Hi to both subscribers and anyone new to this page, Liegois Media. On the first weekend of each month, I post this monthly newsletter about a teacher, ex-journalist, and part-time novelist from eastern Iowa (me, Jason Liegois) and what’s been going on with me, especially when it comes to my writing. I have three novels and a small poetry collection to my name after years of thinking about writing but not doing much of it.
I can’t wait to share what I’ve been working on, but for this edition of the newsletter, I want to focus on the personal writing goals I set for myself at the beginning of 2025, how they in some cases changed over the year, and whether or not I achieved them. Then, I’ll discuss what the goals for 2026 will be, which have certainly been shaped by the results of 2025’s goals.
Writing Goals 2025: The results

For the past several years since I have been writing this blog (and previous ones), I have made what I pointedly do not call New Year’s resolutions (too much bad juju with the term) but call yearly goals instead. At the end of the year or the start of the new one, I like to look back and see how successful I have been at reaching/achieving those goals. So, I will list them below, and review where I am at with each goal in turn.
At the time I listed these goals in January of last year, I called the first two of these “hard” goals and the second two “soft” goals. And during the course of the year, there were a couple items that popped up as well.
- I pledged to write a minimum 200,000 words, with the intention of cracking the 225,000 mark this year if at all possible. And with my results during the past two years, I should be able to make my daily minimum writing goals at least 80 percent of the time. These daily minimum writing goals (or should I say quotas?) are: I require myself to write at least 500 words per day or spend at least 30 minutes a day revising or planning for ongoing or prospective projects.
Over the course of the year, I decided to make this 225,000 number a hard goal. I also didn’t put as much emphasis on the daily goals as I did last year, although it didn’t make too much of a difference either way.
RESULT: SUCCESS!
I managed to limp over the 225,000-word mark late in the evening of 30 December 2025, even though I actually had a decent New Year’s Eve writing session. I’ll list the full totals below.
2025:
Words (total): 226,283
Words (monthly average): 18,857
Revising and planning time (total): 9,705 minutes
Revising and planning time (monthly average): 809 minutes
Daily writing goals met: 85%
By any stretch of the imagination, this is a massively successful year for me, even though looking at the half-year totals I wrote 1,000 less words during the second half of the year as opposed to the first half. It is a record word count total for me ever since I started keeping track of word count back in 2018. (The 53,878 words I wrote that year seems so small now.). The yearly total is more than 1,000 words above my 2024 total, and it is the fourth consecutive year I have managed to increase my word count total over the previous year. The 9,705 minutes I spent revising and/or planning were the most I have ever dedicated to the activity, topping the 8,955 minute record I set back in 2018. Meeting my writing goals 85 percent of the time matches the all-time level I set in 2023. - Get the rough draft of [The Yank Striker’s Journey]done by the end of [January], with an eventual release date of late May or early June. It would be a tight turnaround, but I don’t think it would be impossible.
RESULT: DIDN’T QUITE GET THINGS DONE ON TIME, BUT STILL A SUCCESS.
I did manage to get the rough draft of this book done by the end of January, but I underestimated the leg work I had to undertake regarding revisions, getting my manuscript out to beta readers, working with my publisher, and getting everything ready for the cover art of my book. To make a long story short, I managed to get The Yank Striker’s Journey published during the first part of July. I was still impressed because I managed to get a book written in less than two years which is an absolute record for me. In all, it was a fantastic experience and I’m elated at how the finished edition turned out. Looking forward to getting the next book done, though which book that will be is a question for this year’s goals. - [As of January 2024 – not a typo], I have 24,004 words written on The Untitled Pro Wrestling Project. I would like to make similar progress on this manuscript over the course of this year. It would be fantastic if I had a full rough draft on my hands, but I’m not quite committed to the idea – yet.
RESULT: PARTIAL SUCCESS
I have since given this series the official title of Kayfabe Stories. This is a story about a family of pro wrestlers from Texas and a member of this family, an aspiring young writer, who is determined to understand what it all means. As I’ll mention below, I don’t talk about my book-sized projects until they are ready to be published, so what I have been working on will be titled Kayfabe Stories 1 until we are ready to go with it.
