Best business writing skills books according to redditors

We found 151 Reddit comments discussing the best business writing skills books. We ranked the 30 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Business Writing Skills:

u/jbBU · 43 pointsr/medicalschool

Nicely done. I think you did a great job illustrating some problems in medicine: clueless admin and excess paperwork.
Your speaking was clear and a good tempo. Content was detailed without being boring.
My only critique is to minimize your transitions, like "this is a quote that got me through..."; "so here it goes". While those transitions might add emotional impact or significance, I think it distracts from its own purpose which is to highlight the quote/joke. You're already significant by being on stage in a white coat (non-medical audience) and have impact from your topic. It's nitpicky but you asked. sidenote: as a rule, I hate intros and transitions so maybe it's just me. This is the book I used when learning effecting writing for reference. Surprisingly enjoyable read.
Well done OP!

u/alanbowman · 22 pointsr/technicalwriting

This is a copy and paste from a few months ago. There isn't really a "bible," so to speak, because the field is so varied. But this list should get you started. There are also some technical writing textbooks on Amazon that might be useful.

  • The Chicago Manual of Style, 17th Edition - the classic reference. This covers pretty much everything you ever wanted to know about grammar and usage, including things you didn't know that you didn't know.

  • The Chicago Guide to Grammar, Usage, and Punctuation - this is an expanded version of chapter 5 of the CMoS mentioned above.

  • The Microsoft Manual of Style, 4th Edition - if you write for Windows-based software, this is the book you need.

    If you're looking for more mechanical things like document structure and organization, I'd recommend the following:

  • Information Development - look for this one used, it's been out of print for awhile. Good information on managing documentation projects. I'm a bit of a broken record on this subject, but a LOT of a technical writer's job is managing projects.

  • Handbook of Technical Writing (this is apparently a textbook now...?) - just what it says on the tin. Good overview of various topics related to tech writing.

  • Developing Quality Technical Information - another overview of various topics related to tech writing. This isn't a "read cover to cover" kind of book, but more of a "open to a random location and just start reading" kind of book.

  • The Non-Designer's Design Book - one thing that tech writers have to think about, or at least should be thinking about, is document design. This is the best book I've found on that subject, bar none. The principles taught in this book guide the layout and design of pretty much every document I've created in the past 9 years.

  • The Insider's Guide to Technical Writing - a good overview of some basic technical writing topics.

  • Every Page is Page One - I've been trying to move more towards the concepts covered in this book as I redo and update the current mess I inherited from the previous tech writer.

u/Bobondomia · 20 pointsr/funny

Dude, buy a copy of this book.

https://www.amazon.com/Writing-Well-Classic-Guide-Nonfiction/dp/0060891548

It's not the be all, end all. But it will really help.

u/NoyzMaker · 13 pointsr/ITCareerQuestions

I was younger than almost my entire team, only had 2 others younger than me of a 7 person team. It can be a bit challenging but the key thing to remember is that you were hired for your skills to be a people manager and they are the professionals in their skills.

There was probably someone on that team wanted your job. I tend to acknowledge their desire for leadership positions and ask them if that is what they still want in their career. If so then we make a plan to help make them more marketable for the next role or as my "heir-apparent" when the time comes.

Be humble and let their expertise and opinions be a welcome thing. It is paramount to hear their advice and more importantly to hear why things are done the way they are. People (typically) don't do things without a good reason. Respect that.

Couple other random bits and pieces I recommend to new managers:

This is what I try to do when taking over a new team.

u/StuckOnCoboldLevel · 12 pointsr/programming

I'd like to recommend this to the author.

u/LOLtohru · 10 pointsr/Fantasy

False as in you don't think that it ever happens and isn't a valid concept? I don't think that's the case.

Have you heard about "write to market" authors? They pretty much do what you describe in your first big paragraph. I don't know how to cite that concept but here's a popular book for authors about how to do that:

https://www.amazon.com/Write-Market-Deliver-Faster-Smarter-ebook/dp/B01AX23B4Q

As for whether books can be gendered I think at the least you can say that some genres are mostly read by certain groups. I think romance is 80% read by women and military science fiction is 80% men if not more.

I'm not saying that I LIKE this situation. I don't like that some of my favorite authors say they're more successful when they write more cynical books. But in terms of if authors target demographics or certain genres have demographic trends I think those are things that happen.

u/munificent · 8 pointsr/writing

I would personally ditch Strunk & White and add On Writing Well instead.

u/blue_fitness · 8 pointsr/GlobalOffensive

Thanks form making this.

  1. Use grenade trajectory, especially on the cache flash. Or use a grenade so we can see the entire flash path rather than you turning away for half the grenade path.
  2. Everything that you can say is longer than it needs to be. Use a script and revise to shorten your long train of thoughts.
  3. Long times intimidate people, 9 minutes for 3 grenades/flashes is quite inefficient use of time. It could have been said with more clarity in much less time.

    Here is an excellent book that will help your scripting/writing tremendously. The book is written quite well :)
u/kanak · 6 pointsr/compsci

I would start with Cover & Thomas' book, read concurrently with a serious probability book such as Resnick's or Feller's.

