Andrew J Hoffman wrote: > > Thank you all for you lists, a wildly rich assortment, many I have > thought to read anyway but had to date lacked the full inspiration to > crack. Your enthusiasm, and the practical considerations of preparing a > course, move me onward. Don't hesitate to throw out more suggestions as > they come to mind. Thanks again, fellow Forumites. > Actually, I was under the (perhaps mistaken) impression that you were looking for _short_ pieces for your students. Proceeding on that assumption, allow me to suggest a few things. For short non-fiction, the logical place to look is the newspapers. The best columnists get under a thousand words to work with, so they have to grab a reader quick, convey information economically, set mood with alacrity. As Donald Hall has said (and you could do a lot worse than to give your class some of his non-fiction writing!) the best and worst writing in any newspaper can be found in the sports section. Give them something by Red Smith, Jimmy Cannon, Frank DeFord (for a longer magazine piece he's the master), Thomas Boswell and Roger Angell on baseball, Dan Jenkins on golf or football. Any column by Jimmy Breslin will be worth reading, but I particularly recommend his piece after JFK was shot; Breslin sought out and profiled the gravedigger, and the result is so moving, so unusual, that my wife's professors at Columbia School of Journalism actually tell their students, "Look for the gravedigger," when they want to convey the importance of finding a new angle on a story everyone is covering. In a considerably different vein, John McPhee is proof that you can write interestingly on almost any subject: oranges, the Swiss Army, merchant seamen. Oh, and there are some nice non-fiction pieces by a 19th century American writer. I think his name was Clemens. Something like that. George Robinson