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On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing Nonfiction Paperback – April 5, 2016


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On Writing Well has been praised for its sound advice, its clarity and the warmth of its style. It is a book for everybody who wants to learn how to write or who needs to do some writing to get through the day, as almost everybody does in the age of e-mail and the Internet.

Whether you want to write about people or places, science and technology, business, sports, the arts or about yourself in the increasingly popular memoir genre, On Writing Well offers you fundamental priciples as well as the insights of a distinguished writer and teacher. With more than a million copies sold, this volume has stood the test of time and remains a valuable resource for writers and would-be writers.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

On Writing Well belongs on any shelf of serious reference works for writers.” — New York Times

“Not since The Elements of Style has there been a guide to writing as well presented and readable as this one. A love and respect for the language is evident on every page.” — Library Journal

About the Author

William Zinsser is a writer, editor and teacher. He began his career on the New York Herald Tribune and has since written regularly for leading magazines. During the 1970s he was master of Branford College at Yale. His 17 books, ranging from baseball to music to American travel, include the influential Writing to Learn and Writing About Your Life. He teaches at the New School in New York.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 0060891548
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Harper Perennial; Anniversary,Reprint edition (April 5, 2016)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 336 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780060891541
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0060891541
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 15 - 18 years
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 0.76 x 5.31 x 8 inches
  • Customer Reviews:

About the author

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William Zinsser
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William Zinsser, a writer, editor, and teacher, is a fourth-generation New Yorker, born in 1922. His 18 books, which range in subject from music to baseball to American travel, include several widely read books about writing.

On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing Nonfiction, first published in 1976, has sold almost 1.5 million copies to three generations of writers, editors, journalists, teachers and students.

Writing to Learn which uses examples of good writing in science, medicine and technology to demonstrate that writing is a powerful component of learning in every subject.

Writing Places, a memoir recalling the enjoyment and gratitude the places where William Zinsser has done his writing and his teaching and the unusual people he encountered on that life journey.

Mr. Zinsser began his career in 1946 at the New York Herald Tribune, where he was a writer, editor, and critic. In 1959 he left to become a freelance writer and has since written regularly for leading magazines. From 1968 to 1972 he was a columnist for Life. During the 1970s he was at Yale, where, besides teaching nonfiction writing and humor writing, he was master of Branford College. In 1979 he returned to New York and was a senior editor at the Book-of-the-Month Club until 1987, when he went back to freelance writing. He teaches at the New School and at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. He is an adviser on writing to schools, colleges, and other organizations. He holds honorary degrees from Wesleyan University, Rollins College, and the University of Southern Indian and is a Literary Lion of the New York Public Library.

William Zinsser's other books include Mitchell & Ruff, a profile of jazz musicians Dwike Mitchell and Willie Ruff; American Places, a pilgrimage to 16 iconic American sites; Spring Training, about the spring training camp of the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1988; and Easy to Remember: The Great American Songwriters and Their Songs; and he is the Inventing the Truth: The Art and Craft of Memoir. A jazz pianist and songwriter, he wrote a musical revue, What's the Point, which was performed off Broadway in 2003.

Mr. Zinsser lives in his home town with his wife, the educator and historian Caroline Zinsser. They have two children, Amy Zinsser, a business executive, and John Zinsser, a painter and teacher.

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
5,268 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the writing style good, casual, and easy to read. They also describe the depth of content as informative, useful, and optimistic. Opinions are mixed on the content, with some finding it wonderful and bursting with good ideas, while others say it's not quite as interesting and hard to follow.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

324 customers mention "Writing style"313 positive11 negative

Customers find the writing style good, encouraging readers to embrace simplicity. They also say the book is easy to understand and retain, with a digestible amount of clever clichés. Readers say it's not too academic, providing a smattering of meticulous examples. They mention that the book starts off wonderfully and moves in graceful strides.