I would also take a look at Mackay's book later as it ties notions from Information theory and Inference together.

At this point, you have a grad-student level understanding of the field. I'm not sure what to do to go beyond this level.

For crypto, you should definitely take a look at Goldreich's books:

Foundations Vol 1

Foundations Vol 2

Modern Crypto

u/lingual_panda · 6 pointsr/cscareerquestions

I highly recommend Mindset. A fixed mindset is basically shooting yourself in the foot if you have any sort of goal whatsoever.

Facts and Fallacies of Software Engineering is from the mid-90s but basically everything is still true today.


Becoming a Technical Leader and Apprenticeship Patterns are kind of like two sides to the same coin. I read the former during my first internship and I definitely think it helped me succeed at my second internship and in my first job.

On Writing Well has an entire chapter on technical writing, but the rest of the book is fantastic as well.

u/SleepingMonad · 6 pointsr/Decoders

Here are some resources I've found especially helpful for my own puzzle-making and codebreaking endeavors.

General Overviews and Websites for Getting Started:

u/ibwip · 5 pointsr/writing

First off, start a blog and force yourself to write 3 articles a week. It will get you in a routine, and after a month you will see drastic improvement. Getting hired through a traditional j-school program or an internship is highly improbable. I got hired at my first paid gig because I knew how to code in a few web languages. After two months I was writing features on international finance. Do not under any circumstance pursue graduate work in journalism or a JD. You are wasting your money. Most journalism work is trending towards specialization, while j-school prepares you as a generalist. Not only that, you can learn all of the tricks simply by writing and reading a few books. Four years ago, I was in your position. Now I write for a living.

I'd recommend the following books/articles for any person interested in writing
On Writing Well
On Writing
Malcolm Gladwell's Advice
Interview with Matt Taibbi

Best of luck

u/ReindeerHoof · 5 pointsr/classicalmusic

The first thing that I suggest is that you buy a reputable book that will teach you how to write. I'm not saying that you're a bad writer, but I would wager that most people write three times worse than they think they can (I am including myself). On Writing Well is a classic, and you might also want to read this one and this one, although I strongly recommend completing the first one. What's included is:

a) Keep it simple. Don't say it's going to be a turbulent precipitation, say that it's going to rain. A lot.

b) Study each adverb and adjective. Any words that aren't necessary should be cut. Is it really important to say that the violin was wooden? Probably not. What about the sentence "She smiled happily"? The "happily" isn't necessary, that's what "smiled" means.

c) Use specific verbs.

d) Consistency is key. Switching tenses or something similar in the middle of writing is generally a bad move.

e) Proofread. Duh. That goes hand in hand with editing.

So, yeah. You should really look into that stuff area. One read-through will help significantly.

Ok. So now that I finished preaching to you, let's move on. I didn't find any templates in my quick search, so that's of no use right now. What you can do, though, is study very well-written program notes. Are their sentences long or short? When are they longer or shorter, and why? Is the tone active or passive (psst. it's probably active)? What's the tone that they use, and what is your impression at the end? You get the gist. If you write down what you think your thoughts for three of these, you'll have a good idea what you're shooting for. Other than that, it's all up to you, so go nuts.

Anecdotes are also a nice way to make things entertaining. Search for stories, or impacts on the audience. Did you know there are at least six editions of the Rite of Spring? Why was the one your orchestra's performing (let's assume) created? Many people also don't know about the riot after its premier. Stravinsky escaped out the back entrance to avoid the aristocratic mob. Say fun things, win fun prizes, or something like that.

It's also important to know that stories tend to follow the path of one person. The Odyssey could have had its crew be the focus, instead it was Odysseus. Inside Out could have placed all the emotions front and center, but it was Sadness and Joy that saved the girl. Keep that in mind if you're going down a similar path.

Man, I went all out on this. Good luck with your program.

u/icyrae · 5 pointsr/writing
  • The Writing Life by Annie Dillard -- An example both in the things she says and how she says it of damn good writing. It's short, and influential. I read it three times in twenty four hours the first time I picked it up.

  • [Walking on Water: Reflections on Faith and Art] (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/087788918X/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=087788918X&linkCode=as2&tag=crysbrya-20) by Madeline L'Engle -- I recommend this for anyone of any faith or lack thereof for L'Engle's discussions on true art, the morality of art, the effect it has on a person's being and possibly the best writing I've ever read of hers, and I love L'Engle's novels, so that's saying something.

  • On Writing Well by William Zinnser -- My personal copy has probably half the book underlined, but my favorite chapter, by far, is Chapter 2, Simplicity. I feel it should be required reading for every author aspirant.

  • The Art of the Personal Essay by Philip Lopate -- This is an anthology, but a better teacher of good personal writing than any how-to book I've ever read.

  • Eats, Shoots and Leaves by Lynne Truss -- You'll never find grammar or punctuation boring again after reading Truss's hilarious and informative treatment of the worthiness of punctuation, in current times and throughout history. (Though I disagree with her dismissal of the interrobang.)
u/BardoSpirit · 4 pointsr/eroticauthors

I read a helpful book on this subject recently: "Write to Market" by Chris Fox. It is not specific to the romance genre, but it IS pretty specific to Amazon, explaining their ranking system, how to research, etc. etc.

