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The War of Art
Audible Audiobook
– Unabridged
Think of The War of Art as tough love...for yourself.
Since 2002, The War of Art has inspired people around the world to defeat "resistance"; to recognize and knock down dream-blocking barriers and to silence the naysayers within us. Resistance kicks everyone's butt, and the desire to defeat it is equally as universal. The War of Art identifies the enemy that every one of us must face, outlines a battle plan to conquer this internal foe, then pinpoints just how to achieve the greatest success.
Though it was written for writers, it has been embraced by business entrepreneurs, actors, dancers, painters, photographers, filmmakers, military service members, and thousands of others around the world.
- Listening Length2 hours and 29 minutes
- Audible release dateApril 4, 2019
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB07PTBYH2G
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
Listening Length | 2 hours and 29 minutes |
---|---|
Author | Steven Pressfield |
Narrator | Steven Pressfield |
Audible.com Release Date | April 04, 2019 |
Publisher | Black Irish Entertainment LLC |
Program Type | Audiobook |
Version | Unabridged |
Language | English |
ASIN | B07PTBYH2G |
Best Sellers Rank | #514 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) #3 in Creativity (Books) #3 in Creativity (Audible Books & Originals) #28 in Motivational Self-Help (Books) |
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book phenomenally inspiring and extremely insightful, with one review noting it's filled with common sense practical inspiration. Moreover, the writing style is engaging, making it a fantastic read for creative people, and customers appreciate its honest and relatable approach to human nature. Additionally, the book effectively helps readers resist procrastination, with one review highlighting how it addresses procrastination, resistance, and fear head-on. However, customers disagree on the book's effectiveness and pacing, with some finding it powerful while others say it's not helpful, and some praising its concise chapter structure while others find it lacking in practical content.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book phenomenally inspiring and life-changing, with good insights that help with mindset. One customer notes that each page is filled with common sense practical inspiration, while another mentions it provides shrewd psychological truths.
"...The second section covers: Combating Resistance – Turning Pro. According to Pressfield, there’s no mystery about turning pro...." Read more
"...It’s organized like a manual, with short chapters, and important titles and messages that will resonate with you at different points in your life...." Read more
"...It's not about "success", either. It’s a book about every waking moment and the presence we do or don’t bring to it...." Read more
"...It can also assemble old ideas and knowledge into new combinations. It is the wellspring of our creativity. Two, there’s a universal consciousness...." Read more
Customers find the book easy to read and engaging, with one customer noting that the chapters are well thought out and another describing the prose as laconic but piercing.
"...This book is an extremely easy read, and was very encouraging to me personally...." Read more
"...While reading its entirety is do-able, one can just as easily flip through the chapters and meditate on the headline and chapter that speaks to you..." Read more
"...But that’s what this became. This is much more than a book about art. In fact, it's not about art at all. It's not about "success", either...." Read more
"...This book is aimed at creative artists, especially writers...." Read more
Customers find the book authentic and honest, providing interesting insights into the human psyche.
"...It's about living an authentic life. Read it. It may just change everything." Read more
"...time to read the foreword by Robert McKee, who gives you an engaging personal story about his own creativity and block and how Pressfield has helped..." Read more
"...in all our work and reading is the absolutely integral need for clear, honest, incisive and creative thinking...." Read more
"...one's higher Self which is our deepest being, united to God, incapable of falsehood, and is ever-growing and ever-evolving...." Read more
Customers find the book effective at addressing procrastination, providing great reasons to stop and motivating them to take action.
"...book has been a game changer, there's something about reframing procrastination as resistance...." Read more
"...no effort at all, no, no, actually this book changes you and pushes you to make efforts, but like an urgent need, reveals what is important in your..." Read more
"...give this book four stars, because it’s well written and it gets better as it goes along. At first, I didn’t understand it...." Read more
"...It detonates excuses, obliterates procrastination, and leaves your inner critic shell shocked...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's concise format, with chapters ranging from 1 to 2 pages long.
"...can zip through the book quickly, especially because some pages contain only one paragraph...." Read more
"...In these short, punchy chapters, and in succinct powerful phrases, Pressfield gives us the real story that goes on inside each of us creative types:..." Read more
"...It's short, but worthy of rereading...." Read more
"...The chapters are short (some only a few sentences) and to the point but all of them are packed with a lot of effectiveness...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the effectiveness of the book, with some finding it powerful and complete, while others say it's not really helpful and lacks practical advice.
