Austin Kleon

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3 reasons why you should show your work

March 24, 2016

A few weeks ago I gave my friend Chase Jarvis 3 reasons why all workers — not just “creatives”! — should be showing their work:

  1. Documenting your process helps your progress.
    Keeping track of what you’ve done helps you better see where you’ve been, where you are, and where you’re headed. It’s also a great way to hold yourself accountable — if you dedicate yourself to sharing a tiny bit of your process every day, you’re forced to actually do the work you should be doing.
     
  2. Sharing your process reaps the benefits of self-promotion without the icky feelings.
    People are often just as interested in how you work as much as the work itself. By sharing your process, you invite people to not only get to know your work, but get to know you — and that can lead to new clients, new projects, and all sorts of other opportunities.
     
  3. Building an audience for what you do creates a valuable feedback loop.
    Christopher Hitchens said the best thing about putting out a book is that it’s a “free education that goes on for a lifetime.” As you gain fans and followers by sharing your work, they will, in turn, share with you. Even when the feedback is bad, it can lead you down new paths.

That’s a short version of the why. The book will teach you how.

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Journal talk at Book Passage

March 4, 2016

Video of a talk I gave last October at Book Passage in Corte Madera, while touring The Steal Like An Artist Journal. (I didn’t remember they were filming! I gave three talks that day on completely opposite ends of San Francisco — this was the third.) It’s the same as the talk I filmed at BookPeople (which has all the slides) but there’s a Q&A in this one that starts around the half-hour mark, if you want to skip straight there.

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How to read more

March 3, 2016

how-to-read-more

Here’s a short list of tips that have helped me form good reading habits over the years. Share it as much as you like. You can also download a printer-friendly version and hang it in your workspace or classroom.

If you’re looking for a good book to read, here are books I recommend and books I’ve written.

And to keep you on track, here’s a wallpaper for your phone:

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See also: 33 thoughts on reading

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What happened when I used my own journal for a month

February 29, 2016

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Mary Karr once compared reading her own books to a dog sniffing old turds.

“I’m repelled by them,” she said. “The degree to which I never read them is profound.” She doesn’t even keep copies.

This, to me, seems like a perfectly healthy way to go about being a writer — the writing is alive to you when you are writing, and once you’ve written and rewritten as much as Karr has (she’s been known to throw out literally 1,000 pages on a project), you’re finished, you move on.

The life and the fun of the project is often in finding the idea. To “execute” the idea, in some ways, is to kill it. This process is exacerbated by the delayed gratification of the machinery of publishing. “By the time the book is published it’s already practically dead to me,” says cartoonist James Kochalka. “I’ve moved on to other work.”

The book itself is dead, or not dead, but dormant, like Sleeping Beauty: The book is waiting on a reader to crack it open and breathe life into, take the words into their eyes and let them dance in their mind.

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The trouble is that in order for your book to find its way to the reader in the first place, it needs to be put in front of them. This often requires the writer to become a person in sales, a role they are often extremely uncomfortable in playing.

In his talk, “Generation Sell,” William Deresiewicz argued that art-making and sales come from “fundamentally” different places:

It’s the nature of being an artist to be always consumed with doubt. That’s the nature that fuels your exploration. And it’s the nature of the salesperson to suppress all doubt and to speak in exclamation points. Now those functions have to exist in the same person.

At no other time does an author feel the tug-of-war between these two roles more than when on book tour.

“I feel like the wretched employee of my former self,” Ian McEwan bemoans. “My former self being the happily engaged novelist who now sends me, a kind of brush salesman or double glazing salesman, out on the road to hawk his book. He got all the fun writing it. I’m the poor bastard who has to go sell it.”

My book Show Your Work! was about sharing bits and pieces of the creative process as you go, so that you didn’t have to worry so much about selling at the end: by the time you make it to the finished work, your audience is primed to buy. But there’s always more selling to do. “To sell is human,” as Dan Pink says.

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I continue to try to find ways to unite the roles of salesman and artist, and figure out how (and if) they can better co-exist. (Then again, maybe they should be kept separate, like alter egos, Bruce Wayne and Batman.)