If you have a KU subscription, you can borrow it and read it for free.

https://www.amazon.com/Write-Market-Deliver-Faster-Smarter-ebook/dp/B01AX23B4Q

u/amazon-converter-bot · 4 pointsr/FreeEBOOKS

Here are all the local Amazon links I could find:


amazon.co.uk

amazon.ca

amazon.com.au

amazon.in

amazon.com.mx

amazon.de

amazon.it

amazon.es

amazon.com.br

Beep bloop. I'm a bot to convert Amazon ebook links to local Amazon sites.
I currently look here: amazon.com, amazon.co.uk, amazon.ca, amazon.com.au, amazon.in, amazon.com.mx, amazon.de, amazon.it, amazon.es, amazon.com.br, if you would like your local version of Amazon adding please contact my creator.

u/swinebone · 4 pointsr/IWantToLearn
u/coldstar · 3 pointsr/Journalism

I'm going to go ahead and take the easy answers: On Writing Well and Elements of Style. Both a must for any writer.

u/Newtothisredditbiz · 3 pointsr/freelanceWriters

*definitely learning on his time?

Or are you being defiant by learning on his time against his wishes?

--------

If you want to learn how to write things people will actually want to read (as opposed to just doing it because someone pays you), I'd suggest reading a book or two about how to write well.

On Writing Well by William Zinsser is a classic for non-fiction writers. It has lots of helpful guidelines about how to communicate effectively, even if you have no aspirations of being a magazine writer or book author.

However, there are probably some books about copywriting or some other areas closer to what you're doing.

Along those lines, look for other websites that have the kind of writing you or your boss are aiming for. Try to learn what they do well and what they do poorly, and emulate the good sites in your writing.

u/Subsourian · 3 pointsr/starcraft

They still sell Spectres on Amazon here, it's a bit above normal price but not unreasonable.

u/matoiryu · 3 pointsr/TrollXChromosomes

Writer here. That shit is definitely hard. My recommendation? Write down everything you want to say and don't worry about length. Then edit ruthlessly. Cut out anything redundant or that doesn't further your point. Look at every word and every sentence and ask yourself, do I need this word? Usually you can cut out adjectives in favor of strong verbs. E.g. "Earning a master's degree from your fine institution would be a great boon to my career." (16 words) becomes "A master's degree from X would catapult my writing career." (10 words) Or something. I've had some wine.

William Zinsser is way better at this shit than me. Everyone should read "On Writing Well."

u/halhen · 3 pointsr/dataisbeautiful

It took me three "Next"s before I realized what was going on. Newspaper style, I'd make my point first: look for ways to start with the final chart and, if need be, introduce the four sources of delay in other ways. I suspect that the final bullet list beneath the chart will do the job (but see below for my note on writing). Maybe a short sentence within the hover thingie, rather than a name?

The top bullet points are is too specific to start out with. I lack context when I read them, and they are besides the point until the very end, or ever. I'd use that top space for more valuable stuff. (Also, super specific but nagging me: You mention 15 minutes required to be a delay, yet in the chart the bars go no higher than 8. I understand technically the difference, but it kills my intuition and put a doubt in my mind as to whether I really understand what's going on -- self-doubt often being a more potent source of fear or dislike than actual misunderstanding.)

Text: Simple words, short sentences, ruthless editing. Write like you speak. If you are the least interested, read https://www.amazon.com/Writing-Well-Classic-Guide-Nonfiction/dp/0060891548

To answer your questions (in case those are required for class):

What do you notice in the visualization?

  • Airlines rated by how delayed they are.
  • There are different sources of delays, two of which make up most of the reasons

    What questions do you have about the data?

  • How does my airline do compared to others?
  • What's within the two major categories? I'd keep them as is, but can I also see a breakdown? I'm especially curious as to NAS.
  • What's with the other airlines not listed here?
  • How does it change over the year? (The month bars doesn't really help here, especially so as you update the X axis when the bars change)

    What relationships do you notice?

  • It looks like the relative %-age of cause is kindof the same within airlines even though different airlines differ between each others. How come Southwest gets less problems with NAS than AA?

    What do you think is the main takeaway from this visualization?

  • Fly Southwest, maybe. Definitely that some do a better job than others. (But on second thought, if my plane is delayed 4 minutes or 8 doesn't matter much. What matters is my risk of being VERY delayed, like 30+ minutes. Does that differ between airlines? You might have a story there too?)

    Is there something you don’t understand in the graphic?

  • The texts are way too hard for me: technical terms, passive tone, what have you.

    Hope it helps!
u/mtb_addict · 3 pointsr/PhD

Hi there, I like to read On Writing Well yearly to calibrate my writing (lhttps://www.amazon.ca/Writing-Well-Classic-Guide-Nonfiction/dp/0060891548). It's a writing book that doesn't feel like a writing book.

That and of course elements of style... But that one feels like a writing book

u/IsomerSC · 3 pointsr/Rlanguage

No problem. If you're writing in Turkish, I don't know how to help. However, for English writing, I've found the following book to be a useful one: https://www.amazon.com/Writing-Well-Classic-Guide-Nonfiction/dp/0060891548

u/-MoHawgo- · 3 pointsr/latterdaysaints

Seriously, take some of these ¶.

