One of the things I like best about browsing paper books in libraries is that sometimes you get what you weren't expecting, and it's wonderful.
I needed a book for a grad student whose writing is from the "why write one word, when six ill-used ones will make me sound more intelligent" school. Because this book opened with many examples of terrible academic and business writing, and exercises for rewriting them, I grabbed it without looking through it thoroughly.
I'm glad I always read books before I rec them. I fell unexpectedly in love with both Tredinnick's writing and his suggestions for improving my own.
The first sections are about business writing, with basic grammar rules and sentence structure, but soon the book turns to fiction and style, and somehow it just spoke to me. Well, mainly it was saying "never try to write literature" because gods know, I suck, which made the examples in here akin to watching food porn at midnight in a crummy motel with no mini-bar in a small town that lies in darkness. Luckily when you write non-fiction papers people tend to think if they can read it without nodding off then you've done a good job. But Tredinnick made me want to be better: he showed me a sky of words and made me feel that even though I can't fly, I can still have fun jumping off bridges with a parachute.
It took quite a while to read, because I had so much to think about after each chapter. I've ordered my own copy because this has to go back now :(
The book is all about the writing. There's nothing here about time management, or finding a place to write, or battling procrastination. It's about putting the words on the page, one after another, with care and forethought and consideration for the reader.
I highly recommend it.