Get My Latest Short Story The Wheel for Free (STORY52 No. 11)

Usually, I make my short stories available for free on Mondays. However, since I already published No. 11 of the STORY52 series, The Wheel, yesterday, I decided to run a little experiment and make it free from Saturday through Wednesday to see if this helps me reach more readers.

On YouTube, fewer people watch my tutorials from Friday to Sunday. Viewership starts to rise again on Mondays and typically peaks on Wednesdays. I assumed the same pattern might apply to book sales—but maybe I’m wrong.

It could be that people are more likely to browse Amazon for new books to discover on weekends, when they’ve got more time for leisure activities. Let’s find out.

As always, the digital edition is free. You can read it on a Kindle device or via the Kindle Online Reader if you don’t own the device.

Synopsis:

A village. A wheel. A task that must never end.
When Joseph Richter becomes stranded in Treadwell, he encounters a community whose daily life revolves around a single, inexplicable duty: the relentless turning of a massive wooden wheel. No one asks questions. No one stops working. Never.

A dark, oppressive short story by Michael Brig, approx. 11,000 words.

US version | https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GJDSY9RR
German version | https://www.amazon.de/dp/B0GJF9XW2H

If you enjoyed the story, I’d really appreciate it if you left a review on the good old Amazon website. And if you never want to miss a giveaway, you can sign up for my mailing list here.

Take care,
BRIG

I Should Have Finished My STORY52 Project First

I bit off more than I could chew.

Trying to write 12 books in 12 months is still something I believe is possible for me—but not while I’m also trying to finish my short story project. Today, I uploaded story no. 11 (The Wheel). You can get it for free today if you have Kindle Unlimited. If not, just wait until next week, when I’ll make it freely available from Monday through Friday.

It’s around 11,000 words—roughly a fifth of a full novel.

When I look at the other 41 short stories I still plan to release as part of this project, I have to admit it will take more time than I originally hoped.

Whenever I try to write, edit, or translate another novel, that time has to come out of the STORY52 project. And when I focus on the short stories, there’s no time left for the novels. It’s a dead end with no easy solution, especially since my YouTube project takes time too—just like my real-life work.

I estimate that writing The Wheel took about 12 hours, followed by another 12 hours of editing and around 4 hours of translation. Today alone, I spent 3 hours designing the cover, finalizing the formatting, and uploading it to KDP, including the metadata. That’s roughly 30 hours of work in total.

For a full novel, I estimate around 60 hours for writing, 90 hours for editing, and 30 hours for translation. The additional 3 hours for cover design, formatting, and KDP setup stay roughly the same.

When I add up the work still required to publish the remaining 41 short stories, I’m looking at the equivalent of 6–9 full novels of work in this project alone.

Because of that, my main goals for 2026 have shifted:

  • Finish the STORY52 project completely
  • Publish the second part of my 17 series
  • Publish as many additional novels as possible—though certainly not 11 more

Last year, I published 10 short stories and 3 full novels. Reaching 42 short stories and 4–5 novels is now the new goal. If I can achieve that, I should be ready to attempt 12 novels in 12 months next year.

It’s not a great way to start the year—completely turning my main goal upside down—but I don’t see how I can realistically manage 12 novels in 12 months and 42 short stories on top of that. Besides, there is also private life which has thrown some serious health issues my way that I need to deal with.

It’s a mess.

I just hope I can clean up that mess and be ready to tackle the big 12-in-12 project next year.

Are Quickly Written Books Bad Books?

I’ve seen people say they don’t want to read a book that came out of NaNoWriMo.

If you’re not familiar, NaNoWriMo stands for National Novel Writing Month. Participants are challenged to write a novel of at least 50,000 words in a single month. You can technically start any time, but every November 1st, NaNoWriMo takes over social media as thousands of writers announce their goal to complete a novel in 30 days that day.

For some reason, many people assume that books written under this challenge must be badly written. I once stumbled across a Medium article (before they banned me) titled: “Thanks, but if your book was written in 30 days, I’m not interested.”

Sure, with so many people participating, there will inevitably be a lot of rough drafts—and some of those even get published. Perhaps the author of the Medium post encountered some poorly written stories and then generalized from there.

But just because a book is written quickly doesn’t mean it’s bad.

Think about the opposite: does a book automatically become good if it takes a year to write it? Or is a novel written over a decade necessarily superior to one completed in two years? The answer is obviously: no.

