
I was born in Port of Spain, Trinidad, in 1943 to a Navy father and mother. I graduated from Duke University in 1965. In January of 1966, when I was on the bus leaving Parris Island as a freshly-minted Marine, I looked back and thought there was at least one good thing about this departure. "No matter what happens to me for the rest of my life, no one can ever send me back to this freakin' place again." Forty years later, to my surprise and gratification, I am far more closely bound to the young men of the Marine Corps and to all other dirt-eating, ground-pounding outfits than I could ever have imagined. GATES OF FIRE is one reason. Dog-eared paperbacks of this tale of the ancient Spartans have circulated throughout platoons of U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan since the first days of the invasions. E-mails come in by hundreds. GATES OF FIRE is on the Commandant of the Marine Corps' Reading list. It is taught at West Point and Annapolis and at the Marine Corps Basic School at Quantico. TIDES OF WAR is on the curriculum of the Naval War College. From 2nd Battalion/6th Marines, which calls itself "the Spartans," to ODA 316 of the Special Forces, whose forearms are tattooed with the lambda of Lakedaemon, today's young warriors find a bond to their ancient precursors in the historical narratives of these novels. My struggles to earn a living as a writer (it took seventeen years to get the first paycheck) are detailed in my 2002 book, THE WAR OF ART. I have worked as an advertising copywriter, schoolteacher, tractor-trailer driver, bartender, oilfield roustabout and attendant in a mental hospital. I have picked fruit in Washington state and written screenplays in Tinseltown. With the publication of THE LEGEND OF BAGGER VANCE in 1995, I became a writer of books once and for all. My writing philosophy is, not surprisingly, a kind of warrior code—internal rather than external—in which the enemy is identified as those forms of self-sabotage that I have labeled "Resistance" with a capital R (in THE WAR OF ART) and the technique for combatting these foes can be described as "turning pro." I believe in previous lives. I believe in the Muse. I believe that books and music exist before they are written and that they are propelled into material being by their own imperative to be born, via the offices of those willing servants of discipline, imagination and inspiration, whom we call artists. My conception of the artist's role is a combination of reverence for the unknowable nature of "where it all comes from" and a no-nonsense, blue-collar demystification of the process by which this mystery is approached. In other words, a paradox. There's a recurring character in my books named Telamon, a mercenary of ancient days. Telamon doesn't say much. He rarely gets hurt or wounded. And he never seems to age. His view of the profession of arms is a lot like my conception of art and the artist: "It is one thing to study war, and another to live the warrior's life."
Books

Turning Pro
Tap Your Inner Power and Create Your Life's Work
2012

The Daily Pressfield
A Teaching a Day from the Author of the War of Art
2023

An American Jew
A Writer Confronts His Own Exile and Identity
1656

The Legend of Bagger Vance
2000

What Is Your Story About?
2023

The Authentic Swing
Notes From the Writing of a First Novel
2013
The Arcadian
A Novel
2026

Killing Rommel
2008

The War of Art
2002

The Lion's Gate
On the Front Lines of the Six Day War
2014

The Daily Pressfield
A Companion Journal
2023

How Does A Story Start?
2018

The Knowledge
2016

A Man at Arms
2021

36 Righteous Men
2019

The Warrior Ethos
2011

Last of the Amazons
2002

Tides of War
2000

Put Your Ass Where Your Heart Wants to Be
2022

Gates of Fire
1998

The Legend of Bagger Vance
1995

Govt Cheese a memoir
2022

The Afghan Campaign
2006

Do the Work
2011

The Artist's Journey
The Wake of the Hero's Journey and the Lifelong Pursuit of Meaning
2018

The Virtues of War
2004

Nobody Wants to Read Your Sh*t
Why That Is And What You Can Do About It
2016

The Profession
1878