The best-selling, most flexible rhetoric―now with advice for reading and writing across disciplines The Norton Field Guide lets you teach the way you want to teach. Short chapters with just enough detail can be assigned in any order. Color-coded links send students to more detail if they need it. Menus, directories, and a glossary/index all make the book easy to navigate. This flexibility makes it work for first-year writing, stretch, ALP, co-req, dual-enrollment, and integrated reading-writing courses.
This is a fieldguide. It doesn't go into detail. It merely scratches the surface. At least it is a textbook that I can use with my students. However, I have to supplement it a lot because it doesn't hav enough information to provide much help. I teach intro to writing and hope that we will use a different book next year.
This book was assigned reading for a masters degree class in creative nonfiction writing. Personally, I feel that using a book clearly intended for high school students or, at best, college freshman was a bad choice for a masters level course. It does not teach much of anything that post graduate students should already know.
Though it is a textbook this was one that I could not have done without. I kept the book as it was so useful I would like to reference it in the future.