Skip to content
Go back

33 Best Screenwriting Books For All Authors

If you’re eager to master the art of screenwriting, explore our list of the 33 best screenwriting books. Discover valuable insights and techniques from the experts!

Screenwriting, when done well, can be an excellent way to make money writing. You can follow screenwriters on Instagram and find that many do quite well for themselves. Yet, for every blockbuster that hits the silver screen, you have hundreds of scripts that hit the cutting room floor. How can you learn to write screenplays that sell? Going to film school is one option, but a costly one. Another is to read one of these 33 best screenwriting books.

Table of Contents

Open Table of Contents

Top Books Screenwriters Must Read

1. Save the Cat: The Last Book on Screenwriting You’ll Ever Needby Blake Snyder

First up in the top books for beginning screenwriters, [Save the Cat](https://www.amazon.com/dpB00340ESIS? tag=work089-20) explains how movie magic is made. It talks about the art of screenwriting and the business side of the trade. It’s an informative but also engaging and entertaining read.

“True originality can’t begin until you know what you’re breaking away from.”

Blake Snyder

2*. Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting*by Syd Field

This is the second book designed for beginning screenwriters. Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting looks at concepts most film students take for granted, but new film writers may need help understanding. He has detailed explanations of the structure and character creation in books, and the book has a companion practical guide called The Screenwriter’s Workbook.

“Action is character. What a person does is what he is, not what he says.”

Syd Field

3. 150 Screenwriting Challengesby Eric Heisserer

With[ 150 Screenwriting Challenges](https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00GKNFPGK? tag=work089-20)*, *Heisserer adds another list to the books for beginning screenwriters. It provides a list of brainstorming activities that may help writers develop the next blockbuster to add to their portfolio. It also comes from a professional screenwriter, so his ideas are precious.

“I started writing for the chance at paying the rent with it about fifteen years ago (oh god, that’s a long time, I was such a derp), and during that long, slow crawl uphill to professional status I learned a ton of tricks and tests to help me improve my craft, including ways to find my own unique voice, and methods to break through writer’s block.”

Eric Heisserer

4. Your Screenplay Sucks! 100 Ways to Make It Greatby William Akers

Beginning screenplay writers can benefit from this book as well. Your Screenplay Sucks! is Akers’s work, with three feature films to his name. It provides practical advice about making a weak screenplay better, and beginning writers can take those tips to heart.

If you are looking screenwriters on Instagram to follow) and take inspiration from, just search “screenwriters on Instagram” to get a hold of our round-up!

“Scribble on napkins or beer coasters. Write down cool stuff for characters to do that may never find its way into the movie. Make notes and more notes and more notes, but do not trouble yourself with structure. Screw structure. Have fun.”

William Akers

5. The Screenwriter’s Bible: A Complete Guide to Writing, Formatting and Selling Your Scriptby David Trottier

The Screenwriter’s Bible makes a listas the first guide for screenplay formatting. It does contain writing advice, but it works more like a reference for formatting your work for Hollywood, so you can understand the written and unwritten rules you may not learn in film school. It also touches on how to sell a screenplay, which is an important part of being a successful filmmaker.

“denouement”

David Trottier

6. The Complete Guide to Standard Script Formatsby Cole Haag

Formatting can get tricky, and *The Complete Guide to Standard Script Formats*helps take some of the mystery out of it. The guide will help you know the Hollywood formatting standard so you can craft professional-looking screenplays. The only problem is that it does not pair well with Final Draft or Movie Magic software programs, but if you use something else, it may give you the necessary insights.

7. The Hollywood Standardby Christopher Riley

Next on the list of screenplay formatting books is [The Hollywood Standard](https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09477R5CD? tag=work089-20). This book only touches on formatting but offers tips and tricks for using modern technology to format a screenplay well. It is an important work to have because every good screenplay must have good formatting.

