Throughout the 1970s, Zinsser taught writing at Yale University, where he was the fifth master of Branford College (1973–1979).[citation needed] He served as executive editor of the Book-of-the-Month Club from 1979 to 1987.[citation needed] As of 2013, he lives in New York City. He retired from teaching at The New School and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism because his glaucoma has advanced.[citation needed] [1] His 18 books include On Writing Well, which is in the seventh edition; Writing to Learn; Writing with a Word Processor; Mitchell & Ruff (originally published as Willie and Dwike); Spring Training; American Places; Easy to Remember: The Great American Songwriters and Their Songs; Writing About Your Life; and most recently, Writing Places, an autobiography. The American Scholar runs William Zinsser's weekly web posting, "Zinsser on Friday," featuring his short essays on writing, the arts, and popular culture.[2]
In his books, Zinsser emphasizes the word "economy". Author James J. Kilpatrick, in his book The Writer's Art says that if he were limited to just one book on how to write, it would be William Zinsser's On Writing Well. He adds, "Zinsser's sound theory is that 'writing improves in direct ratio to the number of things we can keep out of it."[3] [4]
Zinsser interviewed Woody Allen in 1963 for the Saturday Evening Post. After a chance encounter in 1980, Allen cast Zinsser, a Protestant, in a small role as a Catholic priest in his film Stardust