These books are listed by priority and i really think you should read them in that way despite some being more comprehensive than others. Almost so, i would recommend that you do not start writing actual articles untill you have read 3 of these

Reasoned Writing by Devin Jindrich

This “book” is really strongly focused on the basic unit of the academic article which is a well reasoned argument. Other books also highlight this, but reasoned writing goes above and beyond on really hammering in to your head the importance of reasoned writing.

Link: https://sites.google.com/view/reasonedwriting/home

Academic writing for Graduate students by Swales and Feak

This book is really good at highlighting the literary aspect of how academic articles and texts are written - what we expect from each section in terms of writing styles but also why it is so and it includes many practice excersices to test knowledge.

Link: https://press.umich.edu/Books/A/Academic-Writing-for-Graduate-Students-3rd-Edition2

Writing your Journal article in twelve weeks by Wendy Belcher

This book is great at using the insights gained from the two previous and making it into a coherent workflow where you can take each part of the article and focus on working on it one week at a time. Furthermore, this book is great at adding in focus on all the extra details that are also important (abstract, title, selecting journal)

Link: https://wendybelcher.com/writing-advice/writing-your-journal-article-in-twelve/

Published by Thomas Deetjen

This book is not a perfect fit for social science and clinical science, but it is very good at creating a step by step workflow and also has some very important details on how to reply to reviewers comments.

Savvy Academic by Schwartz

This is a very comprehensive book and if you are serious about a career in academia it is very worth the read. However, i would wait untill you have a few articles published before starting on this.