"...1. Good writing must exhibit humanity and warmth. A writer's product is himself, not the subject that he is writing about.2...." Read more

"This book helped me improve my writing style found it be a very informative and useful book...." Read more

"...Great insight, though, and easy to understand and implement." Read more

"...What I particularly enjoyed is the plethora of examples and excerpts through which the author presented the concepts...." Read more

252 customers mention "Depth of content"249 positive3 negative

Customers find the book very informative, useful, and pragmatic. They say it teaches you about the drafting process, has practical applications, and is encouraging. Readers also mention that the author is not a grammarian or pedant.

"...Trust your material.6. Make your lead so compelling that the reader can't put your book down.7...." Read more

"This book helped me improve my writing style found it be a very informative and useful book...." Read more

"...Great insight, though, and easy to understand and implement." Read more

"...I got a lot out of it. He gives a lot of useful tips: think what the reader wants to know next after each sentence; the last sentence of each..." Read more

28 customers mention "Humor"28 positive0 negative

Customers find the book very humorous and use wit in it. They also appreciate the practical tips and helpful examples.

"...In the end, this book suggests adding humor and surprise to writing, the question is how to be humorous in writing. The recipe is not given." Read more

"...He has both wit and charm. He supplies many funny stories. He makes fun of pompous academics and pedagogues. He is empathetic and warm...." Read more

"...And the humor teaches you as it entertains.This book is the real deal; for me, on a level with Strunk and White...." Read more

"...He has a supple wit, and a highly readable style that make the absorption of his subject matter very enjoyable...." Read more

29 customers mention "Content"15 positive14 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the content. Some find the book wonderful, invaluable, and bursting with good ideas. They also describe the author as sympathetic, enthusiastic, and encouraging. Others however, find the genres not quite as interesting, the second half endlessly repetitive, and hard to follow. They say the book often rambles on and is not clear or concise.

"...what Zinsser calls the four articles of faith: Clarity, simplicity, brevity and humanity...." Read more

"...Not only was Part 3 hard to follow, he didn’t always appear to be an expert on the subject he was talking about...." Read more

"...Clarity, simplicity, brevity, and humanity are Zinsser's "four articles of faith."..." Read more

"...commands - "Go to it" - that have a cheerleader's enthusiasm and lack of content...." Read more

The second time I bought this book, have to leave a review with 5 stars
5 out of 5 stars
The second time I bought this book, have to leave a review with 5 stars
I bought tow of it one for my friend and the other for myself. On Writing Well has been praised for its sound advice, its clarity and the warmth of its style. It is a book for everybody who wants to learn how to write or who needs to do some writing to get through the day, as almost everybody does in the age of e-mail and the Internet. Whether you want to write about people or places, science and technology, business, sports, the arts or about yourself in the increasingly popular memoir genre, On Writing Well offers you fundamental priciples as well as the insights of a distinguished writer and teacher. With more than a million copies sole, this volume has stood the test of time and remains a valuable resource for writers and would-be writers. Whether you want to write about people or places, science and technology, business, sports, the arts or about yourself in the increasingly popular memoir genre, On Writing Well offers you fundamental priciples as well as the insights of a distinguished writer and teacher. With more than a million copies sold, this volume has stood the test of time and remains a valuable resource for writers and would-be writers.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on June 29, 2013
I read On Writing Well by William Zinsser twice. I loved this book. sOn Writing Well embodies what excellent writing should be. At first I thought the book would be a dull "how to write" book, much like a cookbook, without a lot of creativity. Instead, On Writing Well has depth and soul. It challenges me to ask, what can I achieve for the glory of God if I implement these nuggets of wisdom?
On Writing Well gives me a high standard to emulate and debunks many myths perpetrated by people I consider more knowledgeable than myself. This book is a gift to anyone who takes writing seriously.

