Gwern's Reviews > Clear and Simple as the Truth: Writing Classic Prose

Clear and Simple as the Truth by Francis-Noel Thomas
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Dec 16, 2014

really liked it
Read from December 14 to 16, 2014

(~80k words book, ~56k word online guide; ~3h without doing any exercises) A style book which actually delivers real style advice! I first heard of it on Robin Hanson's blog and followed up recently when I saw they've put up an online edition/guide. The "classic style" names a style I've always admired - smooth, calm, humanistic, and elegant - which appears in a variety of writers past and present (Gene Wolfe often writes in this style), and it's a pleasure to see it examined and its strengths and weaknesses laid out. (As Hanson says, the classic style is a good way to lie or deceive as it encourages one to strip away details and qualifiers to maintain the smoothness of passages.) If one likes the classic style or has need of it, I could not name a better text. The authors may not be the greatest classic stylists ever, but they are the best in discussing it while often embodying it.

The book is split up into 3 parts, laying out the general attitude and evolution of classic style, then providing a few dozen short examples of the classic style vs other styles with some critical examination (noting the careful choice of language to produce striking sentences or pointing out how classic style would be disastrous in some contexts), and finally a list of writing exercises to help one learn this particular style.

The first part delves into some academic issues that really don't concern anyone interested in the classic style (I suspect most readers have neither heard of nor care about 'mimesis'), and second part, the 'Museum', seems to be substantially expanded in the online guide (eg Blaise Pascal's Provincial Letters are mentioned a few time in the book, but the excerpt of the Jesuit/Jansenist debate over "proximate" only appears in the online guide as far as I can tell); the eccentric formatting of the online guide aside, since I enjoyed most reading all the examples side by side, it might be a good idea to read the online guide first which concentrates on describing classic style & providing examples. Then, when one knows the lay of the land, read the full book, where the tangents will not distract.
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Reading Progress

12/14/2014 marked as: currently-reading
12/16/2014 marked as: read

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