25 Great Nonfiction Essays You Can Read Online for Free
A list of twenty-five of the greatest free nonfiction essays from contemporary and classic authors that you can read online.
Alison Doherty
Alison Doherty is a writing teacher and part time assistant professor living in Brooklyn, New York. She has an MFA from The New School in writing for children and teenagers. She loves writing about books on the Internet, listening to audiobooks on the subway, and reading anything with a twisty plot or a happily ever after.
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I love reading books of nonfiction essays and memoirs , but sometimes have a hard time committing to a whole book. This is especially true if I don’t know the author. But reading nonfiction essays online is a quick way to learn which authors you like. Also, reading nonfiction essays can help you learn more about different topics and experiences.
Besides essays on Book Riot, I love looking for essays on The New Yorker , The Atlantic , The Rumpus , and Electric Literature . But there are great nonfiction essays available for free all over the Internet. From contemporary to classic writers and personal essays to researched ones—here are 25 of my favorite nonfiction essays you can read today.
“Beware of Feminist Lite” by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
The author of We Should All Be Feminists writes a short essay explaining the danger of believing men and woman are equal only under certain conditions.
“It’s Silly to Be Frightened of Being Dead” by Diana Athill
A 96-year-old woman discusses her shifting attitude towards death from her childhood in the 1920s when death was a taboo subject, to World War 2 until the present day.
“Letter from a Region in my Mind” by James Baldwin
There are many moving and important essays by James Baldwin . This one uses the lens of religion to explore the Black American experience and sexuality. Baldwin describes his move from being a teenage preacher to not believing in god. Then he recounts his meeting with the prominent Nation of Islam member Elijah Muhammad.
“Relations” by Eula Biss
Biss uses the story of a white woman giving birth to a Black baby that was mistakenly implanted during a fertility treatment to explore racial identities and segregation in society as a whole and in her own interracial family.
“Friday Night Lights” by Buzz Bissinger
A comprehensive deep dive into the world of high school football in a small West Texas town.
“The Case for Reparations” by Ta-Nehisi Coates
Coates examines the lingering and continuing affects of slavery on American society and makes a compelling case for the descendants of slaves being offered reparations from the government.
“Why I Write” by Joan Didion
This is one of the most iconic nonfiction essays about writing. Didion describes the reasons she became a writer, her process, and her journey to doing what she loves professionally.
“Go Gentle Into That Good Night” by Roger Ebert
With knowledge of his own death, the famous film critic ponders questions of mortality while also giving readers a pep talk for how to embrace life fully.
“My Mother’s Tongue” by Zavi Kang Engles
In this personal essay, Engles celebrates the close relationship she had with her mother and laments losing her Korean fluency.
“My Life as an Heiress” by Nora Ephron
As she’s writing an important script, Ephron imagines her life as a newly wealthy woman when she finds out an uncle left her an inheritance. But she doesn’t know exactly what that inheritance is.
“My FatheR Spent 30 Years in Prison. Now He’s Out.” by Ashley C. Ford
Ford describes the experience of getting to know her father after he’s been in prison for almost all of her life. Bridging the distance in their knowledge of technology becomes a significant—and at times humorous—step in rebuilding their relationship.
“Bad Feminist” by Roxane Gay
There’s a reason Gay named her bestselling essay collection after this story. It’s a witty, sharp, and relatable look at what it means to call yourself a feminist.
“The Empathy Exams” by Leslie Jamison
Jamison discusses her job as a medical actor helping to train medical students to improve their empathy and uses this frame to tell the story of one winter in college when she had an abortion and heart surgery.
“What I Learned from a Fitting Room Disaster About Clothes and Life” by Scaachi Koul
One woman describes her history with difficult fitting room experiences culminating in one catastrophe that will change the way she hopes to identify herself through clothes.
“Breasts: the Odd Couple” by Una LaMarche
LaMarche examines her changing feelings about her own differently sized breasts.
“How I Broke, and Botched, the Brandon Teena Story” by Donna Minkowitz
A journalist looks back at her own biased reporting on a news story about the sexual assault and murder of a trans man in 1993. Minkowitz examines how ideas of gender and sexuality have changed since she reported the story, along with how her own lesbian identity influenced her opinions about the crime.