I also believe there is a spiritual battle waged in Christian writing. The evil one does not want God's glory to be revealed in human creativity. If he can persuade Christian writers through mediocrity and deception that publishing articles or books is the ultimate goal without a passion for truth, beauty, and redemption, our writing will be compromised. We will sacrifice our best-God's creativity--for a cheap counterfeit. As Zinsser states so well, we need role models who exhibit good writing that we can copy to help us develop our own style.

I also feel "normal" now knowing I am not "crazy" with my compulsion to rewrite things over and over as I fidget for the right construction. I take comfort in knowing at least Zinsser does the same thing.
There are too many good points On Writing Well to summarize in a few short paragraphs, so I want to break them down into the four parts of the book as Zinsser presented them.

Part I Principles
All these principles would apply equally to fiction and nonfiction.

1. Good writing must exhibit humanity and warmth. A writer's product is himself, not the subject that he is writing about.
2. Write clearly and eliminate all clutter.
3. Be yourself on paper as you are in person.
4. Write the way that is most natural to you.
5. Write to please yourself--I like to think I am writing to please God. To paraphrase from the Bible, whatever I do, do it as if I am doing it unto the Lord, and give Him the glory. That means the reader deserves the best I have to offer.
6. Writing is art through imitation.
7. Avoid journalese and cheap words--the world has enough of them already (I know because I caption them every day). Instead, surprise the reader with the rhythm and cadence of verbs and nouns that express vitality and beauty in unexpected ways.
8. Respect the English language and write correctly--it will show you care about the reader and respect his intelligence.

Part II Methods
All these principles would apply equally to fiction and nonfiction.

2. Unity ensures orderliness in terms of presentation, pronoun, tense, and mood.
3. Enthusiasm will keep the reader engaged.
4. Leave the reader with one new thought or idea to consider after he finishes your story.
5. Be flexible--let your writing take you where it wants to go. Trust your material.
6. Make your lead so compelling that the reader can't put your book down.
7. Always have more material to draw from than you think you will need.
8. Look for the story in your writing--people love stories.
9. Know when to end (I have read my share of great books that I never finished because I became bored in the waning chapters).
10. Use active and precise verbs and adjectives. Avoid overuse of adverbs.
My translation is, if it sounds like writing, it's a poor substitute. My favorite books are those where I get lost in the story--I have been transported to another world or another time and forget I am reading until something or somebody disturbs me.
11. Omit the "little qualifiers."
In my book Children of Dreams, I did a word search for qualifiers I tend to overuse like "very" and removed them. I also did a search for exclamation points--most of those came out also. The change in overall appearance was stunning.
12. Avoid contractions like "I'd, he'd, and we'd." I don't write these words captioning because I don't like them (they don't exist in my captioning dictionary), so I am glad to know I don't ever need to write them.
13. Don't overstate. I have been turned off by writers who overstated a fact. My translation is, don't insult the reader's intelligence.
14. Don't compare your writing to others. Your only competition is with yourself.
15. If something can't be fixed, take it out. In captioning parlance, when in doubt, take it out. Better not to caption it than to caption it wrong.
16. Keep paragraphs short.
17. Rewrite, rewrite, rewrite.

Part III Forms (Noted for my own edification)

1. Dramatic nonfiction should have no inferring or fabricating, but a condensing of time and events is acceptable to tell the story, raising the craft of writing nonfiction to art.
2. Seize control of style and substance when writing about people and places; take unusual care with details.
3. A memoir covers a short span of time and is not autobiographical. Use sound, smell, touch and rich remembrance to allow the reader to enjoy the journey alongside you.
4. When writing science, write as an ordinary person, sequentially, and never forget the human element is what will make the story come alive.
5. Strip from business writing all the extra "lingo" and write with what Zinsser calls the four articles of faith: Clarity, simplicity, brevity and humanity.
6. Sports writing is rich in opportunity for nonfiction writers--a source of material for social change and social history. Strip away the sports jargon and write with active verbs and colorful adjectives. (This chapter spoke to me personally as it takes months of training to become a competent sports captioner. Because I hope to incorporate sports into my creative writing, I'm glad to know that good sports writing eliminates the junkie lingo that I caption every day).
7. Criticism is a serious intellectual act undertaken by those trained in the area of inquiry. The first qualification should be to love the type of art being critiqued.
8. Humor is the secret ingredient to nonfiction writing that adds zest and joy to truth and life.

