In-person classes are held at 508 Dale Ave., Charlottesville VA

Online classes are held via Zoom

All class times listed are Eastern Time

Upcoming Classes

    • July 25, 2026
    • 1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
    • WriterHouse
    • 0
    Join waitlist

    This seminar will meet in person at WriterHouse for one session on Saturday, July 25 from 1:00 to 5:00 PM.

    Description:

    Anyone who writes seriously soon learns that revision is a central part of the process. A poem can be revised by making only small changes, but some revisions are more dramatic. Marianne Moore, who continued to revise her poems even after they had been published, famously cut “Poetry” from thirty lines to three. Ezra Pound took Eliot’s original draft of “The Waste Land” and helped create a Modernist collage.  Sonia Sanchez urges poets to “revise purposefully and constantly and playfully.” In this one-day seminar, we will look at a range of specific approaches and strategies other writers have used in revising their work. Seminar members will also be invited to share their own “before” and “after” poems to highlight their experiences with revision. Finally, we will focus on poems by members of the group that are still in the process of being revised.  

    About the Instructor:

    Margaret Mackinnon is the author of two collections of poetry, The Invented Child (Silverfish Review Press 2013), winner of the 2014 Literary Award in Poetry from the Library of Virginia, and Afternoon in Cartago (Ashland Poetry Press 2022), winner of the Richard Snyder Memorial Publication Prize. Her work has appeared in The Hampden-Sydney Poetry ReviewImagePoetryBlackbird, and other journals. She attended Vassar College and the University of North Carolina, and she received her MFA in poetry from the University of Florida. She lives with her family in Richmond.

    • August 08, 2026
    • 9:30 AM - 12:30 PM
    • WriterHouse
    • 11
    Register

    This seminar will be held at WriterHouse on August 8 from 9:30 AM to 12:30 PM.

    Description:

    Leaving the Ordinary World and Returning with the Elixir is a writing seminar for Novelists, Memoirists, Narrative Nonfiction writers and authors of screen plans and stage plays, based on the universal concept of the Hero’s Journey.  Consider your hero’s initial state of woundedness, incompleteness and unfulfilled potential, “kicking around on a piece of ground in (her) hometown.”  Setting your heroic and authorial sights on the opening of your story and stages of the journey Joseph Campbell pioneered, found in most every tale ever told, can inspire an opening dovetailing with your ending -- thematic and plot points to ponder over three hours on an August Saturday morning, maybe taking you and your hero where you have longed to be. 

    About the Instructor:

    Ran Henry is a writing professor at the University of Virginia and author of the definitive biography Spurrier: How the Ball Coach Taught the South to Play Football and the forthcoming spiritual true crime book The Preacher: Mother Emanuel Pastor Clementa Pinckney and the Confederate Storm:  He lives atop Afton Mountain with wife Linda, co-owners of Blue Mountain Weddings in Charlottesville.


    • August 15, 2026
    • 11:00 AM - 3:00 PM
    • WriterHouse
    • 11
    Register

    This one-session seminar will be held on Saturday, August 15 from 11:00 AM to 3:00 PM. A light lunch will be included.

    Description:

    Sharon Harrigan will lead a "writing marathon," a generative writing session based on Natalie Goldberg's famous craft book, Writing Down the Bones. Participants write in response to a series of prompts, then students read them aloud, but no one comments. The duration for each prompt increases as time goes on--starting with five minutes and ending with twenty minutes.  It is a straightforward but dramatically different experience from writing prompts on your own or even writing to a single prompt in one sitting. The continuous flow state that writers achieve can be intense and liberating.

    "What usually happens," Goldberg says, "is you stop thinking: you write, you read; you write; you become less and less self-conscious. Everyone is in the same boat, and because no comments are made, you feel freer and freer to write anything you want. …After a while your voice begins to feel disembodied: you are not sure if you said something or someone across the room said it.  Not commenting on another person’s work builds up a healthy desire to speak. You can pour that energy into your next round of writing. Write, read, write, read. It is an excellent way to cut through the internal censor and to give yourself tremendous space to write whatever’s on your mind."


    About the Instructor:

    Sharon Harrigan is the author of the debut novel Half, which was published in summer 2020, and the memoir Playing with Dynamite, published in 2017. She has an MFA in Creative Writing from Pacific University and has published more than 50 personal essays, short stories, and reviews in such venues as Virginia Quarterly Review, New York Times (Modern Love), and Narrative. A starred Booklist review called Half “suspenseful, lyrical, and consuming,” and Publishers’ Weekly called the novel “riveting and inventive.”

    Sharon’s current and former students have published their work in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Huffington Post, The Rumpus, NPR, Gravel, The Guardian, Gettysburg Review, Bay Journal, The Sow’s Ear Poetry Review, Living Lutheran Magazine, Mothers Always Write, Fluvanna Review, Charlottesville Family, and The Ethos Collection, among others.