“Standard format is about infinitely more than margins. It’s knowing when to add a shot heading and when to leave one out. It’s knowing how to get out of a POV shot and how to set up a montage. It’s knowing what to capitalize and how to control pacing and what belongs in parenthetical character direction and whether those automatic (cont’d)s beside dialogue should be turned on or off.”

Christopher Riley

8. Writing Screenplays That Sell: The Complete Guide to Turning Story Concepts into Movie and Television Dealsby Michael Hague

The primary focus of this book is on selling screenplays. Writing Screenplays That Sell discusses everything from brainstorming ideas to finalizing the structure of the completed screenplay to sell the work to Hollywood filmmakers. This book is unique because it does not just focus on movies but also on commercials and television writing.

“script as fast, easy, and enjoyable to read as possible.”

Michael Hague

9. Selling a Screenplay: The Screenwriter’s Guide to Hollywoodby Syd Field

This book is another about selling screenplays.[Selling a Screenplay](https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00329UW22? tag=work089-20) focuses not on how to write a great screenplay but on what to do after you have written it. It touches on formatting, production, and pitching while also talking about the business side of screenwriting.

“Then I remembered something I’d read in a Kurt Vonnegut novel: when you’re trying to find the answer to a question, the answer is in the question.”

Syd Field

10. Selling Your Story in 60 Secondsby Michael Hauge

The final book on selling screenplays is*Selling Your Story in 60 Seconds.* This book focuses on how to make an Elevator Pitch for your screenplay or book. With the guide outlined here, you are sure to get a producer to take a second look, even with just 60 seconds to use to sell.

“convey the most powerful elements of your story clearly, succinctly and passionately”

Michael Hauge

11. The Writer’s Journeyby Christopher Vogler

The Writer’s Journey opens the next category of screenwriting books: books on story theory. It can be a bit deep for beginning screenwriters, but it delves into the origins of storytelling. Since storytelling is at the heart of making screenplays, it can help people understand what makes a great tale and how to translate that tale from paper to the screen.

“The young, in their innocence, are often wise and capable of teaching the old.”

Christopher Vogler

12. Three Uses of the Knifeby David Mamet

In Three Uses of the Knife, David Mamet explores story theory by discussing what makes a good drama. Since every good screenplay or play script needs a dramatic hook, this book is quite helpful. Even though the author is a playwright, the reality is that the theories of drama apply to screenplays as well.

“Tragedy is a celebration not of our eventual triumph but of the truth – it is not a victory but a resignation.”

David Mamet

13. The Hero with a Thousand Facesby Joseph Campbell

*The Hero with a Thousand Faces*explores the theory of stories. It discusses where stories come from and how they have changed as the world has grown and developed. While it doesn’t have much practical insight into screenwriting, it is an interesting read that can help writers understand stories and their origins.

“Regrets are illuminations come too late.”

Joseph Campbell

14. Into the Woodsby John Yorke

*Into the Woods*is another book on the theory of stories. It explores the five-act structure and builds on ancient Greek philosophers’ ideas to see how stories affect the writer’s psychological journey as they create a screenplay. This is a highly philosophical book, but it can positively impact your writing endeavors.

“A character’s want is a superficial conscious desire for the thing they think they need in order to present themselves to the world.”

John Yorke

15. The Ultimate Hero’s Journeyby Neal Soloponte

At the heart of the theory of stories is the hero’s journey. The Ultimate Hero’s Journey looks at 195 stages of a great movie or novel story. If you want to create a classic screenplay, this book is a must-read to help you do it.

16. The Idea: The Seven Elements of a Viable Story for Screen, Stage or Fictionby Erik Bork

The final book on the theory of stories is The Idea. In this book, Bork explores the idea that the selection of the initial story idea is the most important part of the scriptwriting process. It discusses what elements make a good story and how a writer can find a story that will work.

“In a series idea, I look for that one central thing that each important character is most haunted and challenged by—that one way in which they don’t have the life they want, and never will.”