No one is going to read a wall of text that large. You need some structure to your thoughts, white spaces, topic sentences.

It couldn't hurt to do some editing, add some headings and bulleted lists where appropriate. If you really are serious about getting your message of fire and brimstone repentance across or whatever else I saw while skimming, you need to learn how to communicate more effectively.

I can recommend a really good book. The Harvard Business Review Guide to Better Business Writing is a fantastic resource and could really help you not just in your internet preaching but your career as well.

u/new_land · 3 pointsr/writing

Ah yes, you have On Writing. But do you have On Writing Well?

u/mustacheriot · 3 pointsr/AcademicPhilosophy

You're a graduate student, not an artist. There's so much "artistic freedom" in here that the paper is twice as long as it needs to be and it takes forever to make its point. That's why I'm not reading the whole thing. I don't mean to be insulting. Sorry.

In general, I think this is a really helpful book. More academics should read it.

u/Rimshot1985 · 3 pointsr/DestructiveReaders

Hello! Thought I'd try my first stab at DestructiveReaders on your story. Lucky you. Disclaimer: I'm a professional editor... of marketing materials--not fiction.

Here's what you requested be dug into:

1) Narrative Style

I think people are telling you it feels detached because it needs another heavy edit. I'd recommend reading On Writing Well by William Zinsser. I think his advice could help you clean your prose up a bit. I see what you're trying to do to add tension, but your sentences don't flow together as nicely as they could. Another suggestion would be to read your work out loud and assess where it doesn't sound right.

2) Worldbuilding

I can see that you're trying to give the story an ominous tone with your prose, but try to favor showing to set the tone. The dramatic language should be a second layer to back up what's happening in the story.

For example, your story begins with three paragraphs of what I'd called "preamble". More effective would be to open the story by starting with the Kalina looking out her window at the mourners. I feel like you're repeating the fact that the Czar's daughter is dying too many times. Readers will understand after you mention it once.

I'd also recommend not saying "the Czar's daughter" repeatedly in the beginning. Start with "Kalina, the Czar's daughter..." and the refer to her as Kalina beyond that. Even better would be making one of the mourners wail something like, "Kalina, our Czar's daughter! We mourn you!" to be more artful about the exposition.

Everything being "red" might be a little too on-the-nose of a metaphor for a book about communism, but maybe that's just my taste.

Overall, too much showing and not telling. Just one example of many: "...dying people should not speak, it is improper." I want to see an example of somebody chastising her for speaking (or something), not just be told that it's improper. Readers want to care for Kalina, and building tension by showing that she can't even speak, even though she's dying, would be more emotional.

The image of a mourning crowd outside the dying princess' room is and makes me want to know more. Why is she dying? Why do they love her so much? Good stuff.

3) Dialogue

Use your dialogue to drive the story and the amount that you're (again) showing. For example, in the scene where Kalina interacts with her mammoth, start with "I'll come back, Lyuba." And then describe what she does with the mammoth from there. There's a whole paragraph of telling above it that could be worked into the action after she first speaks to her pet.

I'm actually at work now, but hopefully I can do some line edits tonight.

Overall, I think it's an interesting concept that could be helped with some screw tightening.

u/birthday-party · 3 pointsr/Journalism

Simple tip this is not, but I found that William Zinsser's "On Writing Well" is a fantastic read. It goes through basics on conciseness and writing factually, but also has specific guidelines on writing nonfiction (travel, humor, business, sports, arts, etc.) Also helpful on how to rid yourself of cliches and clutter.

u/Isleif · 3 pointsr/Games

Good man! A colleague of mine recently wrote this book, which is actually good at answering a lot of questions.

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00EBFYXJO

Keep in mind that different things work for different folks. I won't lie--I sometimes write the most lazy ass pitch letters for sites that know me well: "Hey, can I write about [blah blah]?" And often that'll get approved. But I have the luxury of having done this for a while and having established a name for myself.

But again, the actual work's more important than the cover letter. Editors especially love uncommon stuff, such as thoughts about the influence of current events on a game's development rather than a straight review or preview.

u/[deleted] · 3 pointsr/books

Not on those subjects, but here's one about writing:

On Writing Well by William Zinsser

u/CleansThemWithWubs · 3 pointsr/gaming

While they linked the first book, they forgot about [the second book.] (http://www.amazon.com/StarCraft-Ghost--Spectres-Nate-Kenyon/dp/1439109389/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1367546236&sr=8-2&keywords=starcraft+ghost) Have yet to read the second one yet, but I thought the first was very well done.

u/KodaFett · 3 pointsr/writers

Just do it. Just put it out there. Some of the worst stuff I have written, that I still call "trash fiction", is the stuff people loved best. Some of the best stuff I have written has gotten the harshest critiques. The point, here, is to be careful of becoming "married" to things, that is, being unwilling to change it if someone has a valid critique.

Basically, take everything that is said to you about your work, process it as feedback rather than attack, and use it to help your writing get better. If someone took the time to critique your work, rather than defending the work, thank them for the criticism. Take the criticim, apply it, and see if it makes your work stronger. If it does, keep it, if not ignore it. Rough criticim has helped me immensely.