“Politics and the English Language” by George Orwell
In this famous essay, Orwell bemoans how politics have corrupted the English language by making it more vague, confusing, and boring.
“Letting Go” by David Sedaris
The famously funny personal essay author , writes about a distinctly unfunny topic of tobacco addiction and his own journey as a smoker. It is (predictably) hilarious.
“Joy” by Zadie Smith
Smith explores the difference between pleasure and joy by closely examining moments of both, including eating a delicious egg sandwich, taking drugs at a concert, and falling in love.
“Mother Tongue” by Amy Tan
Tan tells the story of how her mother’s way of speaking English as an immigrant from China changed the way people viewed her intelligence.
“Consider the Lobster” by David Foster Wallace
The prolific nonfiction essay and fiction writer travels to the Maine Lobster Festival to write a piece for Gourmet Magazine. With his signature footnotes, Wallace turns this experience into a deep exploration on what constitutes consciousness.
“I Am Not Pocahontas” by Elissa Washuta
Washuta looks at her own contemporary Native American identity through the lens of stereotypical depictions from 1990s films.
“Once More to the Lake” by E.B. White
E.B. White didn’t just write books like Charlotte’s Web and The Elements of Style . He also was a brilliant essayist. This nature essay explores the theme of fatherhood against the backdrop of a lake within the forests of Maine.
“Pell-Mell” by Tom Wolfe
The inventor of “new journalism” writes about the creation of an American idea by telling the story of Thomas Jefferson snubbing a European Ambassador.
“The Death of the Moth” by Virginia Woolf
In this nonfiction essay, Wolf describes a moth dying on her window pane. She uses the story as a way to ruminate on the lager theme of the meaning of life and death.
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Like literary journalism , literary nonfiction is a type of prose that employs the literary techniques usually associated with fiction or poetry to report on persons, places, and events in the real world without altering facts.
The genre of literary nonfiction, also known as creative nonfiction, is broad enough to include travel writing, nature writing, science writing, sports writing, biography, autobiography, memoir, interviews, and familiar and personal essays. Literary nonfiction is alive and well, but it is not without its critics.
Here are several examples of literary nonfiction from noted authors:
- "The Cries of London," by Joseph Addison
- "Death of a Soldier," by Louisa May Alcott
- "A Glorious Resurrection," by Frederick Douglass
- "The San Francisco Earthquake," by Jack London
- "The Watercress Girl," by Henry Mayhew
Observations
- "The word literary masks all kinds of ideological concerns, all kinds of values, and is finally more a way of looking at a text , a way of reading...than an inherent property of a text." (Chris Anderson, "Introduction: Literary Nonfiction and Composition" in "Literary Nonfiction: Theory, Criticism, Pedagogy")
- Fictional Devices in Literary Nonfiction "One of the profound changes to have affected serious writing in recent years has been the spread of fiction and poetry techniques into literary nonfiction: the 'show, don’t tell' requirement, the emphasis on concrete sensory detail and avoidance of abstraction, the use of recurrent imagery as symbolic motif, the taste for the present tense, even the employment of unreliable narrators. There has always been some crossover between the genres. I am no genre purist, and welcome the cross-pollination, and have dialogue scenes in my own personal essays (as did Addison and Steele). But it is one thing to accept using dialogue scenes or lyrical imagery in a personal narrative, and quite another to insist that every part of that narrative be rendered in scenes or concrete sensory descriptions . A previous workshop teacher had told one of my students, 'Creative non-fiction is the application of fictional devices to memory.' With such narrow formulae, indifferent to nonfiction's full range of options, is it any wonder that students have started to shy away from making analytical distinctions or writing reflective commentary?" (Phillip Lopate, "To Show and to Tell: The Craft of Literary Nonfiction")
- Practical Nonfiction vs. Literary Nonfiction "Practical nonfiction is designed to communicate information in circumstances where the quality of the writing is not considered as important as the content. Practical nonfiction appears mainly in popular magazines, newspaper Sunday supplements, feature articles, and in self-help and how-to books... "Literary nonfiction puts emphasis on the precise and skilled use of words and tone , and the assumption that the reader is as intelligent as the writer. While information is included, insight about that information, presented with some originality, may predominate. Sometimes the subject of literary nonfiction may not at the onset be of great interest to the reader, but the character of the writing may lure the reader into that subject. "Literary nonfiction appears in books, in some general magazines such as The New Yorker , Harper's, the Atlantic , Commentary , the New York Review of Books , in many so-called little or small-circulation magazines, in a few newspapers regularly and in some other newspapers from time to time, occasionally in a Sunday supplement, and in book review media." (Sol Stein, Stein on Writing: A Master Editor of Some of the Most Successful Writers of Our Century Shares His Craft Techniques and Strategies)