As of now, I have written 50,440 words for Kayfabe Stories 1 at this point, which is a huge level of progress from where I was. What pace I want to get this done is an open question. - As far as my poetry, I would like to continue to add to my collection of original work. Whether I want to put together another chapbook this year might be an open question. I would like to get my poems published in an outside publication, whether it be a poetry periodical or something regional. I have no acquaintance with this whole process, so I am sure this will be a full learning experience.
RESULT: MOSTLY A SUCCESS
By my count, I wrote twenty-nine poems this calendar year. This is by far the most productive I have ever been on a poetry front.
My poem “Peace of Mind” was published in Lyrical Iowa 2025, the annual anthology of the Iowa Poetry Association. It was a great experience for me, and I was happy to be published in an edition dedicated to Rodney Reeves, a poetry acquaintance from Burlington, Iowa, who was an officer with the IPA at the time of his passing last year.
New Year, New Goals for 2026
…a mixed bag. The first of these goals will be word count/quota oriented, while the remainder will be centered on the projects I have in development at the moment1.
AUTHOR’S NOTE: All project titles of works currently in development are working titles unless otherwise noted. I often have solid titles in mind for these projects, but I’m a bit superstitious about revealing them until they are close to publication. The names of the series I mention in this newsletter, however, are the true names.
- Since I made it to 225,000 words last year, I think I would like to try and make it to at least that number in 2026. If I push myself, I think I could even make it to 230,000 words. That sounds like a nice, round number, doesn’t it2?
I’m not going to worry about reaching what I call my daily writing goal (or maybe quota would be a better term for it) more than I did last year. I keep my goal for this at 80 percent completion of those daily goals.
Timetable: End of year. - The book I want to complete the soonest is a project I currently call The Land, the River, and the Waste (LRW). It is a sci-fi/horror novel set in Iowa, leaning on the environmental damage being done to my home state. Think of Night of the Living Dead, The Purge, The Crazies, Fast Food Nation, Dear Marty, We Crapped in Our Nest, and The Swine Republic poured into the creative stew of my head, along with some hometown and later memories. I’m now more than 23,000 words into the rough draft of the book.
Timetable: Rough draft completed by the first half of 2026, publication (in one form or another) by the holiday season of 2026 (hope, hope?). - The Fool Series. The Fool 2 is the sequel to my debut novel, The Holy Fool,whichwas a story about Iowa native Samuel “Sonny” Turner, a newspaper columnist for the Chicago Journal. Set in the fall of 2008, Sonny’s mentor and editor Gus tasks him with investigating the paper’s unscrupulous owner and his plans to sell the paper to a rival. In part, it is my own autopsy of the state of American journalism and what might take its place.
The Fool 2 revisits Sonny in 2024. He’s left Chicago and founded his own news site, The Fool. In addition to the US’s chaotic political situation, he’s dealing with life as an emigrant in Switzerland and raising his family and children there.
I’m past 11,000 words on this rough draft. Of the sequels to my works, this is the one I want to get wrapped up first because I want to turn it into a small series, at least. I want to see how the events of 2026 shake out in this country and around the world before I decide on how to wrap it up. The fact that much of the action has occurred in Chicago will be useful for my purposes. However, I want to finish LRW first.
Timetable: Rough draft by the end of 2026, publication ASAP afterwards. - The Yank Striker 3 (YS3). The Yank Striker series follows the exploits of DJ Ryan, a fledgling American soccer player who leaves his family behind to try his fortune with an English Premier League team in the East End of London. This has more information about the first book in the series, and this link will brief you in about Book 2, The Yank Striker’s Journey. YS3 continues DJ’s growth as a footballer as he faces both setbacks and opportunities.
Despite the fact I’m over 20,000 words of a rough draft into this project, I think I might keep this on a back burner for a while. While I love the story and its continuation from The Yank Striker’s Journey, I don’t think I can justify going three books into a series when I want to diversify the things I’m writing about (see LRW).
Timetable: As of right now, I do not have a timetable for when I want to have a rough draft or publication, but it will be after LRW and The Fool 2. - Kayfabe Stories:
The first book (Kayfabe Stories 1) will not be a priority until I at least get a rough draft done for LRW.
Timetable: ??? for a rough draft and publication, but I’m too far ahead to stop now.