Part IV Attitudes
The following would apply to fiction except for 6 through 10. All would apply to nonfiction.

1. Avoid cheap writing, clichés, and breeziness. Develop a style that the reader with recognize as "your voice."
2. Write with sincerity. Your best credential is yourself.
3. Focus on process, not outcome. Zinsser calls it, "The Tyranny of the Final Product."
4. Quest and intention should guide us in our writing. Quest is the search for meaning and intention is what we wish to accomplish--the soul of our writing.
5. Writing is about making decisions, and ultimately, where you wish to take the reader on your journey.
6. Consider the resonance of the words you choose and its emotional impact on the reader.
7. As a nonfiction writer, "You must get on the plane." (I think about the adoption of my two daughters from Nepal and Vietnam. My book Children of Dreams is about their adoptions. If I never got on the plane, I wouldn't have them. Neither would the reader have my book.
8. When writing memoir, choose one point of view to preserve unity; i.e., writing from the viewpoint of the child versus the adult looking back. They are different kinds of writing.
9. Remember, when writing memoir, it's your story. Memoirs should have a redemptive quality--readers won't connect with whining.
10. Organize your memoir through a series of reductions, focusing on the small stories tucked away in memory. The reader will connect because the stories will resonate with universal truth.
11. Strive to write the best you can. Give all of yourself. The reader deserves the best you have to offer.
112 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2024
This book helped me improve my writing style found it be a very informative and useful book. I have been writing for quite a long time but learnt many new things to enhance my writings.
One person found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 24, 2024
Anyone interested in writing of any kind should add this to their collection before much else. Great insight, though, and easy to understand and implement.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2011
As the title hints this book is a guide to writing nonfiction. This book is NOT a how-to write recipe book, rather one on fundamentals and principles. William structures his work into four sections through which he addresses the craft of writing.

The first section is one on principles (The Transaction, Simplicity, Clutter, Style, The Audience, Words and Usage). These principles according to the author can be learned through experience, but require effort as writing is hard. The call of this section is one for uttermost simplicity and clarity.

The second section is on methods (Unity, The Lead and the Ending, and Bits & Pieces). Theses methods address the structure of one's written piece, the importance of flow, and consistency. In addition, the fundamental concept of rewriting - being the essence of writing well - is also discussed.

The third section discusses the different forms of writing (Nonfiction as Literature, The Interview, The Travel Article, The Memoir, Science and Technology, Business Writing, Sports, Writing About the Arts, and Humor). This section focuses on the nuances of each of the mentioned forms, and the associated considerations. I found the section on business writing particularly interesting and applicable.

Finally the fourth and last section is on attitudes (The Sound of Your Voice, Enjoyment, Fear and Confidence, The Tyranny of the Final Product, A Writer's Decision, Write as Well as You Can). In this section the author exposes the human side of writing with all the emotions, hardships and successes that come with it. He aims to instill confidence into writers and promotes them to trust their instinct and take action.

Overall, a very insightful book on the topic of writing non-fiction. What I particularly enjoyed is the plethora of examples and excerpts through which the author presented the concepts. This made the book very practical. On the critical side, given the breadth inherent in such a topic (writing), the book did not have a lot of depth in the areas presented.

Below are some excerpts from the book that I found particularly insightful:

1-On email: "Just because they are writing with ease and enjoyment doesn't mean they are writing well."

2-On interviewing people: "Writing is a public trust...When you get people talking, handle what they say as you would handle a valuable gift."

3-"The best gift you have to offer when you write personal history is the gift of yourself. Give yourself permission to write about yourself, and have a good time doing it."

