Recommended Books on Writing

While there is no required reading for this course, I highly recommended the following books for excellent advice on narrative craft and insights into the writing life. You can also share your favorite books on writing in the comments.


On Writing:A Memoir of the Craft, by Stephen King

By the time I got around to reading this modern classic by one of the most prolific writers of our time, I'd already published three novels. I wish I'd found it sooner! While King's smart, down-to-earth memoir/writing lesson is a must-read for beginning novelists, fiction writers at any stage of their careers will find much to admire and be inspired by. Consider it a crash course in how to write fiction that people want to read.


Wonderbook: The Illustrated Guide to Creating Imaginative Fiction, by Jeff Vandermeer

This book by the New York Times bestselling author of the Southern Reach Trilogy and a whole bunch of other novels is a feast for the eyes. In additional to being a physically beautiful book, it's packed with information on world-building, narrative forms and structures, plot devices, and more. It also includes writing exercises. While this doorstop is geared toward science fiction and fantasy writers, it's so beautiful and joyful, I think every writer should have a copy. Just be sure it's a hard copy! This is a big, colorful book. Kindle would not do it justice!


Mastering the Process: From Idea to Novel, by Elizabeth George

After having huge success as a novelist, George takes you inside the process of how she wrote a particular novel, from the first inspiration (which for her is setting), all the way to the first editorial letter from her editor (who was also my editor at Random House for two books), on through revision. George's approach is very location-specific and includes a careful building of character before she begins writing the book. An insightful behind-the-curtains look at how one very successful writer crafts a novel. Each chapter includes a suggested writing exercise.


Writing Past Dark: Envy, Fear, Distraction, and Other Dilemmas in The Writer's Life, by Bonnie Friedman

According to Friedman, "Successful writers are not the ones who write the best sentences, they are the ones who keep writing." While the other books on this list focus on narrative craft, Writing Past Dark is the book you'll turn to when you feel gobsmacked by your novel, and you're not sure how (or why) to continue.


Big Magic: Creative Living Beyond Fear, by Elizabeth Gilbert

Listen to this audiobook whenever you think, "Why am I doing this? Can I really do this?" It's truly inspiring!


First You Write a Sentence, by Joe Moran

This isn't just a book about what makes a wonderful sentence (although it is that). It's also a book about how sentences lead us into our writing, how sentences guide us to discovery and help an idea become a story. This book is an inspiration for those of us who geek out on language and a primer for anyone who wants to know how a great sentence is made, and why it matters.


The Apprentice Writer: Essays, by Julian Green

A refreshing, wide-ranging collection of essays by a French-American writer. While the essays cover various subjects such as translation and Paris neighborhoods, the book is worth reading for the essays "How a Novelist Begins," "Where do Novels Come From?", and "Lectures on Writing." This one isn't that easy to find, but if you do find it, buy it!


Plotting and Writing Suspense Fiction, by Patricia Highsmith

You don't have to be a writer of crime fiction or thrillers to learn a great deal from this slim, to-the-point guide on creating suspense in fiction. Highsmith's advice on everything from plotting to getting past "snags" is invaluable to novelists in any genre. As a writer of literary fiction, I found that it provided me with a much-needed kick in the pants.


Letters to a Young Writer, by Colum McCann

This wide-ranging book by Pulitzer Prize winning author and long-time teacher McCann is one of the most inspiring books I've ever read on writing. McCann talks about how to focus on the work instead of the ego, how to get past envy, how to work with an agent, and why exhaustion is an essential part of the writing process. If you're in a slump, this brilliant little book will pull you out of it.


Writing Memoir

Still Writing by Dani Shapiro - very inspiring, with some terrific thoughts on craft

The Art of Memoir by Mary Karr - memoir-specific, but also includes craft advice that is helpful to fiction writers


On Detail

The next book is not a book about writing. It is that more wonderful thing: a book so exquisite it will inspire you to write. I urge you to read it, because I can talk to you all day about how to write significant detail, but the best way to learn is a book that does it brilliantly. The book is The Guardians: An Elegy for a Friend by Sarah Manguso. If you want to see how to draw a character with a single stroke, how to describe a moment in an unforgettable way, how to select details so specific your reader will have never seen them before, read this book (or any book by Manguso, but especially this one).



Novels That Feature a Writer as Protagonist

Dependency, by Tove Ditlevsen

"I'm thinking about my novel all the time, which I know the title of, though I'm not completely sure what it will be about. I'm just writing; maybe it will be good; maybe not. The most important thing is that I feel happy when I'm writing, just as I always have."



The End of the Affair, by Graham Greene

This book inspired parts of my 2008 novel No One You Know, which is in many ways a book about storytelling. The first line (below) is quoted in the novel.

"A story has no beginning or end; arbitrarily one chooses the that moment of experience from which to look back or from which to look ahead."



Writers and Lovers, by Lily King

A book about the longing to write, and about literary self-doubt, and about finding the time to write, as well as finding a metaphorical room of one's own in which to immerse oneself in writing.

I sit at my desk and stare at the sentences I wrote before walking the dog. I don't remember them. I don't remember putting them down. I'm so tired. I look at the green digits on the clock radio. Less than three hours before I have to dress for my lunch shift.


Have you read any novels featuring the writer as protagonist? If so, please share them in the comments.

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