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52 Things—Ideas for Writers for 2015
Contributor
Written by
Brooke Warner
December 2014
Outlining
Contributor
Written by
Brooke Warner
December 2014
Outlining

A couple years ago my friends and I made a list of 52 goals we wanted to accomplish, the equivalent of a bucket list for a year's worth of achievable things. Most of them were simple goals, but measurable. For instance, you couldn’t just write “Read more” as a goal. It had to be quantifiable, like “Read a book a month.” It was fun, but also challenging, both to put the list together and to accomplish all the things I came up with. By the end of 2012 I’d done a little more than half of the things on my list.

If you look online you’ll see lots of spin-offs on the 52 things concept—52 things you want to and can achieve in the 52 weeks of next year. I’m a firm believer that it’s good to have goals, but also to hold them gently. In a list of 52 things to accomplish in a year, actually doing 18-20 of those things is pretty amazing. You can always defer the rest to the next year, after all. So if you want to create a 52 Things list this year, and you’re looking to add some writing goals to your list, here are my 52 ideas:

  1. Start or join a writing group.
  2. Go see (in the theater or via rental) three movies based on books you love.
  3. Guest post for a blog you read/admire.
  4. Get your name in print, meaning you must submit! Get e-mails about opportunities from CRWROPPS, a Yahoo! listserv that culls calls for submissions.
  5. Read a banned book during Banned Book Week, September 27 - October 3, 2015. For a list of banned books, visit: http://www.ala.org/bbooks/.
  6. Submit a story to a call for submissions for an anthology.
  7. Become a HuffPost blogger. (This is achievable for anyone, even if it feels elusive.)
  8. Buy a book for a child or teenager in your life for no reason at all.
  9. Join an online community (like SheWrites.com, or NAMW.org, or a private Facebook group dedicated to writing, or a specific genre).
  10. Commit to writing a certain number of words per week, or per month.
  11. Become a regular content contributor to a website you follow or admire.
  12. Attend a local author reading, or two or five or ten.
  13. Support your local bookstore by shopping on Independent Bookstore Day, a national celebration of local booksellers, taking place on May 2, 2015.
  14. Write a book review and put it on your blog. If you don’t have a blog, post it on Facebook.
  15. Do one thing that truly champions another writer.
  16. Read a book that falls way outside your general area of interest.
  17. Post a comment on social media in support of someone you admire.
  18. Go to a writers’ conference.
  19. Participate in online pitch conferences (like pitch fests on Twitter).
  20. Participate in NaNoWriMo in November 2015.
  21. Join an association, like the Independent Book Publishers Association.
  22. Apply for residency retreats, like Hedgebrook.
  23. Get an op-ed placed, or learn how to do it by taking an Op-Ed Project class.
  24. Do a 500 Words challenge. Writers like Jeff Goins have sponsored these kinds of challenges, where you write 500 words a day for a set number of days—a month or longer. Give it a whirl!
  25. Create an audio book of a recently published book. Check out this free webinar on the subject from Betsy Graziani Fasbinder, author of Fire & Water, who put out an audio book version of her novel in 2014.
  26. Map a book you love. It will teach you a lot to outline a book you’ve read more than once to see how another author thinks about structure, scenes, and narrative arc.
  27. Read your work out loud, either at an open mic night or at a literary event like San Francisco’s LitQuake.
  28. Take an online class. I’ll push my best-selling memoir series here. I’m teaching a four-week class on Mary Karr's The Liars’ Club with Linda Joy Myers of NAMW in April. But find something in your genre that works for you.
  29. Find a number of authors you love on Facebook or Twitter and follow them. Repost and retweet their stuff and see what happens.
  30. Follow literary agents on Facebook and Twitter if you’re interested in developing agent relationships.
  31. Gift yourself a weekend away to brainstorm or write, or to just be with your own thoughts.
  32. Do a literary pilgrimage to see a site where a favorite author lived or wrote about, or, if you’re a memoirist, perhaps take a pilgrimage into your own past—to your childhood home, or the setting of your memoir.
  33. Visit a printing plant. Tours are open to the public at plants in Michigan, or at Lightning Source in Tennessee. It’s a serious education in your own craft to see how books get made.
  34. Write and publish an e-book. These can be as short as 25 or 30 pages (single stories or essays) and they can get your work on the map.
  35. Enter your work into a contest. You have nothing to lose!
  36. Tell your friends and family about your literary ambitions. It’s okay to dream big!
  37. Set up a separate bank account for your writing pursuits. Pay yourself a small sum a month for your writing, or when you get paid to publish. Start to think of your writing as a business in 2015.
  38. Attend an in-person writing class. You can find these at writing hot spots like The Grotto in San Francisco, Hugo House in Seattle, and Grub Street in Boston. Google places in your area.
  39. Map out a timeline for your book, or for your next book. Consider when would be a reasonable publication date for your book and write it down. Post it somewhere where you can see it to hold that date as a goal.
  40. Create a book cover for your book-in-progress. Nothing brings a book to life like making it “real,” even if it’s just a collage or a vision that serves as the basis of what you want the book to look like some day.
  41. Commit to a certain number of blog posts a month—one, two, four—and stick to it for the whole year.
  42. If you don’t already have a website, start one. If you have a website you know needs a facelift, commit to giving it one.
  43. Write a fan letter to your favorite author. I field fan mail for an author I work with and these letters are amazing displays of gratitude and appreciation. It’s also good karma.
  44. Create a vision board for your book. This is different than a book cover concept. It’s a collage of images and/or words that inspire you, and that can keep you motivated and disciplined with your writing goals.
  45. Memorize a poem.
  46. Get involved with local library event during National Library Week—April 12-18, 2015— a national observance sponsored by the American Library Association (ALA) and libraries across the country.
  47. Create a reading family night once a week.
  48. Set up a book donation site at your workplace during the holidays.
  49. Make a list of your top ten favorite books in your own genre and reread two of them.
  50. Get a logo made. Yes, the brand of you—as a writer—needs a logo.
  51. Write an affirmation statement that expresses all your strengths as a writer. Remind yourself why you write and allow yourself an opportunity to truly give yourself a compliment.
  52. Do something that shows your commitment to writing—plant something or buy yourself a house (or office) plant; get a piece of “writing” jewelry; or create or purchase something that’s meaningful to you that you see every day as a reminder to yourself about the meaning writing holds in your life.