"...These are our allies in the war against Resistance, in the war to do our work...." Read more
"...It works individually without the need for therapy, support or process, at least according to Mr. Pressfield, who has obviously practice what he..." Read more
"...with seemingly good intentions, making War is never an effective solution to attaining your goals...." Read more
"...anything that requires a creative endeavor...read this slim but super-charged book...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some finding it straight to the point and organized like a manual, while others find it too technical and convoluted.
"...It’s organized like a manual, with short chapters, and important titles and messages that will resonate with you at different points in your life...." Read more
"...This was the most prescriptive section of the book, but I'd say it leaned more towards inspiration than prescription...." Read more
"...It lays out the entire book while also injecting humor and some of Pressfield’s language into your vocabulary before you start page one...." Read more
"...by his odd new age tinged Christianity leading his advice to be extremely vague and shortsighted...." Read more
Customers find the book preachy, with multiple reviews noting it is full of religious mumbo-jumbo and repetitive fluff.
"...Words are broken without hyphenation. Example 1: not appears as no at the end of a line followed by a t at the start of the next...." Read more
"...a rousing argument, but is undercut by some ludicrous and unsupportable conjecture. It will resonate with some people and turn others off...." Read more
"...anyone struggling with 'resistance'....outside of that, it's highly philosophical; which I really dislike..not just in this book but any book for..." Read more
"...identify the enemy, equip you with the tools to fight, and unlock the mystical powers that will help you live a fulfilling life." Read more
Reviews with images

Pressfield's War Of Art is Empowerment in a Nutshell. Get it. Read it. Live it.
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2014Warning: Very long review. This book has helped me multiple times. In The Art of War, Sun Tzu coined the famous phrase ‘know your enemy and know yourself and you can fight a hundred battles without disaster.’
In The War of Art, Steven Pressfield launches into a similar discussion. In the first section we will discover our enemy: Resistance. The second section discusses our means for combat: Turning Pro. In the third and final section we will see that the battle is between our Self and our Ego.
Resistance – Defining the Enemy. This is the first of 3 sections Pressfield shares with us on what he considers to be the enemy of the creator. Resistance is an internal force, the ‘enemy within.’ Defined as self-sabotage, resistance usually manifests as avoidance, procrastination, or inaction caused by fear which creates paralysis. Resistance, according to Pressfield, is invisible, insidious, implacable, internal, impersonal and universal. He elaborates on each of these adjectives (and more), unafraid to use a clever metaphor or simile to illustrate a point. For example, in the section ‘Resistance is infallible, Pressfield writes:
“Like a magnetized needle floating on a surface of oil, Resistance will unfailingly point to true North-meaning that calling or action it most wants to stop us from doing.”
Pressfield goes on to point out Resistance in its many guises: the way peers may be recruited as allies of Resistance when an artist starts to conquer Resistance; the people around her “begin acting strange…they are trying to sabotage her” because they are experiencing Resistance of their own. They may begin to feel guilty for not trying to reach their own potential To make themselves feel better, they pressure her either directly or indirectly to backslide. In my case, I have a couple of people who point out how hard I work, don’t I need to take some me time? That sort of thing….
Resistance also encourages the artist’s tendency to quit at 99%, procrastinating work in order to not face completion of their work. Completion opens our work up to our peers for review and examination of others. He states that Resistance has no power of its own, only power it receives from our fear.
Any one reading it will be able to identify where Resistance has dug it’s claws in at one time or another with many of his examples and definitions. I want to point out that nowhere in his book does Pressfield address the Resistance we also face via the internet, email, Facebook, etc. In one section he mentions completely missing Watergate because he was too busy writing. Apparently he is able to focus on his work so strongly these things that distract many of us have no appeal to him.
The second section covers: Combating Resistance – Turning Pro. According to Pressfield, there’s no mystery about turning pro. You just make the decision and by an act of your will it is so. By turning pro, Pressfield is talking about the ideal of becoming a professional, a mindset. You make a decision to sit down and do your craft, or exercise, or whatever, NO MATTER WHAT. No matter what tries to distract you and stop you, you keep going until the day is done. You are professional in your dedication and behavior. “An amateur plays for fun, a professional for keeps.” The amateur lets a cold or minor distractions stop him. The professional knows he needs to do the work, and then get better. The amateur thinks he can quit anytime it gets tough and go back to something else. The professional doesn’t want to quit every time he hits a problem, he has discipline and determination to steady him.