- Literary Nonfiction in the English Department "It might be the case that composition studies...needs the category of 'literary nonfiction' to assert its place in the hierarchy of discourse comprising the modern English department. As English departments became increasingly centered on the interpretation of texts, it became increasingly important for compositionists to identify texts of their own." (Douglas Hesse, "The Recent Rise of Literary Nonfiction: A Cautionary Assay" in "Composition Theory for the Postmodern Classroom") "Whether critics are arguing about contemporary American nonfiction for historical or theoretical purposes, one of the primary (overt and usually stated) aims is to persuade other critics to take literary nonfiction seriously—to grant it the status of poetry, drama, and fiction." (Mark Christopher Allister, "Refiguring the Map of Sorrow: Nature Writing and Autobiography")
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Blurring the lines: what is Literary Nonfiction?
Nonfiction. The very term conjures images. Dry facts, historical accounts, and scientific reports. But what if the lines between fact and storytelling are blurred? A captivating genre that reads more like a novel than a textbook? Enter literary nonfiction. A compelling world where truth meets artistry, and the real becomes riveting.
What is literary nonfiction?
Literary nonfiction is also known as creative nonfiction. It defies the traditional boundaries of factual writing. It delves into true stories, historical events, and personal experiences. It weaves them with the narrative techniques and stylistic flourishes more commonly associated with fiction. Think vivid descriptions, evocative language, and character development. All are employed to illuminate the complexities of the real world.
This fusion of fact and artistry has been around for a while. From the philosophical musings of Montaigne's 'Essays' to the social commentary of George Orwell's 'Down and Out in Paris and London'. Authors have long explored the intersection of truth and storytelling. However, the term 'literary nonfiction' gained prominence in the latter half of the 20th century. Writers like Truman Capote, Norman Mailer, and Joan Didion pushed the boundaries of the genre.
Why choose literary nonfiction?
So, why opt for literary nonfiction over traditional journalism or academic writing? Here are some key reasons:
- Engagement. Literary nonfiction electrifies facts. By employing narrative techniques, it draws readers in. It makes complex topics more accessible and engaging. Look at Oliver Sacks's ‘ The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat ’. Neurological case studies become tales of human resilience and the power of the mind.
- Emotional connection. Literary nonfiction doesn't shy away from the emotional core of a story. Authors can delve into the motivations, fears, and desires of individuals caught up in the topic. Historical events, scientific discoveries, or personal journeys. This emotional connection allows readers not just to understand the 'what'. It’s also the 'why' behind the facts. This fosters empathy and a deeper understanding of the subject matter.
- Multiple perspectives. Journalism often presents a single, objective viewpoint. Literary nonfiction can incorporate multiple perspectives. This allows readers to engage with different sides of an issue. They can grapple with conflicting narratives and form their own conclusions. For instance, John Krakauer's 'Into Thin Air'. This chronicles the Mount Everest disaster. It weaves together the experiences of climbers, guides, and rescue personnel. This gives readers a multifaceted view of the tragedy.
The allure of the ambiguous: ethical challenges
The marriage of fact and artistry has undeniable benefits. But it also raises questions about the nature of truth in literary nonfiction. Here are some challenges to consider:
- Subjectivity. The author's voice and perspective are central to literary nonfiction. This inevitably introduces subjectivity into the narrative. Events and experiences are filtered through the author's lens. This potentially shapes the reader's perception of the truth. Consider Rebecca Solnit's 'Men Explain Things to Me'. This is a collection of essays exploring gender power dynamics. Her anecdotes are powerful. Some might argue that these are subjective experiences and not necessarily representative of all women. However, many women can relate.