    • September 09, 2026
    • October 14, 2026
    • 6 sessions
    • WriterHouse
    • 9
    Register

    This class will meet in person at WriterHouse for 6 sessions (Sept. 9, Sept. 16, Sept. 23, Sept. 30, Oct. 7, Oct. 14) on Wednesdays, from 10:00 AM-12:30 PM. 

    This course is designed as a series of four distinct modules following the chronological lifecycle of a book. Students may register for the full 20-week intensive or select/combine individual modules on Foundations, Production, Launch Strategy, or Sustainability.

    Description:

    You have typed "The End," but for the professional writer, the work is just beginning. Ink & Income is a comprehensive roadmap designed to bridge the gap between literary craft and sustainable business. Guided by hybrid author and editor Andi Cumbo, this course walks students through the complete lifecycle of a book—from the initial decision between traditional and independent publishing to the complex machinery of book launches, marketing, and financial management. Whether you are a debut writer holding your first manuscript or an established author looking to professionalize your career, this course offers the practical tools to turn your art into a business. 

    Module 3: Launch & Promotion (6 Weeks)
    Focus: Getting the book into readers' hands.

    Weeks 1–2: The Launch Strategy
      • Planning the launch window, organizing launch teams (street teams), ARC distribution, and working with retailers.

      • Guest Spotlight: Flannery Buchanan (Working with Bookstores) & Dave Hirschman (Live Events).

    Weeks 3–6: Ongoing Marketing
      • Moving beyond the launch. Strategies for social media engagement, an introduction to advertising, and public appearances.

      • Guest Spotlight: Marijean Oldham (Marketing) & Jeffrey Lofton (Public Speaking).

      About the Instructor:

      Andi Cumbo is a former creative writing professor, a professional editor, and a publisher who is the author of over 30 books that each incorporate real-life places, people, and events in their pages.  She writes cozy mysteries, romantic comedies, YA fantasy, and creative nonfiction and holds and MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Antioch University. She has taught at Santa Clara University, Stevenson University, and George Mason University. When she’s not writing, she and her young son name his toys odd things like “Blech-agh-bah” and try to figure out Lego Fortnite together. She lives in Charlottesville.

      • October 21, 2026
      • November 11, 2026
      • 4 sessions
      • WriterHouse
      • 10
      Register

      This class will meet in person at WriterHouse for 4 sessions (Oct. 21, Oct. 28, Nov. 4, Nov. 11) on Wednesdays, from 10:00 AM-12:30 PM. 

      This course is designed as a series of four distinct modules following the chronological lifecycle of a book. Students may register for the full 20-week intensive or select/combine individual modules on Foundations, Production, Launch Strategy, or Sustainability.

      Description:

      You have typed "The End," but for the professional writer, the work is just beginning. Ink & Income is a comprehensive roadmap designed to bridge the gap between literary craft and sustainable business. Guided by hybrid author and editor Andi Cumbo, this course walks students through the complete lifecycle of a book—from the initial decision between traditional and independent publishing to the complex machinery of book launches, marketing, and financial management. Whether you are a debut writer holding your first manuscript or an established author looking to professionalize your career, this course offers the practical tools to turn your art into a business. 

      Module 4: Sustainability & The Long Game (4 Weeks)
      Focus: Keeping the business—and the author—healthy.

      Weeks 1–2: Financial Maintenance
        • Understanding royalties, tracking expenses, profit & loss (P&L) statements, and tax basics for authors.

        • Guest Spotlight: Jen Poteet (Multiple Lines of Income).

      Weeks 3–4: Career Longevity
        • Preventing creative burnout, managing time, and planning the "next book" while marketing the current one.

        • Guest Spotlight: Anne Carley (Creative Balance).

          About the Instructor:

          Andi Cumbo is a former creative writing professor, a professional editor, and a publisher who is the author of over 30 books that each incorporate real-life places, people, and events in their pages.  She writes cozy mysteries, romantic comedies, YA fantasy, and creative nonfiction and holds and MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Antioch University. She has taught at Santa Clara University, Stevenson University, and George Mason University. When she’s not writing, she and her young son name his toys odd things like “Blech-agh-bah” and try to figure out Lego Fortnite together. She lives in Charlottesville.


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        WriterHouse, Inc. is a non-profit organization, exempt from Federal income tax under section 501(c)3 of the Internal Revenue Code, and registered as a charitable organization with the Virginia State Office of Consumer Affairs. A financial statement is available from the State Office of Consumer Affairs in the the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services upon request. 

        Contact Us

        Mailing Address

        WriterHouse
        P.O. Box 222
        Charlottesville, VA 22902


        Physical Address

        WriterHouse
        508 Dale Avenue
        Charlottesville, VA 22902
        434.282.6643
        programs@writerhouse.org

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