William Zinsser quotes:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
  • Write about small, self-contained incidents that are still vivid in your memory. If you remember them, it's because they contain a larger truth that your readers will recognize in their own lives. Think small and you'll wind up finding the big themes in your family saga.

  • Noise is the typographical error and the poorly designed page...Ambiguity is noise. Redundancy is noise. Misuse of words is noise. Vagueness is noise. Jargon is noise.

  • Rewriting is the essence of writing well: it's where the game is won or lost. The idea is hard to accept. We all have emotional equity in our first draft; we can't believe that it wasn't born perfect. But the odds are close to 100 percent that it wasn't.

  • It is a fitting irony that under Richard Nixon, "launder" became a dirty word.

  • Rewriting is the essence of writing well - where the game is won or lost.

  • Clear thinking becomes clear writing; one can't exist without the other.

  • Clutter is the disease of American writing. We are a society strangling in unnecessary words, circular constructions, pompous frills, and meaningless jargon.

  • I think a sentence is a fine thing to put a preposition at the end of.

  • The sound of the bat is the music of spring training.

  • Four basic premises of writing: clarity, brevity, simplicity, and humanity.

  • Writing is a craft not an art.

  • Much of my writing has taken the form of a pilgrimage: to sacred places that represent the best of America, to musicians and other artists who represent the best of their art.

  • Nobody told all the new e-mail writers that the essence of writing is rewriting. Just because they are writing with ease and enjoyment doesn't mean they are writing well.

  • Editors are licensed to be curious.

  • It's no fun to think about infinity and no cinche to write about it. Again, it helps to look for some human link.

  • Not every oak has to be gnarled, every detective hard-bitten. The adjective that exists solely as a decoration is a self-indulgence for the writer and an obstacle for the reader.

  • Writing is hard work. A clear sentence is no accident. Very few sentences come out right the first time, or even the third time. Remember this in moments of despair. If you find that writing is hard, it's because it is hard. It's one of the hardest things that people do

  • If the nails are weak, your house will collapse. If your verbs are weak and your syntax is rickety, your sentences will fall apart.

  • A simple [writing] style is the result of very hard work.

  • No one has something original or important to say will willing we run the risk of being misunderstood; people who write obscurely are either unskilled in writing or up to mischief

  • A writer is obviously at his most natural and relaxed when he writes in the first person. Writing is a personal transaction between two people, conducted on paper, and the transaction will go well to the extent that it retains its humanity.

  • Although the frankfurter originated in Frankfurt, Germany, we have long since made it our own, a twin pillar of democracy along with Mom's apple pie. In fact, now that Mom's apple pie comes frozen and baked by somebody who isn't Mom, the hot dog stands alone. What it symbolizes remains pure, even if what it contains does not.

  • Telling a writer to relax is like telling a man to relax while being prodded for a possible hernia.

  • Most writers sow adjectives almost unconsciously into the soil of their prose to make it more lush and pretty. The sentences become longer and longer as they fill up with stately elms and graceful boughs and frisky kittens and sleepy lagoons.

  • If you would like to write better than everybody else, you have to want to write better than everybody else. You must take an obsessive 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 so high.

  • Not everybody has a talent for painting, or for the piano, or for dance. But we can write our way into the artist's head and into his problems and solutions. Or we can go there with another writer.

  • Thought is action in rehearsal.

  • I never think of him as a scholar assaulting me with how much he knows, but as a teacher eager to share a lifelong passion for the subject.

  • A clear sentence is no accident.

  • A writer is always working.

  • A writer will do anything to avoid the act of writing.

  • Abraham Lincoln and Winston Churchill rode to glory on the back of the strong declarative sentence.

  • All writers should strive to deliver something fresh-something editors or readers won't know they want until they see it.

  • All writing is ultimately a question of solving a problem.

  • All your clear and pleasing sentences will fall apart if you don't keep remembering that writing is linear and sequential, that logic is the glue that holds it together, that tension must be maintained from one sentence to the next and from one paragraph to the next and from one section to the next, and that narrative - good old-fashioned storytelling - is what should pull your readers along without their noticing the tug.

  • Also bear in mind, when you're choosing your words and stringing them together, how they sound. This may seem absurd: readers read with their eyes. But in fact they hear what they are reading far more than you realize.

  • As a writer I try to operate within a framework of Christian principles, and the words that are important to me are religious words: witness, pilgrimage, intention.