Turning pro means basically to prepare a work discipline and follow it. To paraphrase Pressfield’s definition: A pro shows up every day no matter what, stays on the job all day, and is in it for the long haul. For the pro, the stakes are high. Pros accept payment for their work (even if they don’t always make an income). Pros also master the technique of their work, have a sense of humor about their jobs, and receive real-world praise or blame. He explains the hangovers and colds and other things as excuses we use to deflect ourselves from our purpose and from fulfilling our call. An added benefit, if you really love what you do, you will be like a child who looks up from their activities to be surprised to find that it’s time for supper.
Also, Pressfield makes a point that we are not to get our identity from the thing we are trying to create. You are still you. Your work should be work, not you. Aside from your calling, your life’s work, you should have an identity that stands alone. If you only have an identity in whatever you are trying to create, you leave yourself vulnerable to the attacks that will come. You will take it all personally and it should never be that way. Your work is what is being attacked, and you should be able to stand back and defend it objectively. Do not over invest your emotional well being in your success or failure. I think this is a common mistake made.
You, Inc. – Pressman also brings up the benefits of making yourself a corporation. Even if you only think of yourself in this way it can reinforce the idea of professionalism in your work because it separates the artist-doing-the-work from the consciousness-running-the-show. I love his idea of having status meetings with himself. In corporate America, we have a status meeting every Monday morning, decide on a plan of action and who will take care of what part of that plan, then divvy out the assignments, type it up and distribute it to the various participants. He has one of those meetings with himself every Monday. He sits down and goes over his assignments, decides when to be responsible for what, and types it up and distributes it to himself. Sometimes as Joe-blow he is too intimidated to go out and pimp himself, but as Joe-blow Inc, he enjoys the pimping. He’s not him anymore. He’s Me, Inc.
This third and final section talks about the muses and identifies the cause of Resistance through the Self and the Ego. Muses, angels, demons, geniuses, an input from the collective unconsciousness, all these Pressfield calls our allies, “equal and opposite powers…counterpoised against [Resistance].” These allies join us when we make the shift from being an amateur to a professional.
In the second section, he heavily stresses professionalism. He states the most important thing about art is work. Nothing else matters except sitting down every day and trying.
“When we sit down day after day and keep grinding…The muse takes note of our dedication. She approves…we becomes like a magnetized rod that attracts iron filings. Ideas come.”
Following this simple but powerful truth, Pressfield talks about the day he finished his first book. He finally wrote, The End. He received this sage advice from his friend Paul: “Good for you. Start the next one today.” In my words: don’t stop now, you finally have a work ethic that is producing your art.
Now: Ego and Self, and the battle between the two. Resistance has its seat in Ego. The Ego is that part of the psyche that believes in material existence, is concerned with its own preservation and comfort, with stasis and the physical, material world. The Ego likes things the way they are. It likes to be in control.
The Self, according to Pressfield, is where we grow from. This is where our dreams and ideas come from. When we meditate or pray, this is the part of ourselves we are seeking. Self is our deepest being.
Why does the Ego hate the self? According to Pressfield, its …”…because when we seat our consciousness in the Self, we put the ego out of business.” The Ego hates it when the creator sits down to create, whether it’s a book, a painting or an exercise routine. Ego hates to lose control, and tries to cripple Self. It hates creators because they are pathfinders to the future.
Pressfield ends the book with a simple call to action: listen to your Self and take action in order to find out what you were meant to do. Once you figure it out, do it like a professional. If you don’t explore and utilize your gifts, you hurt yourself and everyone around you. If you do, great; you’re sharing your gifts with the world.
Pressfield uses humor and a confident, competent demeanor in what he shares. He’s been there and done this, and wants to share the rewarding fruit he has to show for it, to encourage us to seek that fruit for ourselves. He wants us to be able to overcome our enemy, Resistance, and flourish with our own muses.