4-On writing class: "In short, our class began by striving first for humor and hoping to wing a few truths along the way. We ended by striving for truth and hoping to add humor along the way. Ultimately we realized that the two are intertwined."

5-"Writing is related to character. If your values are sound, your writing will be sound. It all begins with your intention."

6-"If you like to write better than everybody else, you have to want to write better than everybody else. You must take pride in the smallest details of your craft. And you must be willing to defend what you've written against the various middlemen - editors, agents and publishers - whose sights may be different from yours, whose standards not as high."

7-On attitude: "A reporter once asked him (Joe DiMaggio) how he managed to play so well so consistently, and he said - "I always thought that there was at least one person in the stands who had never seen me play, and I didn't want to let him down."
20 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2024
It's a humble and clear book
2 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

Carolina Perez
5.0 out of 5 stars Apto para beginners
Reviewed in Mexico on June 11, 2024
Tengo años escribiendo informalmente. Este es Mi primer libro de escritura, y me ha parecido divertido, fácil de leer y con aportes valiosos que desde el día 1 estoy aplicando. :)
Placeholder
5.0 out of 5 stars The only book you need to start writing
Reviewed in India on January 29, 2024
This book has helped me gain confidence in myself as a writer.
It talks about what writing should look like whether you are a sportswriter or travel writer. It keeps its focus on nonfiction writing but you get many lessons on fiction writing as well.
MUST READ if you are a writer or editor or just hoping to be a writer some day.
One person found this helpful
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Anna
5.0 out of 5 stars Helpful for anyone who writes - and in any language.
Reviewed in Germany on January 30, 2024
An entertaining and enlightening book for anyone who wants to improve his or her writing style - and not just for English native speakers but also for people (like me) who usually write in another language. The core criteria of good writing style are convincingly explained and illustrated with just the right number of examples. The practical tips for revising texts makes things easy and motivate you to revise your own texts quickly and effectively It's easy to see the before-and-after effects in your own work immediately.
One person found this helpful
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vipin
5.0 out of 5 stars A master piece of writing for aspiring writers
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 24, 2023
Good writing cannot be achieved unless the writer can organise his thoughts, first in his mind, then on paper. Even as I write this review, the lessons I learned in the chapters of On Writing Well are fresh in my mind. The book not only helped me develop the rigour and clarity in my writing, it also sparked a new enthusiasm to not just write, but write well.

William Zinsser tells with clear examples that clutter and clichés in writing are present everywhere, we read them so often that we’ve become numb, narrowing our sense of what a good piece of writing looks like. Then he elegantly shows what it looks like. Humour and optimism are “lubricants in writing”, it also requires “a good musical ear, a sense of rhythm and a feeling for words”, he says.

My favourite chapter of this book is A Writer’s Decision in which William Zinsser deconstructs one of his travel piece on Timbuktu, which had appeared in Condé Nast Traveller magazine. Leading up to that section, with my fresh pair of reading eyes and heightened reading senses, I thoroughly enjoyed it from start to finish. That chapter summed it up for me, the experiences of Timbuktu lingered for several days in my mind, so did the intertwined writing lessons. I imagined that I was reading the Timbuktu article in the magazine and thought, “how could someone, after reading it, not want to visit Timbuktu and relive for themselves what William Zinsser did”.

The book is neatly organised, starting with the fundamental principles of writing, followed by the methods to use during the execution. At this point you’re hooked which is when he takes you with him to dive deep and long into the various forms of writing — such as an interview, a travel, a business, or a science article — each consisting of some brilliant examples to take home an important lesson. In the last section, he covers attitudes which one can develop to become a complete writer.

Never ever will I be fooled and mislead again by a poor piece of writing even if it appears in the most prestigious publication. On the other hand, I’ve realised that a fresh piece can appear even in the least reputed newspaper.
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kiage
5.0 out of 5 stars On writing well
Reviewed in Italy on March 7, 2023
Spedizione arrivata in tempo, oggetto come da descrizione, libro ben scritto.