Consider some famous examples:

  • Stephen King wrote The Running Man in just two months.
  • Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson was written in two months too.
  • Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea was completed in roughly 8 weeks.
  • Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men was written in a month.
  • H.P. Lovecraft often wrote stories within weeks, sometimes days.
  • Stevenson reportedly wrote The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in only three days.

It’s not limited to literature. The script for Rocky took Sylvester Stallone four days. Sam Raimi wrote The Evil Dead in three weeks. Even a complex drama like Good Will Hunting was written in just seven weeks.

Music follows the same pattern: Ozzy Osbourne claimed that Paranoid, one of Black Sabbath’s biggest hits, was written in ten minutes—music and lyrics. Paul McCartney wrote Yesterday in a dream and merely jotted it down upon waking. Smoke on the Water was improvised in front of journalists who wanted to see Deep Purple write a song live.

The bottom line: when creativity strikes, time doesn’t matter. You can write a masterpiece in days, or toil for a lifetime and produce something forgettable.

If you’ve got an idea, sit down and write. And if you can’t stop writing, chances are you’re creating something so engaging that readers will struggle to put the finished book down.

Of course, editing and professional proofreading matter. But don’t assume that a book automatically becomes better simply because you spent more time on it. What truly matters is the idea and your talent for shaping it into a piece of art. And if you have both, you might write a hit song in your sleep, a timeless classic-novel in days, or an Oscar-winning script in weeks.

Get THE LAST PRESIDENT For FREE This Week (STORY52 No. 10/52)

The final short story of the year is published. You can get “The Last President” for free until Friday on Amazon:

America stands before the most important decision of its political future: Democrats or Republicans? Who is better suited to lead a nation into an era in which artificial intelligence shapes the world of work?

A satirical short story about political power in the age of AI – by Michael Brig, approx. 1,000 words.

US Version | https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GCSHZD1P
German Version | https://www.amazon.de/dp/B0GCSCNMZP

As always there might be some delay with the free promo on Amazon depending on the country that you live in, but it should be set to free within the next couple of hours until the promo runs out on Friday.

If you liked it, please leave me a review on Amazon, thanks.

What I’m Going to Blog About in 2026

I’m going to stick with daily blogging. It’s fun, it helps me collect my thoughts, and it keeps me accountable.

What it doesn’t do—at least not very well—is increase blog traffic. As expected, the traffic spike I saw last month was mostly caused by scammers adding my site to their bot comment databases. I receive plenty of suspicious emails and replys about AI tools I should “recommend” to my readers, as well as automation services that promise to send me traffic and make me famous as easily as snapping a finger.

It’s all nonsense.

Real traffic is probably only about a third of what I saw last month.

Still, I’ll continue writing daily, as I enjoy daily tasks. Establishing a routine is basically half the battle. And blogging is a mostly free way to market my books—even if, for now, I’m only marketing them to a handful of regular readers.

Topics I’ll Write About Next Year

I’ll stick to the topics I’ve already started:

  • Blogging basics
  • SEO basics
  • Movie and TV show reviews
  • My author project

I’ll also publish regular updates on my goals for 2026:

  • Writing 12 books in 12 weeks (expect weekly updates)
  • Reading 52 books in 52 weeks, with a weekly book review
  • Monthly “Author in Progress” reports, sharing all my numbers in real time

In addition, I want to share my experiences with freelancing. I’ve been doing it for over a decade, and during that time I’ve had to reinvent myself more than once. For example, I used to make most of my income as a translator in the beginning. Around three to four years ago, translation work dropped by about 95%, largely due to ChatGPT and other AI tools. Still, the core principles of freelancing remain the same.

Adding Images and Graphics

In general, I need to think more about adding graphics and photos. I’m a writer first, so the text should always be the main focus. But an image here and a graphic there can make longer pieces easier to digest and give readers a much-needed break from pure text.

Tracking

In my report posts, I want to expand what I track. Especially with writing, it could be interesting to see how many words I can produce in a given amount of time. How long does it take to edit a 60,000-word book? How long does translating that same book take?

These are interesting questions to answer.

I’d also love to include numbers for book sales and Amazon KENP (Kindle Unlimited page reads). But to be honest, I’m not selling many copies right now, and there are usually only a handful of KENP readers each month.

So there isn’t much to report yet. If that ever changes, I’ll add it to the reports.