I also cannot emphasize how much a few writing classes and good books can help. Check out On Writing Well by William Zinsser, and Sin in Syntax by Constance Hale. Worth their weight in gold.

Feel free to inbox me with your stories. I promise to be thorough, yet non-douchy! Here's my online portfolio , if you want to check out my stuff. :)

EDIT: A comma.

u/modernzen · 2 pointsr/DenverBroncos

Not strictly technical writing-oriented, but On Writing Well by William Zinsser was a game-changer for me. I'm a grad student and I think about this book every time I write a paper, or anything really. I've also heard decent things about this course.

u/malachi23 · 2 pointsr/AskCulinary

Thanks. I don't go for "self-help" books, but the more I read On Writing Well the more I realize that so much of that excellent writing advice is also excellent life advice.

u/mantrout · 2 pointsr/learnprogramming

I don't know how much advice I can offer in this regard, but I think you should practice writing just as you would practice programming. Find a mentor that will give you honest feedback on your writing, and run everything past them for brutal honesty. I have a circle of people I work with who's writing I admire, so I always send written stuff to them.

A blog is a good way of forcing yourself to practice writing on a regular basis. Don't be ashamed to force it upon people and ask them for feedback, most will be flattered you have high regard for their opinion.

If you're wondering if you've written something worth a damn, here is an approach I like to use, that has helped:

  1. Before you write anything, ask yourself "if people walk away with only 1 idea after reading this, what do I want it to be"

  2. write something with this intent in mind, when you're ready...

  3. get someone with little to no context (like an intern or new hire) to read your documents, and then ask them what they took away from it... was the idea you wanted to convey the first thing they said? Second? Did it ever come up in their description of the document? If not, use this as a feedback loop... what did they pick up on? How could I have made my idea more clear? etc....

    I found "on writing well" to be a great book on the subject: http://www.amazon.com/Writing-Well-30th-Anniversary-Nonfiction/dp/0060891548/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1321336616&sr=8-1

    Hope some of that helps...
u/mosthigh · 2 pointsr/writing

On Writing Well by William Zinsser.

u/DnBDeluxe · 2 pointsr/edmproduction
u/giveitawaynow · 2 pointsr/learnprogramming

> TIA, and sorry for the bad english

A little secret here that I learned from the Ruby community... Knowing English well is what separates a good programmer from a bad one.

"On Writing Well" is an excellent book Link

Make all of your function names descriptive on what they return not what they do (there is a lot of debate about this).

Use namespaces (kind of ugly in PHP), classes, then functions. Procedural is awesome and I'm more of a C guy than a C++ guy. But, organization is key especially if the project involves more than one person.

u/VerbalCA · 2 pointsr/selfpublishing

Chris Fox wrote a great book about how to find the sweet spot between what you want to write and what is selling - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01AX23B4Q

u/rudyred34 · 2 pointsr/SRSAuthors

I took several "creative nonfiction" courses in college, and two books that we used were Tell It Slant and On Writing Well. I remember Tell It Slant more vividly; it included several examples of various styles of nonfiction writing, several of which I enjoyed and used as inspiration for my own writing. I assume that On Writing Well is also valuable, though, considering how long it's been in print.

u/CreativeCoconut · 2 pointsr/AskAcademia

Since you asked for books, if you want a general introduction into scientific writing I really liked The Craft of Scientific Writing. It might be a bit much to read though, if you only want to write one paper for school. If you plan to write more papers especially at University, I definately recommend that book.

Another book which I liked even more was more generally on non-fiction writing. I wish I would have read that one years ago. It's called On Writing Well

Another great thing to do is to just read research papers. You could find real papers with Google Scholar though it might be hard in the beginning to get a grasp on it, since it might be pretty different from what you have read so far.

Lastly I found this blog really interested when I started out writing papers and theses.

I hope this helps

u/NeverRainingRoses · 2 pointsr/RBNLifeSkills

This one is pretty helpful. About.com also has some really good templates.

u/catastrophe · 2 pointsr/cscareerquestions

Read other technical documents, and really just practice. I recommend On Writing Well to many of my junior engineers who are just learning how to do this. It's not tech specific, but does give a lot of good best practices.

u/srthk · 2 pointsr/IWantToLearn
u/maruahm · 2 pointsr/math

Katz and Lindell is the undergrad gold standard on intro cryptography. Goldreich is a good graduate-level intro if Katz and Lindell is too basic. Goldreich also has a second volume.

u/NEp8ntballer · 2 pointsr/bourbon

https://www.amazon.com/Writing-Well-Classic-Guide-Nonfiction/dp/0060891548

You seriously need to buy that, read it, and then implement the lessons.

u/theghostie · 2 pointsr/publishing

Another site to check out is MediaBistro. You can also post on freelancing sites like Elance, Upwork, and even FiveGig if you're really just trying to build your portfolio. However, the best way to go if you're wanting to learn more is an internship, perhaps through a university or small press if you're near either. Some offer remote internships, but you'll learn the most if you can go into an office, ask questions, and watch others do things like book design.

