Categories
Storytelling Writing

The Craft in the Work: A Reading Guide to Ten Storytellers

Thereโ€™s a kind of reading thatโ€™s really a form of listening โ€” not to what a writer is saying but to how theyโ€™re solving a problem. Every great piece of nonfiction is an argument about structure, and most writers never explain it aloud. The argument is in the choices: where the piece starts, when it digresses, what it leaves out, how it ends. You can enjoy the work without seeing any of this. But once you start seeing it, you canโ€™t stop โ€” and eventually, some of it becomes yours.

This guide is for both kinds of reading. Each writer here is worth your time as a reader. Each one also has something specific and stealable for anyone who writes. Iโ€™ve tried to name both.

The ten: John McPhee, Robert Caro, John Jeremiah Sullivan, Michael Lewis, Joan Didion, David Grann, Sam Anderson, Susan Orlean, Tom Junod, and Wright Thompson. Different registers, different obsessions, different methods. What they share is a commitment to making difficult things feel inevitable โ€” and the discipline to make that look effortless.

They fall into three loose clusters, which might help you find your entry point. Structure builders โ€” McPhee, Caro, Grann โ€” write pieces that feel inevitable because the architecture is invisible but load-bearing. Emotional access โ€” Orlean, Junod, Thompson โ€” get you inside feeling before you know youโ€™re there. Voice and form โ€” Didion, Sullivan, Lewis, Anderson โ€” the sentence, the digression, the explanatory seduction, the essay as genuine inquiry. The clusters overlap, and the best writers in each group are doing all three things at once. But if youโ€™re trying to solve a specific problem in your own writing, the clusters tell you where to look first.

Categories
Financial Planning Inspiration Living

Being Serious

One of my favorite podcasts is William Greenโ€™s Richer, Wiser, Happier podcast on The Investorโ€™s Podcast network. Greenโ€™s book came out a couple of years ago and has been one of my favorites. His ability to profile a great group of investors is superb and the book is very enjoyable reading.

On his latest podcast episode heโ€™s interviewing one of my favorite financial writers, Jason Zweig, about his about to be published updated 75th anniversary edition of Benjamin Grahamโ€™s The Intelligent Investor. The book comes out on Tuesday. For many years Zweig has written The Intelligent Investor column in the Wall Street Journal – one of my favorite reads every Friday morning.

Late in this podcast conversation thereโ€™s the following exchange between Green and Zweig – two colleagues who have worked together and apart for many years in the arena of financial journalism:

William Green: And you sent me this lovely quote from Philip Roth, the great novelist who both of us love, who said, “Sheer playfulness and deadly seriousness are my closest friends.”

That’s the formula to describe the concoction that energizes virtually any writer worth his or her salt. I thought that was just so interesting that it’s like you somehow want to go about these pursuits, whether it’s writing or investing, with deadly seriousness and at the same time sheer playfulness.

Jason Zweig: Yeah, I mean, I guess one way I have described this now that you mention it is, is that I take my work incredibly seriously, so I don’t take myself seriously at all. And another way to put that is I have ego in my work, and I have no ego for my work. So I, I throw everything I’ve got into it, I leave nothing on the field but when I’m done, if you ask me, it’s great, right? I’ll say probably not. It’s probably, it’s probably somewhere between terrible and okay. And I’m not really faking it either.


Thatโ€™s such a great way to approach life – being serious about your work (and family and friends, etc) while not taking yourself seriously at all.

Loved hearing Zweig talk about this on this podcast! And Iโ€™m really looking forward to reading his updated commentaries in the new edition of The Intelligent Investor.