His life works include "Anthology of Ancient Poems", "Short Records of Yugu Zhaishi", "Ancient Records of Taoism", "Yimen Reading Notes", "Twelve Volumes of Mr. Yimen's Collected Works", "Yimen "One volume of postscripts on the door" and so on.
The fifty-eight volumes of Yimen Dushuji: It is a collection of the readings and school journals of He Zhuo's works on classics, history, and collections.
He is most famous for editing "Hanshu", "Houhanshu" and "Three Kingdoms". Li Baoxun, a scholar in the late Qing Dynasty, said that "Books reviewed by celebrities can inspire people's minds, and Mr. Yu Yimen is particularly fond of them." In the fifth year of Qianlong's reign, he accepted an appointment from Fang Bao, the Minister of Rites, to send the edited version to the Imperial College for correction for a new edition. He had close contacts with famous book collectors of the time, such as Xu Qianxue, Mao Ke and others, so there are many unique secret books. The family has a library called "Zaiyanzhai", which contains tens of thousands of volumes of books, many exquisite caskets from the Song and Yuan Dynasties, and three small rooms filled with furniture. Each book is inscribed or signed with words such as "Yu Gu Xiao Zhai", "Idle Old Man", "Good Will and Good Will, Sex, Music, Drinking and Virtue". There are also libraries such as "Qingyangzhai", "Bijun Caotang", "Chengkushu School", "Defutang", etc. The books in the collection are printed with "Where is Taixue born?" , "An idle official raises no talent", "Home is in Taohuaxiwu", "Xiaoyaoyou", "Little official at the incense table", "Yellow silk young woman", "Manjusri's disciple", "Zhihu", "My teacher" "Laozhuang", "Yugu" and many others. After his death, Emperor Kangxi felt deeply sorry for him and gave him a bachelor's degree as a special gift. His works include "Records of Difficult Learning", "Short Records of Yugu Zhaishi", "Yimen Reading Notes", "He Yimen Collection", etc. He Zhuo read a lot of books and was good at textual research. The collation of ancient tablets is the most precise. He likes to copy Jin and Tang dynasty calligraphy, make genuine and running scripts, and incorporate them into Nengpin. At that time, people thought that he could be compared with the calligraphers of Jin and Tang Dynasties, and together with Da Chongguang, Jiang Chenying and Wang Shihong, he was called the four great calligraphers of Kangxi period. He was ordered to write the "Collected Commentary on the Four Books" for Emperor Kangxi, which was carved into a woodblock and hidden in the palace. Most of the books in the palace were edited by Zhuo. Before Emperor Yongzheng took over the throne, he asked Zhuo to write annotations for "Kun Xue Ji Wen".