  • Avoid the ecstatic adjectives that occupy such disproportionate space in every critic's quiver - words like "enthralling" and "luminous."

  • Be grateful for every word you can cut.

  • Be wary of security as a goal. It may often look like life's best prize. Usually it's not.

  • Be yourself and your readers will follow you anywhere. Try to commit an act of writing and they will jump overboard to get away.

  • But nothing has replaced the writer. He or she is still stuck with the same old job of saying something that other people will want to read.

  • Clutter is the disease of American writing,

  • Clutter is the official language used by corporations to hide their mistakes.

  • Dare to tell the smallest of stories if you want to generate large emotions.

  • Decide what you want to do. Then decide to do it. Then do it.

  • Don't say you were a bit confused and sort of tired and a little depressed and somewhat annoyed. Be tired. Be confused. Be depressed. Be annoyed. Don't hedge your prose with little timidities. Good writing is lean and confident.

  • Don't be kind of bold. Be bold.

  • Don't hedge your prose with little timidities. Good writing is lean and confident. . . . Every little qualifier whittles away some fraction of the reader's trust. Readers want a writer who believes in himself and in what he is saying. Don't diminish that belief. Don't be kind of bold. Be bold.

  • Don't try to guess what sort of thing editors want to publish or what you think the country is in a mood to read. Editors and readers don't know what they want to read until they read it. Besides, they're always looking for something new.

  • Eloquence invites us to bring some part of ourselves to the transaction.

  • Even a poor translator couldn't kill a style that moves with such narrative clarity.

  • Every successful piece of nonfiction should leave the reader with one provocative thought that he or she didn't have before. Not two thoughts, or five - just one. So decide what single point you want to leave in the reader's mind.

  • Every time you look at a blank piece of paper, you're doing something new. You have to step onto that blank territory and remind yourself the sky didn't fall in the last time you wrote. Writing is a question of overcoming your fears-and everybody has them.

  • Examine every word you put on paper. You'll find a surprising number that don't serve any purpose.

  • Few people realize how badly they write. Nobody has shown them how much excess or murkiness has crept into their style.

  • Fighting clutter is like fighting weeds-the writer is always slightly behind,

  • Finding a voice that your readers will enjoy is largely a matter of taste. Saying that isn't much help-taste is a quality so intangible that it can't even be defined. But we know it when we meet it.

  • 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. His own words will always be better than your words, even if you are the most elegant stylist in the land.

  • Good writers are visible just behind their words.

  • Good writing has an aliveness that keeps the reader reading from one paragraph to the next, and it's not a question of gimmicks to "personalize" the author.

  • Good writing is lean and confident.

  • Hard writing makes easy reading. Easy writing makes hard reading.

  • I almost always urge people to write in the first person. ... Writing is an act of ego and you might as well admit it.

  • I have no interest in teaching writers how to sell. I want to teach them how to write. If the process is sound, the product will take care of itself, and sales are likely to follow.

  • I try to make what I have written tighter, stronger and more precise, eliminating every element that's not doing useful work. Then I go over it once more, reading it aloud, and am always amazed at how much clutter can still be cut.

  • If a good word already exists, there is no need to invent something painful.

  • If writing seems hard, it's because it is hard. It's one of the hardest things people do.

  • If you lose the dullards back in the dust, that's where they belong. You don't want them anyway.

  • If you write for yourself, you'll reach all the people you want to write for.

  • Journalism is writing that first appears in any periodic journal.

  • Keep your paragraphs short. Writing is visual - it catches the eye before it has a chance to catch the brain.

  • Make a habit of reading what is being written today and what has been written before. Writing is learned by imitation.

  • Many of us were taught that no sentence should begin with "but." If that's what you learned, unlearn it - there's no stronger word at the start. It announces a total contrast with what has gone before, and the reader is thereby primed for the change.

  • Many writers are paralyzed by the thought that they are competing with everybody else who is trying to write and presumably doing it better.... Forget the competition and go at your own pace. Your only contest is with yourself.

  • Memoir is the art of inventing the truth.

  • Memoir isn't the summary of a life; it's a window into a life, very much like a photograph in its selective composition. It may look like a casual and even random calling up of bygone events. It's not; it's a deliberate construction.

  • Motivation clears the head faster than a nasal spray.

  • My commodity as a writer, whatever I'm writing about, is me. And your commodity is you. Don't alter your voice to fit the subject. Develop one voice that readers will recognize when they hear it on the page, a voice that's enjoyable not only in its musical line but in its avoidance of sounds that would cheapen its tone: breeziness and condescension and clichés.

