, and real-world subjects connected to the story — then summarize or report their findings in writing.
Informational Writing
Multi-paragraph informational essays on topics woven into the novel, including grief, zoos and animal treatment, the Coast Guard, and more.
Opinion Writing
Students form and defend positions on ethical questions raised by the story, supported with text evidence.
Persuasive / Expository Writing
Full persuasive essays with calls to action, and expository writing tasks that push students to explain and analyze beyond the surface.
Compare & Contrast Writing
Structured comparisons between characters, myth vs. novel, historical figures, student experiences and story events — many include Venn Diagram organization.
Personal Connection Writing
Text-to-self prompts that ask students to connect their own experiences to Percy's, building authentic engagement with the story.
Built-In Writing Scaffolding
Every summary prompt requires the same six elements — on purpose.
The structured summary task appears in every chapter and always requires the same elements. That repetition is intentional. By the end of the novel, students will have written 22 structured summaries and have a solid, practiced understanding of what a complete summary actually looks like.
- Characters present in the chapter
- Chronological order of events
- Main ideas
- Minimum two supporting details per main idea
- Location / setting
- Time of day
Who This Is For
Designed for middle school readers — flexible enough for almost any setting.
-
ELA teachers assigning The Lightning Thief as a class novel and wanting structured writing practice to go alongside reading — chapter by chapter, without needing to create anything from scratch.
-
Homeschool parents using The Lightning Thief as part of a literature-based curriculum who want writing assignments that don't require them to be writing teachers. The structured summary element makes expectations crystal clear to students working independently.
-
Co-op instructors running a middle school literature course and needing a complete, ready-to-use writing supplement for a beloved, high-interest novel.
-
Grades 6, 7, and 8 — the prompts are calibrated for middle school writers, with enough scaffolding for 6th graders and enough depth to challenge 8th graders.
Ways to Use This Resource
Flexible by design — use it the way that fits your student.
- Assign the full prompt page after completing each chapter as a reading comprehension + writing checkpoint
- Choose one or two prompts per chapter and leave the rest as optional enrichment or extra credit
- Use the summary prompt alone as a daily reading journal — and save the other prompts for a deeper writing unit at the end of each section
- Build a mythology research portfolio alongside the novel using the research prompts from Chapters 4–22
- Use the compare & contrast prompts as models for teaching that writing structure, then have students apply it independently
- Assign the persuasive essay prompt in Chapter 19 as a formal writing assessment midway through the novel
Product Specifications
What you're getting.
| Novel | The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan (Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Book 1) |
| Total Writing Prompts | 88 |
| Chapters Covered | All 22 chapters (Chapters 1–22) |
| Prompts Per Chapter | 3–7 prompts per chapter |
| Writing Genres | Summarization, research, informational, opinion, persuasive/expository, compare & contrast, personal connection |
| Recommended Grade Level | Grades 6–8 |
| Format | Printable PDF — print individual pages or the full set |
| Answer Key Included | No — these are open-ended writing prompts with no single correct answer |
| Novel Required | Yes — students will need access to The Lightning Thief to complete the prompts |
| License | Single classroom or homeschool use; additional licenses required for teams, schools, or co-ops |
| Publisher | Light Up Literature™ Curriculum © 2022 |
Frequently Asked Questions
Questions parents and teachers ask before buying.
Ready to light up your Lightning Thief unit?
88 writing prompts. 22 chapters. Seven writing genres. Download it once and use it every time you read the novel.
Add to Cart