In 1975, at the age of twenty-nine, John Bennet got a job at The New Yorker, under the editorship of William Shawn. He was first placed on the copy desk. Eventually, he edited Pauline Kael, Seymour Hersh, John McPhee, Alma Guillermoprieto, Oliver Sacks, Robert Caro, Elizabeth Kolbert, Bill Finnegan, and many others. In 2001, he started teaching courses in magazine writing at Columbia Journalism School. He became, over decades, a mentor to generations of authors, editors, and studentsârecipients of his unimpeachable proofs and compassionate, bullshit-free counsel. Shortly before he diedâof cancer, in the summer of 2022âhe spoke about how life took him from a dirt farm in Athens, Texas, to literary heights, shaping some of the greatest nonfiction stories of his time.
An unofficial list of John Bennetâs aphorisms, also known as Bennetisms:
- Put the best shit at the end, the second-best shit at the beginning, and all the other shit in between.
- An editor is like a shrink. If the writer doesnât think his editor is great, heâs totally fucked up.
- Cut the blah-blah.
- The best journalists always overreport.
- Donât be a hero.
- Chronology is your friend.
- Read your piece out loud.
- Only shitty writers need transitions.
- The bias of journalism is coherence.
- Writing is taking life and reducing it to still life.
- âSaidâ is always the best attribution. (The person didnât âchuckle,â âquip,â or, as in Victorian novels, âejaculate.â)
- In quotes, avoid boilerplate âon messageâ lines that you could paraphrase just as easily.
- There are only two numbers: big numbers and small numbers.
- If thereâs no fix, thereâs no problem.
- Peel off one layer of the onion and youâre a genius. Peel off another layer, youâre a solipsist and people will hate you.
- You need a cosmic graf.
- Donât nudge the reader.
- Donât condescend to the reader.
- Donât rob the reader of feeling emotions by reacting for them (âI started to cryâ).
- When a clichĂ© enters the readerâs brain it is shunted down a scarified tube and fails to generate new synapses.
- Remember the banana rule: itâs never âthe elongated yellow fruit.â
- Readers are like cowsâthey just want to keep chewing what you feed them.
- The best titles are Dylan songs.
- Thereâs no such thing as a shared byline. Two people talk about something for hours, and then at midnight one person sits down at the typewriter and the other walks away.
- BuzzFeed facts: What are the top ten most interesting things about your subject? Make sure theyâre in your article.
- Remember that the reader is blind, so you need physical descriptions of people.
- A piece with a nut graf is like a documentary with a voice-overâit means you havenât got it all on film.
- Editing is not a spectator sport.
- Anything great about a piece is because of the writerâdonât fuck it up.
- Youâre paid for your opinion.
- When it comes to rejection: you donât really want to know why Suzy doesnât want to go with you to the dance.
- A writer is a guy in the hospital wearing one of those gowns thatâs open in the back. An editor is walking behind, making sure that nobody can see his ass.
This audio piece was edited by Amanda Darrach and Mark Van Hare.
Betsy Morais is the managing editor of CJR.