Erik Bork

17. Story: Substance, Structure, Style and the Principles of Screenwritingby Robert McKee

*[Story](https://amazon.com/dp/B0042FZVOY? tag=work089-20)*is a book designed for film students. It takes the lectures of USC professor Robert McKee and combines them into one book. With this book, every screenwriter can access the thoughts and ideas that some of the industry’s top film writers have listened to in his in-person lectures.

“A fine work of art - music, dance, painting, story - has the power to silence the chatter in the mind and lift us to another place.”

Robert McKee

18. Screenwriting 434 by Lew Hunter

The next book for film students is Screenwriting 434. This work allows people to learn from one of the best screenwriting professors in book format rather than in an in-person class. In addition, it gives potential film students a taste of what it would be like to go to film school.

19. Screenplay: Writing the Pictureby Robin Russin and William Downs

Screenplay: Writing the Picture is another book for students. It takes a complete screenwriting course and puts it in book form, covering theme development, story research, script structures, character development, marketing, pitching, and more. It is so thorough it could easily be the most important book for a film student to pick up.

20. Scriptshadow Secrets: 500 Screenwriting Secrets Hidden Inside 50 Great Moviesby Carson Reeves

Scriptshadow Secrets is a book on the actual writing process. It takes 50 of the author’s favorite movies and studies the intricate parts of the story structure or character development that makes them effective. Even though the suggestions in the book are specific to the films they come from, the reality is that each one applies to any screenplay you may be writing.

21. The 101 Habits of Successful Screenwritersby Karl Iglesias

This book looks at the writing process of a screenplay. [The 101 Habits of Successful Screenwriters](https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0047T73NC? tag=work089-20) is a little different because it looks at well-known writers and then explores the regimens they follow to crank out great screenplays. By following some of these tips and tricks, you can learn what you can do as you build your own stories.

22. Crafting Short Screenplays That Connectby Claudia Hunter-Johnson

Crafting Short Screenplays That Connect is another book with tips on the writing process. It includes practical writing exercises to help you develop characters and stories people want to read. If you’re suffering from writer’s block as a screenwriter, these exercises will help you overcome it.

23. The Nutshell Techniqueby Jill Chamberlain

[The Nutshell Technique](https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0170CKMMG? tag=work089-20) also explores the writing process. It teaches how to write a story starting with the smallest point, then building outward from that. The author is a script consultant, so she has many insights into the world of writing scripts.

“The CRISIS typically puts the protagonist in between two bad options, a rock and a hard place, and the audience should feel that there is no other way out of this dilemma.”

Jill Chamberlain

24. Making a Good Script Greatby Linda Seger

Making a Good Script Great is another book about the writing process. It explores how writers can take good screenplays and make them exceptional. She focuses particularly on how to add to the story’s conflict to make it Oscar-worthy.

“A myth is a story that is “more than true.” Many stories are true because one person, somewhere, at some time, lived it.”

Linda Seger

25. How Not to Write a Screenplayby Denny Martin Flynn

[How Not to Write a Screenplay](https://amazon.com/dp/1580650155? tag=work089-20) takes a different approach to the writing process. Rather than focusing on what you should do, it focuses on common mistakes that writers make or myths about writing) that they believe when crafting screenplays. By reading this book, you can come away with practical ideas about how you can make your screenplays better.

26. The Coffee Break Screenwriter: Writing Your Script Ten Minutes at a Timeby Pilar Alessandra

The Coffee Break Screenwriter is full of practical advice about making writing easier. It teaches the writer to spend just ten minutes in focused writing, then step away from the screenplay for a bit. This can help the writing process feel less intimidating and give the writer the freedom to create a great screenplay.

“A villain doesn’t know he’s the villain — he thinks he’s the hero. He believes some good-looking guy with more screen time is simply getting in his way. A romantic interest doesn’t know she’s just “the girl” — she thinks she’s running the show.”

Pilar Alessandra

27. The Art of Dramatic Writingby Lajos Egri

Another book on the writing process, [The Art of Dramatic Writing](https://www.amazon.com/dp/160796130X? tag=work089-20), is technically a book on writing plays, but the principles apply to screenwriting as well. It shows examples of scenes written poorly, then explores why they don’t work before comparing them to great scenes. After finishing the books, you will be equipped to create screenplays that work.