Plus, there are tons of resources online (and books) to teach you the basics of design, editing, etc. Youtube is good, but if you have a way to get a Lynda account for free, they also have a lot of tutorials for InDesign (the main layout software in the industry) and Photoshop/Illustrator (the main graphic design software).

I'd also recommend of picking up or checking out a copy of the following:

u/j-arroyo · 2 pointsr/copywriting

You mean this?

How To Write Better Copy (How To: Academy) https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1509814574/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_CAjUDbDPX93WB

Scientific Advertising: 21 advertising, headline and copywriting techniques https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1517038073/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_jBjUDb8JQHFEE

u/bosseternal · 2 pointsr/projectmanagement

Before transitioning into my current PM role I worked for a PR company. The CEO strongly recommended this book for general writing. It's not tech-focused, more general purpose but still a great resource.

http://www.amazon.com/Writing-Well-30th-Anniversary-Edition/dp/0060891548

u/crowdsourced · 2 pointsr/technicalwriting
u/wildline · 2 pointsr/IWantToLearn

Honestly, though a lot of the information wouldn't be applicable to you, I highly recommend the book On Writing Well by William Zinsser. It helped me with my writing (across all uses) tremendously. My novels, non-fiction articles, personal letters, and even my reddit comments have improved! Hope I helped a little bit :)

u/bkcim · 2 pointsr/copywriting

And I have these in my list on amazon. Would love to get some opinions on them:

 

How to Win Friends and Influence People

by Dale Carnegie

 

Secrets of a Freelance Writer: How to Make $100,000 a Year or More

by Robert Bly

 

Words that Sell

by Richard Bayan

 

Tested Advertising Methods

by Caples and Hahn

 

Writing That Works

by Kenneth Roman and Joel Raphaelson

 

Confessions of an Advertising Man

by David Ogilvy

 

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

by Al Ries and Jack Trout

 

The Robert Collier Letter Book

by Robert Collier

 

Nicely Said: Writing for the Web with Style and Purpose

by Nicole Fenton and Kate Kiefer Lee

 

Letting Go of the Words

by Janice (Ginny) Redish

 

Essential English for Journalists, Editors and Writers

by Harold Evans

 

Can I Change Your Mind?: The Craft and Art of Persuasive Writing

by Lindsay Camp

 

Writing Tools: 50 Essential Strategies for Every Writer

by Roy Peter Clark

 

Read Me: 10 Lessons for Writing Great Copy

by Roger Horberry and Gyles Lingwood

 

Hey, Whipple, Squeeze This: The Classic Guide to Creating Great Ads

by Luke Sullivan

 

WRITE IN STEPS: The super simple book writing method

by Ian Stables

 

On Writing Well

by William Zinsser

 

The Wealthy Freelancer

by Steve Slaunwhite, Pete Savage and Ed Gandia

 

Write Everything Right!

by Denny Hatch

 

The Secret of Selling Anything

by Harry Browne

 

The Marketing Gurus: Lessons from the Best Marketing Books of All Time

by Chris Murray

 

On Writing

by Stephen King

 

Writing for the Web

by Lynda Felder

 

Everybody Writes: Your Go-To Guide to Creating Ridiculously Good Content

by Ann Handley

 

This book will teach you how to write better

by Neville Medhora

u/neotropic9 · 1 pointr/writing

Syntax as Style by Tufte is the best for sentence level mechanics. By far.

On Writing Well by Zinsser is the best for non-fiction.

If you're interested in fiction, Story Engineering by Brooks is the one I usually recommend for structure. But you might use Knight's Creating Short Fiction for that purpose. Or Save the Cat by Snyder.

People often recommend Elements of Style by Strunk and White. It has the benefit of being very short and direct. It will make your writing better, if you're a beginner. Your essays will read more smoothly. But I don't like recommending this book because it lacks nuance and is sometimes wrong. If you just want to improve your writing as quickly as possible, get this book. If you actually care about language, get Virginia Tufte's book instead.

u/arjungmenon · 1 pointr/GetMotivated

Yes, a TL;DR would be great. I think in general, it's important to self-help/advise narratives short and to-the-point. I've read way too many self-help books that are mostly fluff, with author repeating either (1) themselves over and over again, or (2) talking about unrelated stories from their life. Good writing ^([1]) in general should be short, succinct, to-the-point, and packed with valuable information.

^([1]) Best book on the topic: On Writing Well.

u/dharavsolanki · 1 pointr/songofthephoenix

> great articulation

You will like this book, then...

"On Writing Well", by William Zinser

https://www.amazon.in/dp/B0090RVGW0/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&btkr=1

u/cakemonster · 1 pointr/writing

It's not specific to blogging but I think you'll be very well served by reading William Zinsser's "On Writing Well."

u/louis_d_t · 1 pointr/writing

There are 1001 books on the subject. If you're looking for recommendations, I'll plug On Writing Well by William Zinsser.

If you're looking for one simple answer, it's this: get to the point. People get bored really, really, fast, especially on-line, so every sentence, every word, has to do something for you. Don't just write. Write with a purpose in mind, and fight for it.