  • My four articles of faith: clarity, simplicity, brevity and humanity.

  • Never forget that you are practicing a craft with certain principles.

  • Never hesitate to imitate another writer - every person learning a craft or an art needs models. Eventually you'll find your own voice and will shed the skin of the writer you imitated.

  • Never hesitate to imitate another writer. Imitation is part of the creative process for anyone learning an art or a craft. Bach and Picasso didn't spring full-blown as Bach or Picasso; they needed models. This is especially true of writing.

  • Never let anything go out into the world that you don't understand.

  • Never say anything in writing that you wouldn't comfortably say in conversation. Be yourself when you write. If you're not a person who says 'indeed' or 'moreover,' or who calls someone an individual ('he's a fine individual'), please don't write it.

  • Nobody becomes Tom Wolfe overnight, not even Tom Wolfe.

  • Nobody ever stopped reading E. B. White or V. S. Pritchett because the writing was too good.

  • One of the saddest sentences I know is "I wish I had asked my mother about that." Or my father. Or my grandmother. Or my grandfather. As every parent knows, our children are not as fascinated by our fascinating lives as we are.

  • One of underestimated tasks in nonfiction writing is to impose narrative shape on an unwieldy mass of material.

  • People and places are the twin pillars on which most nonfiction is built. Every human event happens somewhere, and the reader wants to know what that somewhere was like.

  • People read with their ears, whether they know it or not,

  • Probably every subject is interesting if an avenue into it can be found that has humanity and that an ordinary person can follow.

  • Readers must be given room to bring their own emotions to a piece so crammed with emotional content; the writer must tenaciously resist explaining why the material is so moving.

  • Scholarship hath no fury like that of a language purist faced with sludge.

  • The best way to learn to write is to study the work of the men and women who are doing the kind of writing you want to do.

  • The game is won or lost on hundreds of small details.

  • The most important sentence in any article is the first one. If it doesn't induce the reader to proceed to the second sentence, your article is dead. And if the second sentence doesn't induce him to continue to the third sentence, it's equally dead.

  • The only way to learn to write is to force yourself to produce a certain number of words on a regular basis.

  • The secret of good writing is to strip every sentence to its cleanest components,

  • The writer who cares about usage must always know the quick from the dead.

  • The writers job is like solving a puzzle, and finally arriving at a solution is a tremendous satisfaction.

  • There are all kinds of writers and all kinds of methods, and any method that helps you to say what you want to say is the right method for you.

  • There's no sentence that's too short in the eyes of God.

  • There's no subject you don't have permission to write about. Students often avoid subjects close to their heart ... because they assume that their teachers will regard those topics as 'stupid.' No area of life is stupid to someone who takes it seriously. If you follow your affections you will write well and will engage your readers.

  • There's not much to be said about the period except that most writers don't reach it soon enough.

  • Tips can make someone a better writer but not necessarily a good writer. That's a larger package - a matter of character. Golfing is more than keeping the left arm straight. Every good golfer is a complex engine that runs on ability, ego, determination, discipline, patience, confidence, and other qualities that are self-taught. So it is with writers and all creative artists. If their values are solid their work is likely to be solid.

  • To defend what you've written is a sign that you are alive.

  • To write a good memoir you must become the editor of your own life, imposing on an untidy sprawl of half-remembered events a narrative shape and an organizing idea. Memoir is the art of inventing the truth.

  • Today the outlandish becomes routine overnight. The humorist is trying to say that it's still outlandish.

  • What I want to do is to make people laugh so that they'll see things seriously.

  • When you're ready to stop, stop. If you have presented all the facts and made the point you want to make, look for the nearest exit.

  • Writers are the custodians of memory, and that's what this chapter is about: how to leave some kind of record of your life and of the family you were born into.

  • Writers can write to affirm and to celebrate, or they can write to debunk and destroy; the choice is ours.

  • Writers must constantly ask: what I am trying to say? Surprisingly often, they don't know.

  • Writers who think THEY are being criticized when only that writing is being criticized are beyond a teacher's reach. Writing can only be learned when a writer coldly separates himself from what he has written and looks at it with the objectivity of a plumber examining a newly piped bathroom to see if he got all the joints tight.

  • Writing and learning and thinking are the same process.

  • Writing improves in direct ratio to the things we can keep out of it that shouldn't be there.

  • Writing is hard work.

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share