Signs of life for Web writing

Writing for the Web is no masterpiece, but any intelligent book on Web writing is better than nothing. And this slim volume does contain a few lessons.


In March 2000, Canadian writer and teacher Crawford Kilian delivered Writing for the Web (around $A18 plus shipping from Amazon). This thin and flatly-written 157-page volume will disappoint anyone hoping for a Web writing manifesto. Kilian brings no new research and an unimpressive bunch of case studies. But by making the case once again for caring about Web text, Kilian's book serves a useful purpose.

Pick up the Kilian nuggets

Many pages of the book are taken up with advice applicable to writing for any medium: understand your reader's viewpoint, use the "active voice", avoid relying on your spell checker. Devotees of that classic writers' how-to manual, Strunk and White's The Elements of Style, will find a startling amount of familiar material. So will devotees of Web usability expert Jakob Nielsen and his Useit.com. A substantial slice of Kilian's book could well have been gathered off a handful of well-known Web sites.

But Kilian also makes a series of points that have been missed or underemphasised in discussions of Web writing to date:

Killian could and should have given his readers more insights on issues like these, rather than recycling better-known guidelines. His book does not deserve recommendation. But it's nice to see Web writing getting some of the attention it deserves.

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This item first filed on Saturday, May 20, 2000 and last modified on Friday, March 05, 2004