Read good writing. The New Yorker is (arguably) the best magazine in the world. Read that. Read The New York Times. Read anything that seems exceptional to you.

Start small. Look for a volunteer position. People always need writers. If you're lucky, find someone to teach you. Work for someone else before you work for yourself.

u/amywokz · 1 pointr/writing

No. Get more traction in the writing field before you leave your job. Test the waters with three short (15-20k word) novellas until you find a sub-genre that works for you. Then write longer works and price appropriately. Make sure your covers and blurbs are top notch.

Additional resources:
https://www.amazon.com/Write-Market-Deliver-Faster-Smarter-ebook/dp/B01AX23B4Q?ie=UTF8&ref_=asap_bc

http://selfpublishingroundtable.com/sprt-143-interview-with-prolific-author-amanda-m-lee/


Consider Dragon NaturallySpeaking (Dragon Dictate if you have a Mac) for increased output. I tripled my writing speed from 1,000 to 3,000 words per hour with it. http://www.tkqlhce.com/click-4970713-10586061-1439933017000

u/gwenthrowaway · 1 pointr/dirtypenpals
u/gesher · 1 pointr/TechSEO

I agree. OP should try reading these two books:

u/SquidofAnger · 1 pointr/sciencecommunication

I'm by no means an expert, but here are some tips I've picked up over the past year or so:

Prep

  • Make sure they know how long you plan to interview them for, and stick to that time limit when you do the interview.
  • Know the basics of what the person does that you are interviewing. Don't waste time asking basic stuff.
  • Have some questions for if the conversation goes dry or to get at specific points, but don't try to structure the whole thing. Plan to go off-track with your interview.

    The Interview

  • Don't be afraid to wait after your interviewee finished talking. Just a few more seconds might lead to the really interesting bits of what they are thinking about.
  • Ask questions you already know the answer to. This can help with getting good quotes and can also lead to unexpected places (because you wound up not actually knowing the answer).
  • Don't be afraid to write stuff down (or record if your interviewee doesn't mind). You'll never remember everything interesting that they say and you don't want to kick yourself later while writing.
  • Regarding notes, make sure to look at them and summarize them shortly after the interview! They'll make more sense sooner rather than later.

    Some other Resources

    Longer-Term, the Turnaround is a podcast about interviewers and their techniques.

    The chapter about interviews in Zinsser's On Writing Well was helpful for me. If you are pressed for time grab it at your library and just read that chapter, it's short. Amazon Link

    > Get people talking. Learn to ask questions that will elicit answers about what is most interesting or vivid in their lives. Nothing so animates writing as someone telling what he thinks or what he does -- in his own words.

    Zinsser, On Writing Well
u/AlisaLolita · 1 pointr/FanFiction

Okay, so I'm not home so these are the few off the top of my head that I can remember I've read and loved.

  • On Writing Well - this book was used for my Script Writing class in college - I loved it, and I still have it on my bookshelf.

  • How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy - This book by Orson Scott Card is genre themed, but I really suggest it no matter what genre you write. It's just a great source to have all around.

  • No Plot? No Problem - Somewhat humorous take on those of us who procrastinate and have lots of writers block.

  • Wonderbook: The Illustrated Guide to Creating Imaginative Fiction - Okay, so I haven't read this yet, but it looks amazing and I might actually just pick it up myself.

  • Book In A Month - Okay, so this isn't really in the same category, but it's incredibly hands-on, fun book that can really, really, really help with outlining. I always suggest this book to people who participate in NaNoWriMo, because it's just super helpful.

    I hope one of these can help out!
u/George_Willard · 1 pointr/writing

I think I disagree, but guess I haven't read a ton of books about writing. In my experience, they can be helpful, especially to people who are just starting out. Maybe not as helpful as reading the types of books that you want to write (and reading the stuff you don't want to write—it's important to read widely), but I don't know if I'd call them a waste of time. King's book is great (but that might be because I got the impression that I'd like him as a person while I was reading that), Strunk and White Elements of Style and Zissner's On Writing Well are helpful for tightening beginners' prose, Writing Fiction: a guide to narrative craft has great exercises at the end of every chapter, and I'm reading Benjamin Percy's essay collection Thrill Me right now, and it's great. I feel like a large part of /r/writing would really connect with the first and titular essay in that collection, actually. He talks about reading a lot of so-called trash genre fiction before being exposed to literary fiction and how he kind of overcorrected and became a super-fierce advocate for that-and-only-that before he realized that you can take the good parts of both to create amazing stories. I've also never read any other respected literary person mention reading R. A. Salvatore, which was cool to see since I forgot I was a big Drizzt fan when I was younger.

u/UltraFlyingTurtle · 1 pointr/writing

First off, you've already made a good decision. It's good you don't write like an academic, because when most writers use that term, it usually means a writerly voice that uses big fancy words in order to project intelligence and education. It's a type of writing that may hide the real person behind the words, if done badly.

Of course academics will use big fancy words, because their chosen discipline may require them to do so, but the best academic writers will still write clearly, and with clarity.

My roommate in college was a T.A. (teacher's assistant) and he'd often ask me for second opinions while grading papers. You could tell the people who were trying to sound smart, over the ones who just tried to be honest. Almost always the ones who tried to communicate well, rather than the ones who tried to sound "academic," were the students who received better grades.

