- theFORGE
- Dec 1
- 2 min read

by Mike Cooper
We’re finishing up the generative phase of The Forge 2025-26. Our Smithys are freewriting to music, then organizing and revising and sharing with their peers for feedback and revision. We’ve given each other some feedback so far, especially in our discussions on the Discord channels, and now we’ll dip our toes into the process of workshopping.
And why workshop?
Hemingway said, “The only writing is rewriting.”
John Updike said, “Writing and rewriting are a constant search for what it is one is saying.”
E.B. White said, “The best writing is rewriting.”
Dorothy Parker said, “I would write a book or a short story, at least three times—once to understand it, the second time to improve the prose, and a third to compel it to say what it still must say.”
Roald Dahl said, “Good writing is essentially rewriting. I am positive of this.”
Workshopping is an important step in the rewriting/revising/editing process. We generally know what we mean when we write something down. We understand all the thoughts and feelings that our characters have because we are who we are—we project all our life experiences onto the page, whether we fully understand them or not. We know what it felt like when Aunt Marge squoze our faces into her ample breasts at Thanksgiving, and that later we would be an accomplice in getting Auntie Marge a little more of the brown liquid from the bottle with the picture of the turkey on the front—which smelled a lot like her perfume—and that it would be “our little secret,” and how we were thrilled and frightened by “breaking the rules” and how our illicit collusion made us feel “grown up.” But if we just say, “I/he/she/they got Aunt Marge some more bourbon,” our reader doesn’t get the full nuance of the moment—and how it has/will affect our character’s thoughts and decisions.
So our readers are there to give us feedback. Feedback is saying, “This is what I see. Is that what you meant?” And we either say “Yes” or “Sort of” or “No, not at all,” and we go back to the page to clarify our intention.
Another great aspect of workshopping is that we get to apply our critical analysis skills to other people’s work. And in doing that, we can’t help but compare it to our own work. We therefore learn to avoid areas that we find don’t work so well in our peers’ writing, and to apply the things that we think do work well to our own work.





