The sixth edition of THE CALL TO WRITE continues and expands its creative approach to college composition. Organized by genres, including memoirs, letters, profiles, reports, commentaries, proposals, and reviews, and including new chapters on multigenre writing and on writing essays, this innovative rhetoric gives students the practice they need to write in college and in the public sphere. Timely, provocative readings promote social engagement, encouraging students to become involved, through public writing, in their community and in the greater world around them. Available with InfoTrac Student Collections http: //gocengage.com/infotrac.
John Trimbur is a specialist in composition and writing studies, with interests in cultural studies of literacy and the politics of language in the United States and South Africa. He has published widely on writing theory and has won a number of awards, including the Richard Braddock Award for Outstanding Article (2003) for "English Only and U.S. College Composition," the James L. Kinneavy Award (2001) for "Agency and the Death of the Author: A Partial Defense of Modernism," and the College Composition and Communication Outstanding Book Award (1993) for The Politics of Writing Instruction: Postsecondary.
He has also published a collection of essays Service or Solidarity: Composition and the Problem of Expertise (2011) and three textbooks The Call to Write (6th ed. 2013), Reading Culture (8th ed. 2012), and A Short Guide to Writing About Chemistry (2nd ed. 2000) and edited the collection Popular Literacy: Studies in Cultural Practices and Poetics (2001). In July and Auguest 2012, he was a Visiting Scholar at the University of Cape Town, South Africa.
Great College Composition textbook! Especially when writing about personal experience, research, or facts. Loved learning about the dynamics of the writer's true emotions and how to use them to establish and emotional connection with the audience and the best way to foster a response. A breakdown of the real life examples helped me to understand the foundation of different styles that I still carry with me to this day.
This was a textbook for my English class, we didn't cover the last few chapters in class so I didn't read them. The book used a lot of visual examples which made it more interesting to read. I had the digital version and there was one item that I came across that was not in the digital version due to copyright issues? Luckily, I didn't need that specific writing sample for my assignments.