How to Tell a Story

An Ancient Guide to the Art of Storytelling for Writers and Readers

Publication date: May 10, 2022

Aristotle’s Poetics is the most important book ever written for writers and readers of stories—whether novels, short fiction, plays, screenplays, or nonfiction. Aristotle was the first to identify the keys to plot, character, audience perception, tragic pleasure, and dozens of other critical points of good storytelling. Despite being written more than 2,000 years ago, the Poetics remains essential reading for anyone who wants to learn how to write a captivating story—or understand how such stories work and achieve their psychological effects. Yet for all its influence, the Poetics is too little read because it comes down to us in a form that is often difficult to follow, and even the best translations are geared more to specialists than to general readers who simply want to grasp Aristotle’s profound and practical insights. In How to Tell a Story, Philip Freeman presents the most readable translation of the Poetics yet produced, making this indispensable handbook more accessible, engaging, and useful than ever before.

In addition to its inviting and reliable translation, a commentary on each section, and the original Greek on facing pages, this edition of the Poetics features unique bullet points, chapter headings, and section numbers to help guide readers through Aristotle’s unmatched introduction to the art of writing and reading stories.

Reviews

“The remarkable insights of Aristotle’s Poetics are unknown to too many writers today. This fluid new translation of his masterwork provides an accessible and reliable guide to Aristotle’s art of storytelling and should help redeem his original and counterintuitive ideas on literature from their long popular neglect.”—Angus Fletcher, author of Wonderworks: The 25 Most Powerful Inventions in the History of Literature

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