For now, this will be the extent of my writing goals for the year. Hopefully, I’ll be as successful with my goals for 2026 as I was for 2025.
Personal News

It’s been a bit of strangeness as 2025 has ticked over into 2026, but there have been far better journalists who have commented on these issues, so I will leave it to them to do so.
The biggest situation was the death of my mother in law.
Marlene passed away on the last weekend of December. She was in her late 80’s and frankly had been in poor health ever since she’d broken her leg on Christmas Day two years previously. However, that doesn’t make it any easier for either my wife, her three sisters, and my kids and nieces and nephews.
She ran a tavern in Muscatine for more than 30 years and did much to look after her family, customers, and community, and she’s the main reason my wife was the amazing person she became. She’ll be missed by all of us.
Writing Quote(s) of the Month:
This is a good idea to keep in mind especially when you start revising your own work.
When all the details fit in perfectly, something is probably wrong with the story.
― Charles Baxter, Burning Down the House: Essays on Fiction
It’s fascinating when you think of an issue (in this case, how writers portray characters of different genders) as being contemporary, only to find out people were talking about this issue centuries previously.
I am satisfied that if a book is a good one, it is so whatever the sex of the author may be. All novels are or should be written for both men and women to read, and I am at a loss to conceive how a man should permit himself to write anything that would be really disgraceful to a woman, or why a woman should be censured for writing anything that would be proper and becoming for a man.
― Anne Brontë, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
When I Post
Check out this post for when and what I post on a regular basis.
How to support me😊.
As always, go to the links on the side if you are reading this on a desktop/laptop or the links on my profile on mobile. If you follow the links, you will be able to buy both the paperback and ebook versions of my books on Amazon. If you just put “Jason Liegois” in Google. you’ll find them on the first page of search results.
I have quite a few places that now carry at least some of my books, some of the many great and fantastic independent bookstores in Iowa and the Midwest.
These are the bookstores you’ll find at least some of my work3:
- Bent Oak Books, 619 7th St. Fort Madison.
- Burlington By The Book, 301 Jefferson St, Burlington.
- The Corner and More, 703 Main St., Mediapolis.
- Green Point Mercantile, 217 E. 2nd St., Muscatine.
- The Brewed Book, 1524 Harrison St., Davenport.
- The Black Rose, 116 W. Main St., West Branch
- Beaverdale Books, 2629 Beaver Ave. # S1, Des Moines.
- Pella Books, 824 Franklin St, Pella.
- The Atlas Collective, 1801 5th Ave, Moline, Illinois – my first out of Iowa bookstore, very proud of this.
I’m always looking for some new places to place my books, so feel free to hit me up in the comments if you have a suggestion.
For those who are budget conscious among all of you, my books are part of the collections of the Fort Madison, Burlington, and Musser (Muscatine) public libraries.
My poetry book The Flow and the Journey is available at Bent Oak, Green Point, Burlington By the Book, and The Corner and More, but it is also available online but not on Amazon. I’ve set up a new online store for copies of my chapbook on my WordPress site, Liegois Media. If you want to get a physical copy, go ahead and click on the button below.

The Flow and the Journey
The first collection of poetry from author Jason Liegois.
If you don’t have the budget for a paid subscription, feel free to just send me a one-time payment of whatever you have the budget for.
Final Thoughts
2025 is in the books, and I’m hoping 2026 is as eventful or successful, or more eventful and successful, than the last year. Best wishes to everyone.
All you writers keep writing and everyone take care of themselves.
-30-
While I do appreciate you following this blog, I really would like you to subscribe to my Substack page. By subscribing to that page, you’ll not only be receiving my Substack newsletter, The Writing Life With Jason Liegois (the companion blog to this one), but you’ll also be signing up for my email list. Just click the button below.
- In yet another attempt to try and keep this modest little newsletter from seeming repetitive, I might attempt to write some pocket summaries of the projects I am working on and just hyperlink them to the newsletters. I’ll likely try this next month. ↩︎
- I usually make it to 200,000 words by around Thanksgiving of each year for the past couple of years. ↩︎
- All Iowa locations unless otherwise noted. ↩︎






















