Where to Start with Sun Tzu: A Reading Guide
Where to start with Sun Tzu — how to approach The Art of War, the ancient strategy classic applied to business, negotiation, and competitive life. A complete reading guide.
By Marcus Webb
Sun Tzu is the name attributed to the author of The Art of War, a Chinese military strategy text composed sometime during the Warring States period — most scholars date it between the fifth and third centuries BCE. The historical Sun Tzu may have been a military general named Sun Wu; the text may be a composite of multiple writers; the question of authorship is unresolved and, for practical purposes, unimportant. What is certain is that The Art of War has survived 2,500 years of continuous use, has been translated into every major language, and remains the foundational strategy text of military, business, and competitive thinking worldwide.
Where to Start: The Art of War
The essential Sun Tzu — and the most widely read strategy text in human history. At 112 pages, the primary text can be read in a single sitting, but the density of the aphoristic style means it rewards repeated reading over many years rather than single consumption. The thirteen chapters cover the full arc of competitive strategy from pre-engagement planning through specific tactical situations to the use of intelligence — a structure that covers, at a high level of abstraction, the full decision-making cycle of any competitive endeavour.
The text’s most quoted and most important principle is: “The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting.” This is the book’s central paradox: a military manual whose highest achievement is avoiding combat. Sun Tzu’s argument is that actual battle is expensive, unpredictable, and generally the result of poor positioning — the truly excellent strategist achieves victory through superior information, preparation, and positioning that makes engagement unnecessary. The opponent yields because the disadvantage is apparent, not because conflict has been resolved through violence.
This principle translates directly into competitive contexts that bear no resemblance to ancient warfare. In negotiation, the goal is an agreement that satisfies your objectives; whether you had to fight hard for it, or whether your counterpart simply recognised the terms were reasonable, is irrelevant. In business, market victory achieved through superior product positioning or operational efficiency is better than victory achieved through costly competitive battles. In law, the best outcome is one that avoids trial. Sun Tzu was writing about the universal logic of achieving objectives under adversarial conditions, which is why the text outlasted the specific context that produced it.
The other core principle that recurs throughout: “Know yourself and know your enemy — in a hundred battles, you will never be in danger.” Intelligence — accurate understanding of your own capabilities and limitations and those of your competitor — is the foundation of all effective strategy. Most competitive failures stem from misassessment of one of these two things.
Translation matters for this text. The Lionel Giles translation (1910) is the scholarly standard; various modern translations prioritise different aspects of the original Chinese, and the commentary in most editions varies enormously in quality. Readers interested in business applications specifically should seek editions with commentary focused on that domain.
Reading Sun Tzu
The Art of War is the only text attributed to Sun Tzu. It stands alone and requires no prior reading.
For the full Sun Tzu bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Sun Tzu author page on Editors Reads.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Where should I start with Sun Tzu?
The Art of War is Sun Tzu's only work — a military strategy text written somewhere between the fifth and third centuries BCE that has been applied to warfare, business, law, sports, and competitive life for 2,500 years. At 112 pages the primary text is readable in a single sitting. The most widely read military strategy text in history, and still the foundational strategy document of competitive thinking.
What is The Art of War about?
The Art of War comprises thirteen chapters on military strategy, covering planning, engagement, positioning, terrain, intelligence, and the management of competitive advantage. Its central insight is that the supreme achievement in conflict is victory without fighting — achieving objectives through superior positioning, intelligence, and preparation that makes actual combat unnecessary. This principle, and the thirteen chapters that develop it, has proven applicable to every competitive domain across 2,500 years.
How should I approach reading The Art of War?
The Art of War rewards slow, reflective reading rather than straight-through consumption. The aphoristic style — dense, compressed maxims — requires the reader to do the interpretive work of translation from ancient military context to contemporary application. Choosing a good edition matters: the Lionel Giles translation (1910) is the scholarly standard, but more recent translations with thoughtful modern commentary can be more useful for readers interested in business or negotiation applications specifically.
What should I read after The Art of War?
After The Art of War, Marcus Aurelius's Meditations is the complementary ancient wisdom text focused on internal strategy rather than external competition. Robert Greene's The 48 Laws of Power extends the strategic tradition to modern competitive contexts. Roger Fisher and William Ury's Getting to Yes translates strategic thinking specifically into negotiation principles. For the history of Chinese military thought, Ralph Sawyer's The Seven Military Classics provides the broader context in which Sun Tzu sits.
