Cheryl Krueger is associate professor of French at the University of Virginia, where she teaches a variety of undergraduate and graduate level courses on French language, literature, culture and cinema. She has served as chair of the Department of French Language and Literature and as director of undergraduate programs. In addition, she is part of the editorial board of DIX-NEUF, (JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY OF DIX-NEUVIÉMISTES), has served on the AAUSC editorial board and is an elected member of the MLA's 19th-Century French Literature Division Executive Committee. Krueger is author of PERSPECTIVES ON TEACHING LANGUAGE AND CONTENT (Yale University Press, 2020) and THE ART OF PROCRASTINATION: BAUDELAIRE'S POETRY IN PROSE (University of Delaware Press, 2007); editor of APPROACHES TO TEACHING BAUDELAIRE'S PROSE POEMS (MLA, 2017); and co-author of MISE-EN-SCÈNE: CINÉMA ET LECTURE. Her articles have appeared in such journals as DIX-NEUF, FRENCH FORUM, FOREIGN LANGUAGE ANNALS, LITERATURE/FILM QUARTERLY, MODERN LANGUAGES OPEN, NINETEENTH-CENTURY FRENCH STUDIES, ROMANCE NOTES, WOMEN IN FRENCH STUDIES and LITTERATURE. Krueger's current research focuses on 19th-century French literature and culture, French cinema, and the senses, olfaction and perfume. Her interest in helping students find their voice in French developed over the many years she served as language program director at UVA. Her approach to teaching writing is informed by a combination of research in SLA and plenty of practice experimenting with new techniques and course design.
Cheryl advocates the book's interactive, process-writing for writers at any level -- from students just beginning to professionals writing for publication.