28. The Creative Screenwriter: 12 Rules to Follow - and Break - to Unlock Your Screenwriting Potentialby Julian Hoxter

This book covers both how to write and how to write creatively. *The Creative Screenwriter*covers terminology in the industry while also looking more deeply at classic films and how they use screenwriting structure to work well. Finally, it covers 12 rules that make a successful screenplay.

29. Writing Movies for Fun and Profitby Robert Ben Garant and Thomas Lennon

*Writing Movies for Fun and Profit*introduces the next category of filmmaking book: personal stories. It is a memoir of the experiences of Garant and Lennon, who wrote several blockbusters, including “Night at the Museum” and “The Pacifier.” It explores how this successful pair broke into the filmmaking industry and how they worked with the stars that made their books famous.

“There are many self-proclaimed “screenwriting gurus”—though how you get to be a “guru” of something you’ve never actually done is beyond us.”

Robert Ben Garant

30. Adventures in the Screen Trade: A Personal View of Hollywood and Screenwritingby William Goldman

Adventures in the Screen Trade is the second book that fits into the personal stories category. While it does have some practical tips for writing a good script, the book mostly focuses on personal stories from Goldman, the man behind the rewrites of “Good Will Hunting,” as well as classics like “The Princess Bride” and “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.” This book will give you insight into how the screenwriting industry started from one of the best in the business.

“Nobody knows anything… Not one person in the entire motion picture field knows for a certainty what’s going to work.”

William Goldman

31. On Writingby Stephen King

If you want to learn screenwriting, you want to learn from the best, and [On Writing](https://amazon.com/dp/B000FC0SIM? tag=work089-20) is the third book about personal stories. In this autobiography, King walks the reader through his career and life. While it is written to be enjoyed by the reader, dedicated filmmakers will find many tidbits to learn from this book.

“The road to hell is paved with adverbs.”

Stephen King

32. How to Manage Your Agentby Chad Gervich

The final category of screenwriting books is practical guide books. How to Manage Your Agent*is one of these, discussing what you need to do to handle an agent once you get signed by one. It discusses how to handle the complicated egos in filmmaking and includes insights from agents and writers.

33. The Guide for Every Screenwriterby Geoffrey Calhoun

The Guide for Every Screenwriter is another practical guidebook for scriptwriting. It covers everything from templates to selling. Use it from start to finish to create a winning, easy-to-sell script.

What is the best way to learn screenwriting?

The best way to learn to screenwrite is to study techniques from successful screenwriters. Reading books written by them will help you do this.

Grammarly Logo

Improve Your Writing

Catch grammar mistakes, awkward phrasing, and pesky typos with Grammarly. It's the AI-powered writing assistant that helps you write with confidence.

Try Grammarly for Free
Audible Logo

Try Audible Premium Plus and Get Up to Two Free Audiobooks

Stream or download thousands of included titles. A great way to discover new authors!

Try Audible Free

📚 Featured Books from This Article

Cover of Screenplay

Screenplay

by Syd Field

Providing examples from well-known movies, Field explains the structural and stylistic elements as w...

0
Cover of Secret Weapons

Secret Weapons

by Eric Heisserer

Eric Heisserer - the Academy Award-nominated screenwriter of ARRIVAL and Valiant's upcoming HARBINGE...

0
Cover of Your Screenplay Sucks!

Your Screenplay Sucks!

by William M. Akers

A lifetime member of the Writer's Guild of America who has had three feature films produced from his...

0

Book covers and metadata powered by Google Books API


Share this post on:

Want More Book Recommendations?

Join our weekly newsletter for curated book picks

Free weekly newsletter • No spam

Related Discoveries


Previous Post
12 Best Edgar Rice Burroughs Books For Science Fiction Fans
Next Post
10 Best Dr. Seuss Books Everyone Must Read