- Scene construction
- Character development
These elements enhance readability. But they raise questions about the line between factual representation and artistic embellishment. Did a conversation truly play out exactly as described? Did the author fabricate internal monologues to enhance a character's portrayal? The ambiguity can be both intriguing and unsettling.
- Accuracy concerns. The reliance on personal narratives and subjective interpretations can lead to accuracy concerns. Literary nonfiction authors generally strive for truthfulness. Inevitably, memories can be unreliable. Eyewitness accounts can be subjective. Readers need to approach the genre with a critical eye. Consider the author's background, potential biases, and the sources used for research.
Navigating the genre
The potential for subjectivity and creative license doesn't negate the value of literary nonfiction. Here are some tips for approaching the genre critically:
- Research the author. Learn about the writer's background, biases, and previous work. This context can help you understand their perspective and potential slants within the narrative.
- Consider the sources. Look for authors who use credible sources to substantiate their claims. Especially for historical events or scientific topics.
- Read with a critical eye. Don't simply accept everything as fact. Question the author's choices. Note the evidence presented. Be aware of potential biases shaping the narrative.
Literary nonfiction offers a unique lens on the world. It allows us to explore complex realities through the power of storytelling. It invites us to both learn about topics and feel the emotional weight of these experiences. By blurring the lines between fact and fiction, it fosters a deeper connection with the subject matter. This prompts us to question, analyse, and ultimately, form our own understanding of the truth.
Case studies
To truly appreciate the power of literary nonfiction, let's delve into some notable examples.
Truman Capote's 'In Cold Blood'
This groundbreaking work of investigative journalism redefined the genre. Capote meticulously researched the Clutter family murders. He wove factual details with an intimate portrayal of the victims, perpetrators, and the surrounding community. The result is a chilling exploration of multiple themes. Violence, the American psyche, and the ethical complexities of storytelling.
Susan Orlean's 'The Orchid Thief'
This is a captivating blend of true crime and botanical exploration. It follows the bizarre story of orchid poacher John Laroche. Orlean goes beyond the crime itself. She delves into the world of orchid collectors and enthusiasts. The book raises questions about obsession, desire, and the value placed on the natural world.
Ta-Nehisi Coates's 'Between the World and Me'
This powerful letter to Coates's son explores the realities of being Black in America. It weaves personal anecdotes with historical accounts of racial injustice, creating a poignant and thought-provoking exploration of race, identity, and the struggle for freedom.
Laura Kelly
Laura is a freelance writer and worked at Readable for a number of years. Laura is well-versed in optimising content for readability and Readable's suite of tools. She aims to write guides that help you make the most out of Readable.
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Jul 9, 2019 · Besides essays on Book Riot, I love looking for essays on The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The Rumpus, and Electric Literature. But there are great nonfiction essays available for free all over the Internet. From contemporary to classic writers and personal essays to researched ones—here are 25 of my favorite nonfiction essays you can read today.
Nov 21, 2023 · A final example of literary nonfiction is the essay. An essay is a short written work on a single subject. There are three types of essays. Expository essays are formal and focus on providing ...
Jul 21, 2020 · What is literary nonfiction? Learn about literary nonfiction, also known as creative nonfiction or narrative nonfiction, and the unique features it has.
Jul 15, 2019 · The genre of literary nonfiction, also known as creative nonfiction, is broad enough to include travel writing, nature writing, science writing, sports writing, biography, autobiography, memoir, interviews, and familiar and personal essays. Literary nonfiction is alive and well, but it is not without its critics.
Discover everything you need to know about literary nonfiction here. Learn the ins and outs of the writing style and see if it's right for you.
Jul 15, 2024 · However, the term 'literary nonfiction' gained prominence in the latter half of the 20th century. Writers like Truman Capote, Norman Mailer, and Joan Didion pushed the boundaries of the genre. Why choose literary nonfiction? So, why opt for literary nonfiction over traditional journalism or academic writing? Here are some key reasons: Engagement.