Please add your own ideas and insights to this list! The more the better. What have you done in the past? What are you planning to do in 2015?

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Comments
  • Venessa Marie Perry

    This is great! Any idea about how to get on Huffpost? The link didnt work.

  • Brooke Warner Outlining

    Thank you, Vicky!

  • Vicky Drake

    I absolutely loved this post! This was how I discovered She Writes and some other great resources to help me at the start of my writing career. Thank you for such an excellent piece

  • Brooke Warner Outlining

    You're welcome, Karen! Yes to celebrating all successes, right? Happy 2015.

  • Karen A Szklany Writing

    Great list of 52, Brooke. I usually make a list of 10 each year, and  if I fulfill at least half of them I am in good shape. Usually it's 3 or 4....which I still celebrate.

    I think that I will write down a list of positive things that have happened in the past year to feel grateful for...and from that I may generate ideas for this 2015. 

    Thank you. ~:0)

  • Brooke Warner Outlining

    Ha ha, love it, Cathy. To a successful year of writing!

  • Cathy Krizik

    This list makes me want to quit my job and change my business card to "writer". That would mean I could put a big check mark next to #52, right? Plus -- extra bonus -- If I quit my job I'll wind up in the poor house so I'll have more time to read and write. Ha! Thanks for this. I'm printing it out and putting it on my fridge. Also makes me consider tossing the TV remote control in the front yard for the dog to devour. TV is too good these days. 

  • A great list. As to # 52, post that affirmation where you will see it every time you sit down to write: on the computer or your desk. 

  • Diana Y. Paul Writing

    Brooke, is there any way I can order a opy of your book if I have an iPad, not a kindle?

  • Brooke Warner Outlining

    Thanks, everyone!

    Kelly, mapping a book is basically outlining it, scene-by-scene. I do have a process I teach based on doing this for your own book that I call scaffolding. I write about it (with an example) in my new ebook, Breaking Ground on Your Memoir: http://www.amazon.com/Breaking-Ground-Your-Memoir-Motivation-ebook/dp/B00R45P0I6/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1420383841&sr=1-1&keywords=breaking+ground+on+your+memoir

  • Renee Cassese

    I love this list! I really need something like this to keep me focused and working toward my goals. Happy to say I can check off a few of these. Now time to go get the others done. Happy writing.

  • Diana Y. Paul Writing

    I'm with Kelly Hayes-Raitt.  Can you post or give us a link on how to "map" a book?  Other authors mention this but, except for Simple Mind software which is really mind "bubbles", I don't have a clue how to "map" the structure of a book.  Would be a great webinar!!  

  • Great list, Brooke, and congratulations on your partnership with SparkPoint Studio!  Their web site is fabulous.

    I'm curious about #26:  How do I "map" a book?  Have you written about this before and I missed it?

    Thanks and happy new year!

    Kelly Hayes-Raitt

    Mosey on over to my web site and sign in for your free gift -- an mp3 of me reading my book's first chapter about a beggar in Iraq!
  • Isabelle Laflèche

    This is terrific! Thank you for sharing & happy 2015! Also, congrats on the big news!

  • Diana Y. Paul Writing

    LOVE, LOVE, LOVE these 52 "resolutions" for the New Year.  I am doing or have done at least 50% but didn't know how I could stretch the writing adventure even more!  Thanks so much, Brooke!!

  • Brooke Warner Outlining

    That's great, Lynn! Love this idea, too, of writing outside your genre. good one!!

  • Lynn M. Andrews

    As someone who started to work towards/transition to a career as a writer in late 2014, I really appreciate these suggestions. And I am so happy to discover that I've actually done a few of these items already! I'm going to take that as a sign that writing is the right path for me! As for another suggestion, maybe try writing in a genre, voice, time period etc. that you haven't previously written in. 

    Thank you for sharing :)

  • Brooke Warner Outlining

    Awesome, Sarah. Welcome! We're so glad to have you. And thanks for the kind words. Time to kick some writing ass in 2015. :)

  • Sarah Perlmutter

    I absolutely love this list (it brought me here). See? I'm already starting to conquer the 52 ideas for writers in 2015. :-) Thanks for all the great ideas Brooke!

  • Brooke Warner Outlining

    @Oraynab, I would, yes. Not to the extent that they take over or stress you out, but I think it's good practice, and these kinds of accolades look very good on your bio that you are submitting when you're trying to get published in other capacities. Good luck!

  • DelRica

    Awesome ideas. I love it!

  • Oraynab Mohamad

    Hi Brooke,

    Would you recommend an aspiring online magazine writer to join fiction writing contests? I have committed the next year to building a name as a magazine writer and wondering just how much fiction contests will help me accomplish this.

  • Edith O Nuallain

    Great list! First on mine is to come back to She Writes! :)

  • Emily Lackey

    What an amazing and extensive list! I'm printing this out. Thanks for sharing, Brooke!