Best Books for Writers

From the newly published to the invaluable classic, our list of essential books for creative writers.

  • First We Read, Then We Write: Emerson on the Creative Process

    by
    Robert D. Richardson
    Published in 2009
    by University of Iowa Press

    In this insightful resource for writers, author Robert D. Richardson explores the acclaimed poet Ralph Waldo Emerson’s literary accomplishments, creative processes, and writing advice.

  • Self-Editing for Fiction Writers: How to Edit Yourself Into Print

    by
    Renni Browne and Dave King
    Published in 1994
    by Harpercollins

    In this guide to self-editing, professional editors Renni Browne and Dave King share their combined expertise by offering practical techniques and advice for polishing prose and turning manuscripts into published works of fiction.

  • Sin and Syntax: How to Craft Wickedly Effective Prose

    by
    Constance Hale
    Published in 2001
    by Broadway Books

    Author Constance Hale describes how to create clear, concise, and dynamic writing by focusing on the essential aspects of grammar such as adjectives, nouns, and implementing stylistic techniques that leverage sentence structure, voice, and rhythm.

  • The Crafty Poet: A Portable Workshop

    by
    Diane Lockward
    Published in 2013
    by Wind Publications

    In this resource for poets, Lockward offers practical advice and insights about establishing sound, voice, and syntax in poetry while also providing writing prompts and other poems as inspiration.

  • Mentor and Muse: Essays from Poets to Poets

    by
    Blas Falconer, Beth Martinelli, and Helena Mesa
    Published in 2010
    by Southern Illinois University Press

    In this anthology Falconer, Martinelli, and Mesa compile essays written by leading poets who explore effective ways of writing and revising poetry.

  • The Novelist’s Lexicon: Writers On the Words That Define Their Work

    by
    Vila Gillet
    Published in 2011
    by Columbia University Press

    Renowned contemporary authors—including Rick Moody, Etgar Keret, Colum McCann, and Annie Proulx— select and write about a specific word that is meaningful to them. Their essays reveal to the reader the author’s inner-thoughts and quirky musings.  

  • Fearless Confessions: A Writer’s Guide to Memoir

    by
    Sue William Silverman
    Published in 2009
    by University of Georgia Press

    In this resource for writers, Silverman focuses on honing one’s personal story and voice in order to write a truthful, captivating memoir. Silverman also explores effective ways of marketing and publishing one’s “confessional,” as well.

  • Poetry In Person: Twenty-five Years of Conversation With America’s Poets

    by
    Alexander Neubauer
    Published in 2010
    by Knopf

    The author compiles interviews between Pearl London (daughter of M. Lincoln Schuster) and prominent poets including Derek Walcott, Robert Hass, Robert Pinsky, Louise Gluck, and Charles Simic. The poets gave writing seminars to students at the New School from from 1973 to 1996.

  • Novel Ideas: Contemporary Authors Share the Creative Process

    by
    Barbara Shoup and Margaret-Love-Denman
    Published in 2009
    by The University of Georgia Press

    Shoup and Denman explore how to write a novel and focus on the elements of fiction and the process of revision. The authors also interview successful novelists in order to provide readers with further insight into crafting their own stories.

  • Quote Poet Unquote: Contemporary Quotations on Poets and Poetry

    by
    Dennis O'Driscoll, editor
    Published in 2008
    by Copper Canyon Press

    O’Driscoll collects hundreds of inspirational and thought-provoking quotations about poetry, spanning topics such as “Poetry in Motion,” “Poetic Drive,” and “Call Yourself a Poet,” from prominent authors.

  • Vex, Hex, Smash, Smooch: Let Verbs Power Your Writing

    by
    Constance Hale
    Published in 2012
    by W. W. Norton

    The author of Sin and Syntax: How to Craft Wickedly Effective Prose (Broadway Books, 1999) explores syntax, grammar, and powerful ways of utilizing verbs to write more compelling, effecive prose.

  • 642 Things to Write About: A Journal

    by
    The San Francisco Writers' Grotto
    Published in 2011
    by Chronicle Books

    Get your creative juices flowing with this collection of witty, outrageous, and thought-provoking writing prompts compiled by thirty-five members of the San Francisco Writers' Grotto, a workspace for professional writers.

  • An Absorbing Errand: How Artists and Craftsmen Make Their Way to Mastery

    by
    Janna Malamud Smith
    Published in 2012
    by Counterpoint Press

    The author uses stories of artists' lives, personal anecdotes, and insights from the author's work as a psychotherapist to examine the psychological obstacles that prevent people, including poets and writers, from staying with, and relishing, the process of art-making.

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