We all encounter Resistance in one form or another (fear of failure, fear of success, procrastination, avoidance, distraction, etc.). This book is an extremely easy read, and was very encouraging to me personally. I would highly recommend it for anyone facing any new project in their life. You will be surprised by the things this book reveals to you, and you will also see yourself represented in more than one situation Pressfield shares. Steven Pressfield defines the enemy, offers a strategy for overcoming it and shows us the beautiful fruit we can have as a result of our labor: A completed work, a job well done. Eventually success. It all started for him when he was finally able to write: The End.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 11, 2020The cover of The War of Art has a quote by Esquire Magazine. It reads, “A vital gem… a kick in the ass.” Flip the book open and the reader will see the book is published by a firm called Black Irish Entertainment. It’s logo is a single boxing glove. While reading this book, I couldn’t help but constantly think back to this quote and image. Each chapter felt like a punch to the gut, a wake up call, a kick in the ass. Steven Pressfield titled his book The War of Art: Break Through the Blocks and Win Your Inner Creative Battles and he presents his readers with just that. A manual on fighting and defeating the opponent of life and resistance. I strongly recommend this book to anyone looking for the tools necessary to overcome life’s greatest obstacles, develop yourself into an accomplished professional, and become the ultimate versions of yourself. Here's why:
The book was first published in 2002 and written by Steven Pressfield. Pressfield is most known for his historical fiction but has also produced many award winning non-fiction works and screenplays. His first book, The Legend of Bagger Vance, was made into a reputable film in 1995. His writing often draws parallels between historical classics, religious archetypes, and motivational revelations about his struggles and others’. His tales have motivated multitudes of individuals to conquer their fears, reach their potential, and accomplish their dreams.
The War of Art is split into three books. The first book is called Resistance: Defining the Enemy. He uses this chapter to call out what he believes as the root to most of our problems. He defines Resistance as “The enemy within” and a “Force of nature”. It’s a “repelling force. It’s negative”, “Resistance will tell you anything to keep you from doing your work”, and “Resistance aims to kill.” He says everyone has had a battle with Resistance and it’s the root to many of the issues we face and develop in our lives. Substance dependence, unhappiness, and anger are just some of the effects caused from our internal battle with this self-sabotage energy. Each chapter is poetically written to describe the way resistance can infiltrate our lives and destroy us from within. The goal of this chapter is to identify to readers Resistance’s characteristics so they can recognize and fight it when face to face with this malevolence.
The second book is called Combating Resistance: Turning Pro. Pressfield uses the terms professional and amateur to describe the battle with Resistance. He explains that those defeated by Resistance think like amateurs, and professionals are equipped with the tools to overpower their Resistance and reach their potential. Some of these chapters describe a professional's attributes. They’re titled: A Professional is Patient, A Professional Acts in the Face of Fear, A Professional Reinvents Himself, etc. He uses stories and accounts of his own life and others, such as golfer Tiger Woods, to paint the picture of perseverance, focus, and strength. My favorite quote from this book comes from his chapter How to be Miserable. A marine himself, he briefly talks about how Marines are trained to love being miserable, to embrace the struggle, and fight to the death. The last line reads: “Because this is war, baby. And War is hell.”
Book Three is called Beyond Resistance: The Higher Realm. This chapter aims to harness the psychic powers needed to fight the Resistance he described earlier. He uses terms such as angels, demons, and muses, but offers his more secular audience the option to think of these forces as abstract and impersonal, such as gravity, instincts, or universal forces. He claims we need these allies if we are ever to defeat the enemy of Resistance. He mentions the Athenian Xenophon who would make sacrifices to the gods and call for their aid before any expedition. His own version of this he calls invoking the Muse, a Greek mythology term used to describe the nine Goddesses, or even a person or personified force used as a source of inspiration to artists. Additionally, Pressfield goes on to describe the difference between the Ego and Self. With quotes from famous psychologists such as Freud and Jung, he believes the Ego is where Resistance lies, while the Self is where the angles, or good forces, live. He describes the characteristics of the ego and how it is the “part of the psyche that believes in material existence” and nothing more. While the Self is our deepest being, united to God, and is ever-growing and ever-evolving. The Ego hates the Self, Pressfield writes, and is the perpetrator for growth, progression, and success. He goes on to describe what the Authentic self looks like, how to defeat the hierarchical orientation, and how to unleash the artist within us.
As a young aspiring professional on the cusp of a career and “the rest of my life”, this book struck the deepest cord in me and immediately earned its place in my list of books to re-read every year. It’s an easy read and I read it cover to cover in about three hours. It’s organized like a manual, with short chapters, and important titles and messages that will resonate with you at different points in your life. While reading its entirety is do-able, one can just as easily flip through the chapters and meditate on the headline and chapter that speaks to you most. It makes for the ultimate bed-side book for any artists looking for daily motivation to break through their creative struggles. Pressfield also seemed to speak to me specifically. I have long been a lover of Greek mythology and culture, Xenophon, and the Bhagavad-Gita, all which he mentions and parallels in his chapters. I was also a fan of the spiritual take-aways in his third book. The War of Art is a self-help book, but differs to many I have read. It is straight to the point, raw, and hard-hitting. While many self-help books rely on abstract and vague themes, Pressfield tells his readers his truth with his own words, as blunt as possible. It’s entertaining, easy to read, and powerful to anyone seeking help.
