His correspondence and diaries are published
Throughout his career, Shaw wrote a lot of stories. Between 1965 and 1988, his letters were published after being edited by Dan H. Laurence, which are interesting facts about George Bernard Shaw. According to Shaw, his letters would fill 20 volumes. Without editing, they fill up, even more, said, Laurence. 2,653 of Shaw's more than a quarter of a million letters, or around 10%, are included in Laurence's four volumes. All of Shaw's letters to The Times were collected in a 316-page book that was published in 2007.
Weintraub edited Shaw's Diaries from 1885 to 1897, which were released in 1986 in two volumes comprising 1,241 pages. Shaw scholar Fred Crawford reassessed them and stated: "Although Shavians' main concern is for what supplementary material. The diaries are useful as a historical and sociological picture of British life in the late Victorian era given what is known about Shaw's life and work. The demands of other writing after 1897 caused Shaw to stop keeping journals.
Shaw covered a wide range of subjects in his publications, pamphlets, and occasionally lengthier works. He has written and spoken extensively on a variety of topics, including photography, vegetarianism, religion, language, cinema, and photography.