Writing
Finish Dryads to
Discover (new urban fantasy, first in series)--In Progress
Start Dragons to
Deceive (sequel to Dryads to Discover)
Finish “The Unnumbered World” (short story from the Catalyst
Chronicles series, set between Twinned
Universes and Catalyst in the Crucible, started but not finished)
Revise “The Fighting Roses of Sharon” (standalone fantasy short
story, draft complete)
Write and submit to 3-4 anthologies/magazines?--In Progress
Work on Welcome to
Costume City (middle grade story, started but not finished)
Plan overall arc for Selathen Avatars series (followup to fantasy Season Avatars series)--In Progress
Publishing
Prepare and publish 1 or 2 box sets for the Season Avatars
series
Publish Dryads to
Discover
Publish “The Fighting Roses of Sharon” as standalone
Consider collecting fantasy short stories into single
eBook/print collection
Marketing
Prepare at least one pull quote graphic for each
novella/novel
Send out at least four newsletters
Run a promotion every 1-2 months
Sell 150 units (books, short stories, collections) = 12.5
books/month
Participate in local literary festivals when possible
WisCon?
Other
Finish Jedi costume!
General Leia costume?
Make Santa Jawa costume
Finish 2 Death Star pillows--In Progress (One almost done)
Crochet blanket for Alex
Crochet at least ten SW characters
Troop 20-25 times
Read 150 books
Take 3-4 vacation days to be alone and work on projects
Household
Garage sale!
Get compost bin?
Landscape back yard
This may be overly ambitious, especially since this doesn't account for work, household chores, or family (though trooping does count for family time). I may have trouble achieving half of this. Still, I'd rather aim too high than too low. At least preparing and posting a list of goals helps me establish priorities and forces me to commit to them. It's possible some of my writing projects may shift in priority as my interests or circumstances change. We'll see how much I've accomplished at the end of 2018.
Are you setting goals for the new year? If so, what are they? Feel free to share in the comments.
That's an ambitious list, but it sounds exciting on all fronts!
ReplyDeleteKeep us posted.
I really want to see that Santa Jawa costume. Though Jawas seem better suited to elves.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Maria!
ReplyDeletePat, I'm going to make a Jawa robe and hood using red velvet and white faux fur trim. I've seen other people do it, and the costume should be a hit at a local parade we troop every year.