So, in your case, strive for honesty and clarity. If you need to use simple words, that's not only okay, but desirable. You want to reveal yourself in your words, as so often big words or using an academic-like voice will get in the way of that.

Having said that, if you need to write as a steam of consciousness. Go for it. Stream away. Then afterward you can edit, revise and reorganize your thoughts.

Because you haven't written in so long, your writing muscle, so to speak, is dormant and weak so the number one priority is to just write. Get words on the paper. That's the only way you'll know what you want to say.

After that, polish it up. Maybe start all over, but now you know where you are going with your writing.

Here are a few books that can help give you good writing advice for nonfiction writing.

  • [On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing Nonfiction](
    https://www.amazon.com/Writing-Well-Classic-Guide-Nonfiction/dp/0060891548/) by William Zinsser

  • Writing to Learn: How to Write - and Think - Clearly About Any Subject at All by William Zinnser

    This first book by William Zinnser is a classic. He has basic advice on how to improve writing skills, and provides various examples for different types of writing, like memoirs, job interviews, science and technology, etc.

    The second book goes even further exploring more disciplines like mathematics, art and music, nature, technology, liberal arts, etc.

    I think both would help you not just with your application essay but also with your writing while at graduate school.

    Lastly, you may already have this general writing advice book:

  • Elements of Style by William Strunk, Jr.

    I hope that helped. Don't be afraid to write, and good luck!

u/HellhoundsOnMyTrail · 1 pointr/OkCupid

These two books

If you want to write

and

On writing well

Keep a daily journal. Or check out 750words.com

What you want to do is get all the crap that's in your head out of the way so the real you can come out. I know you probably don't see it be the profile the way it's written now you're trying to appeal to people and not be polarizing. And it comes off boring. You want someone to imagine having a good time with you. It takes time so put in some work and come back for another critique. And to be honest it's not terrible but it doesn't stick out. And sticking out, in a good way, is the name of the game because online dating is frustratingly boring for most women.

u/shannondoah · 1 pointr/india
u/deper29 · 1 pointr/math

I learned undergrad cryptography from An Introduction to Mathematical Cryptography. I thought the book was pretty good and easy to understand. There's a couple of typos in there unfortunately though.

u/furiousgazelle · 1 pointr/writing

Could you be more specific on the type of magazine editing job you're looking for? (Headlines, features, etc. – it can also make a big difference in what type of magazine you want to work for.)

​

This is a pretty great book on all around nonfiction writing and editing https://www.amazon.com/Writing-Well-Classic-Guide-Nonfiction/dp/0060891548 Check your library for a copy; if they don't have this one I'm sure they can recommend a similar book.

u/StateAardvark · 1 pointr/eroticauthors
u/6regmcc · 1 pointr/findareddit

I would highly recommend reading this book On Writing Well

u/username802 · 1 pointr/funny

If you really want to know what good writing is, read this: http://www.amazon.com/Writing-Well-30th-Anniversary-Edition/dp/0060891548

u/composted · 1 pointr/compsci

On Writing Well
has a good chapter on technical writing.

u/sdbest · 1 pointr/writing

Treat yourself to On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing Nonfiction by William Zinsser. It's not only one of the finest books on writing nonfiction, it's also a damn good read. That means the book itself is a case study in writing well. I see a previous person made this recommendation, too.

u/Nerdlinger · 1 pointr/geek

Oi. Disclaimer: I haven't bought a book in the field in a while, so there might be some new greats that I'm not familiar with. Also, I'm old and have no memory, so I may very well have forgotten some greats. But here is what I can recommend.

I got my start with Koblitz's Course in Number Theory and Cryptography and Schneier's Applied Cryptography. Schneier's is a bit basic, outdated, and erroneous in spots, and the guy is annoying as fuck, but it's still a pretty darned good intro to the field.

If you're strong at math (and computation and complexity theory) then Oded Goldreich's Foundations of Cryptography Volume 1 and Volume 2 are outstanding. If you're not so strong in those areas, you may want to come up to speed with the help of Sipser and Moret first.

Also, if you need to shore up your number theory and algebra, Victor Shoup is the man.

At this point, you ought to have a pretty good base for building on by reading research papers.

One other note, two books that I've not looked at but are written by people I really respect Introduction to Modern Cryptography by Katz and Lindell and Computational Complexity: A Modern Approach by Arora and Barak.

Hope that helps.

u/Cannonofdoom · 1 pointr/roosterteeth

I don't think you're stupid. You're young and excited. Nothing wrong with that. If you want to be a writer, I suggest not only writing a ton of stuff, but reading a ton. Start here: http://www.amazon.com/Writing-Well-30th-Anniversary-Edition/dp/0060891548

u/catladyfromhell · 1 pointr/eroticauthors

Read "Write to Market" by Chris Fox. It's free on KU or $2.99 to buy. I found it extremely helpful.

u/MartianTomato · -1 pointsr/GradSchool

"10 tips on how to write better", or simply "10 tips on writing better", would be less badly written titles. Quips aside, Zinsser's On Writing Well is fantastic for this.