Quick thought for your maiden voyage as a nonfiction writer

Several of my clients have started nonfiction works recently and asked if they should go the memoir route or the how-to route. I pushed a couple of them toward a memoir-heavy blend.

If you’re in an industry with an established audience and are approached as one who could make an “easy sell” or if you’re young but swear you came up with this BRILLIANT idea for a nonfiction book, don’t let it go to your head.

Take a breath, back up, and think:

If you want to write good how-to or good nonfiction based on some principle you hope to teach, you’ll need a year or more of solid research. Every good piece of nonfiction from Good-to-Great to Blink required their authors to hit the books and crunch numbers.

Don’t have the time?

Then pepper your hard-earned, experiential advice into a memoir-like read.

The best example I’ve given of suitable form is King’s “On Writing.” Set aside his great advice on the craft and think about his form: the book is 40% memoir of how he came to be a famous author, followed by 20% advice on the craft, followed by 40% memoir on his experience writing the book itself, which included getting hit by a van.

A book fashioned along those lines (minus the near-death experience) works great for first-time nonfiction authors who have only enough time to write the dang thing and no time to do research. It also keeps you from writing the equivalent of Nurbmashing for Dummies or whatever.

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  1. Helen Ross

    Hi Lance, thanks for the tips. I have a couple of ideas re non fiction that requires research which I am willing to do, but like your tips/suggestions re peppering advice into a memoir style read. All food for thought. Also loved King’s ‘On Writing’ which I read after your book recommendations that you included in a post some time ago.

    1. lanceschaubert

      Thanks, Helen. Glad you read it and enjoyed it!

      Yeah, if you’ve got the time or can delegate to research assistants, I say go for it, but any nonfiction that skimps on research (though the source length, age, and mediums may differ) will end with an anemic final product.

      I say a solid year or two of focused research or several years of research in between things would be a good rule of thumb.

      Can you sell a nonfiction book that doesn’t spend that kind of time? Of course! You can sell nonfiction without writing more than a book proposal.

      But should we?

      Sales aside, I’d say either spend the time in research or on stories, because a great nonfiction book will take just as long as a great work of fiction. Just look at Thoreau’s “Walden” or Ghandi’s “Satyagraha.”

      It all depends on your intended purpose. John Maxwell recycles the same nonsense into eighteen different varieties of reheated blah. Jim Collins, in the same section of the bookstore, spends a solid year if research and then applies his findings.

    2. lanceschaubert

      All that said, if you can’t do research, go with personal stories bearing a common thread.



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