Typically, I try to stay away from definitive statements, such as “Everyone would enjoy or resonate with this book.” We are all individuals that react differently to everything. But I do firmly believe this book would provide everyone of it’s readers a piece of something they have been looking for. We are all artists, and without unlocking the creative power within us, we find ourselves riddled with dilemmas and obstacles that are far from conquerable. For all willing, this book will help you identify the enemy, equip you with the tools to fight, and unlock the mystical powers that will help you live a fulfilling life.
Top reviews from other countries
- Vansh KesariReviewed in India on April 21, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Gives you shivers
Before reading this book, I set so many goals but failed to achieve even a single one of them. I felt worthless and powerless even though I was always ambitious. After reading this book, I got the culprit, it was my RESISTANCE, which always comes before your work and the only cure to it is ACTION.
Literally this book changed my life for good and I hope who ever read this, his/her life also gets changed for good...
-
YannWithAyahuasca.wordpressReviewed in France on October 3, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Est déjà en train de changer ma vie
Je ne sais pas pourquoi je n'avais jamais entendu parler de ce livre avant, il devrait être obligatoire à l'école. Je fais à présent partie d'un groupe fermé de gens qui sont en train de métamorphoser leur vie pour le mieux et nombre d'entre eux à lu ce livre et le classe n°1 dans leur collection.
C'est bien écrit mais simple et direct. Facile mais profond. Succint mais instruit.
Dès les premières pages on est absorbé, fasciné et empli d'espoir, puis de certitude : je VAIS vaincre cette Résistance, cette peur insensée.
Vous êtes angoissé ? Déprimé ? Vous avez tendance à ne rien foutre ? A perdre du temps ?
Ce livre démistifie, explique, et détruit ces résistances, et donne des clés concrètes pour vaincre.
Je recommande fortement. Vous vous devez bien cela.
- Bosco GamizReviewed in Spain on April 14, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars The hype was deserved
Ok. I read or heard about this book enough times to be intrigued and I went and read it. And yeah, I get it. It's not what I'd usually consider would appeal to me, but it did. A great deal actually. Just a few underlines, but very powerful ones. I'm not too keen on the machoesque undertones, but nothing to really trip over. Just a stylistic choice. The message comes through loud and clear. And it's one worth hearing.
- Linda jReviewed in Canada on May 29, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars This book will be a touchstone for me
I bought this book as recommended reading for an on-line course I was taking called Creative UnBootcamp, to help people get past Writer's Block or whatever creative block they're experiencing. The course did the trick and and I write every day now. Since the dry 'spell' was broken before I started reading this book I can't personally attest to its efficacy in that regard. But I was enchanted when I first heard the name of the book. What a clever name I thought. I'd never even heard of Steven Pressfield. Then I saw he'd written Bagger Vance. I hadn't read the book but I saw the movie when it first came out. I didn't know it was based on the Bhagavad Gita. That intrigued me since I follow a yogic path and the Bhagavad Gita is one of the defining texts of my life. So I ordered Bagger Vance, in book form, too. But back to 'The War of Art'. Although I can't claim it was responsible for getting me out of my writer's block, it certainly is one of the things keeping me out of it. It is broken up into small gemlike pieces so, much like doing mantra repetition on a mala, you can savour each sacred bead as it rolls through your consciousness. I deliberately read this book slowly. I would put it down, sometimes for days at a time, then pick it up, process a few more gems, and put it down again. I rarely reread books, and if I do, it's years later. But now that I'm finished, I will start at the beginning again (like painting the Golden Gate Bridge). This book reminds me why I write. The delight of a well turned phrase, the inspiration of a new concept encountered, the joy of communion with another thoughtful human being. You don't need to feel blocked in some way to love this book. Frankly I've found Self Help books to be completely useless for someone like me. This book is a treasure. It was designed to help readers accomplish something, but it has a separate existence beyond that also. I long ago embraced the Bhagavad Gita philosophy that we are not entitled to the fruits of our labour, and this book reinforces that on every page. Create for the joy of creating. Create because you must. Create because there is a longing in you that won't go away if you don't. Create as an offering. Just create. It's who we are.
- Joep BReviewed in the Netherlands on October 30, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars It gave me an enemy to fight
Amazeballs, great book. I'm currently procrastinating and writing reviews instead of working. But, this is a great book with short chapters and you should definitely need it if you find your time to have any value beyond minimum wage. Take care <3