Columns > Published on January 12th, 2018

Looking Back: The 2017 One Story Per Week Writing Challenge

Last year I wrote about the 2017 One Story Per Week Writing Challenge and hosted an online writing group and support network for participants. One year on and 2017 was a hell of a ride. Some participants managed to write 52 stories in 2017, whereas others (present company included) didn’t quite hit that gold standard. Still, we all learned so much about ourselves and our writing.

Stories Written  

I wrote 25 stories last year including two novellas, one of which was co-written with Bob Pastorella. In addition to this, I wrote 30,000 words of a novel and six extracts (17,500 words) as ‘Martin,’ a neurotic teacher who has haunted me since I was at University and turns up every few years. Whilst I do not have a record of exactly how many words I wrote last year (considering the words exhausted on numerous drafts, plans for written and unwritten stories, character studies, etc.) the total word count for all stories in their current draft is 173,909, which breaks down to around 14,500 per month, 3,334 per week, and just shy of 500 per day.

Lessons Learnt  

Not only did I learn many new lessons, but many past lessons were reinforced. Here are just a few of my key takeaways.

  • The point of a goal is more important than the goal itself. Rather than writing 52 stories per year, ask yourself Why am I doing this? In my case the objectives were to write more, to develop a daily writing practice, to learn more about and cultivate a writing voice, to gain confidence as a writer, and to finish more stories. This was the spirit of the goal, the greater purpose of the challenge. Thus, when I was confronted with a large project one-third into the challenge, that I knew would see my total story count drop, I took the risk and didn’t look back.  
  • The first draft may indeed suck but it is much more valuable than the unfinished draft. It’s okay, too, to suck at first. Give yourself permission to suck.  
  • Sometimes rewriting a story from a different perspective or in a different tense can breathe new life into and improve it. Experiment with form and perspectives. Don’t be afraid to switch gears when things get tough and you don’t feel a story is working. And as Elmore Leonard said—“try to leave out all the parts readers skip.”
  • If you set yourself a challenging goal and fail, do you really fail? James Cameron said, “if you set your goals ridiculously high and it’s a failure, you will fail above everyone else’s success.”
  • The size or form of the story is of far less importance than whether the story is any good—I would rather miss out on a market than under- or overwrite at the detriment of the story.

Best Outcomes

I wrote a great deal more fiction in 2017 than I have ever written in a single year previous. I showed my work to far more people, too, and gained increased confidence in my own ability as a writer. I said going into 2017 that I had to write more, that I had to improve, that the time for talk was over—it was all about the action, the writing. I achieved what I wanted to.  

Biggest Challenges

Perhaps the biggest challenge was truly believing the purpose of the goal was more meaningful than the goal itself. I’m competitive. I like to set myself ridiculous challenges and ‘win.’ I had to constantly remind myself that it was better to write the stories I wanted to write than to simply write 52 stories. Though logically it made sense—it would have been better to write just one good story than 52 passionless stories for the sake of meeting an arbitrary goal.   

That said, as the host of the One Story Per Week Writing Challenge, there were times when I felt like I would be a failure and a let-down if I didn’t write 52 stories, but I had to remind myself of the spirit of the goal and that, whatever happened, 2017 was—hands-down—my most productive year as a fiction writer.

The Other Participants

I invited each participant in the One Story Per Week Challenge to answer a series of questions regarding their own experiences (keep an eye out for a future post on the Michael David Wilson blog with full answers). Here are some of the key takeaways.  

Mind Set

“I learned that finding time to write and combatting procrastination is on me. There is always time to write, but only if you put your force of will into it, and that is hard. But if you want it, you'll do it.”—Kev Harrison (33 stories)

“I learned that if I put my mind to it and really push myself, I can output way more than I realize.”—Hillary Dodge (35 stories)

Community

“The best things [about the challenge] were the chance to connect with other writers, and also to test my mettle and stretch myself as a writer.”—CC Adams (52 stories)

“The best thing to come out of the challenge for me was connecting with other writers and going through the process of beta reading and being beta read. Writing seems like a solitary pursuit but it doesn't have to be and everyone can benefit from constructive criticism.”—Travis Earl (52 stories)

Finding Your Voice and Routine

“The challenge helped me find my voice and the style of fiction I write, it’s different to what I imagined. It also made me realise that the more you write the more ideas you’ll get, but not every one of those is good or will work. I’m less precious about every word I write.”—Grant Longstaff (27 stories)

“I've been able to make writing as much of my daily routine as eating breakfast—it's simply something that I do, and after years of not writing for various bullshit reasons I've figured out how to do it regularly. I don't really look at a day as being a good one if I've not done any writing, even a few hundred words.”—Brian Asman (52 stories)

“I had to remind myself a few times throughout the year that some/many of these pieces/stories didn't need to be perfect and that you could view them just as a sketch for something else like how visual artists might … Like, I don't sit down on the guitar and get annoyed at myself for only noodling about for a bit. That’s usually where songs/riffs/sweet, sweet licks come from. So if I ‘waste’ some time writing a bunch of words that don't turn into what I expected it’s probably not been a total loss.”—Jonathan Cosgrove (35 stories)

“I learned a lot about making room in my day for writing. I've never been a ‘write every day’ writer, but I came closer to that this past year. At first, I didn't think I'd use a lot of what I was writing when I forced myself to sit down when I didn't want to—when I didn't like the words that were coming to me. But here we are four days in to 2018 and I'm already cannibalizing several thousand of those throw-away words into other things. Every piece is useful in ways you might not suspect, I think. Like using every piece of an animal.”—Sarah Read (46 stories)


How was your writing year in 2017? I’d love for you to answer the (slightly modified) questions I asked One Story Per Week Challenge participants.

  1. How many stories did you write?
  2. What did you learn?
  3. What were your biggest achievements?  
  4. What were your biggest challenges and toughest obstacles?

See you in the comments.

About the author

Michael David Wilson is the founder of the popular UK horror website, podcast, and publisher, This Is Horror. Michael is the author of the novella, The Girl in the Video, and the novel, They’re Watching, co-written with Bob Pastorella. His second novella, House of Bad Memories, lands in 2021 via Grindhouse Press. His work has appeared in various publications including The NoSleep PodcastDim ShoresDark Moon DigestLitReactorHawk & Cleaver’s The Other Stories, and Scream. You can connect with Michael on Twitter @WilsonTheWriter. For more information visit www.michaeldavidwilson.co.uk.

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