The Writer's Workshop takes an approach to teaching writing that is
new only because it is so old.
Today, rhetoric and composition typically proceed by ignoring what was
done for 2,500 years in Western education. Gregory Roper, on the other
hand, helps students learn to write in the way the great writers of the
past themselves learned: by carefully imitating masters of the craft,
including Cicero, Thomas Aquinas, Charles Dickens, Sojourner Truth,
James Joyce, and Ernest Hemingway. By living in their workshops and
apprenticing to these and other masters, apprentice writers--like
apprentice musicians, painters, and blacksmiths of the past--will
rapidly improve the complexity of their art and discover their own
native voices.
Interspersed into chapters full of sound practical advice and
challenging assignments are reflections on Great Ideas from "Realism and
Impressionism" to "Nominalism and Modern Science." Perfect for the
college or even high school writing classroom--as well as a marvelous
book for homeschoolers and others who would like to improve their own
writing--The Writer's Workshop is a fine practical guide, and Dr.
Roper a friendly yet demanding teacher-mentor.