Basically: What ways are there to be searching for new ideas while peddling the old ones? Is it possible?

That’s a long-winded setup for my most recent experiment: in January, I decided that every day in February, I would fill a page in The Steal Like An Artist Journal and share it on Instagram.

It started in my mind, honestly, as a pure sales thing. A crass promotional device. Despite going on a 10-city tour, I felt a little bit like I hadn’t marketed the journal the way I should have, and I needed an excuse to tell people about it again.

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The thing was dead to me, of course, in that way that things published are. Luckily, it wasn’t designed to be read, it was designed to be scribbled in. I wouldn’t have to re-read myself, I just had to do what the prompt told me. I also figured February was the shortest month, and something small every day adds up quickly.

The first tiny sign that things wouldn’t be so simple was when my wife pointed out that it was a leap year, and I’d have to share one more page than I’d planned on.

Next up: our old 1970s ranch house that we’d been renovating since October was finally move-in ready, so by the time I filled my first page on February 1st, most of my studio was still in a box, and I hadn’t actually written anything or pushed a pen across a page for weeks.

Fittingly, I filled my third day’s page with a collage of recently-cursed-at IKEA instructions:

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Collage is the activity I often turn to when my brain is empty. (Lynda Barry: “Sometimes we are so confused and sad that all we can do is glue one thing to another.”) After such a long period of inactivity, I naturally turned to exercises involving cutting and pasting:

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But soon I found myself answering the prompts that were a little deeper:

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I started diving into what was bothering me:

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It reminded me of something I read in Kenneth Goldsmith’s Uncreative Writing, a big influence on the journal:

the suppression of self-expression is impossible. Even when we do something as seemingly “uncreative” as retyping a few pages, we express ourselves in a variety of ways. The act of choosing and reframing tells us… much about ourselves…”

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I lazily filled out the Krazy Kat exercise with some lines from Waiting For Godot (“what do we do now that we are happy?”) and even THOSE took on autobiographical meaning in light of the new house:

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I found that if I actually gave myself over to this material that was previously dead to me, I kept uncovering surprising things. This was made by cutting up my introduction to the journal:

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It might seem so obvious, and you could call it just plain ol’ “practice what you preach,” but I ended up somewhat delighted by the experience. My goal in the beginning, when my editor and my agent talked me into the thing, was to make a journal I always wished existed. I just wasn’t expecting that it would ever be so useful to me now. And the 29-day experiment, which began as sort of a chore, wound up being something I looked forward to.

Best of all, by using my own journal every day, I had tricked myself into working again.

And that’s the story of how a promotional gimmick turned into something creatively satisfying.

You can get your own copy of the journal here.

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The light of the universe

February 29, 2016

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“Every time we have built new eyes to observe the universe, our understanding of ourselves and our place in it has been forever altered.”
—Lawrence M. Krauss

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Breakfast of champions

January 14, 2016

books and breakfast

The only thing I like more than books is breakfast. Put them together? Bliss!

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100 things that made my year

January 1, 2016

millions of years have been about average let this year go

  1. Grilled pimento cheese with red onion and tomato sandwiches.
  2. Crying on airplanes.
  3. Watching Buster Keaton’s The General with J Dilla’s Donuts as the soundtrack.
  4. Writing on balancing motherhood and art. Sally Mann’s Hold Still. Sarah Ruhl’s 100 Essays I Don’t Have Time To Write. Jenny Offill’s Dept. of Speculation. Maggie Nelson’s The Argonauts. Elena Ferrante. Writer Maureen McHugh on how she’s probably changed more lives being a mom and a teacher.
  5. Debbie Chachra’s “Why I Am Not A Maker.”
  6. Thinking about the relationship between artist and audience. What, if anything, we owe each other. Coltrane on what you give to the listener. Wendell Berry’s “Warning To My Readers.”
  7. Jez Burrows’ Dictionary Stories.
  8. David Lee Roth’s Crazy From The Heat.
  9. Thinking about long-term creativity. Roger Angell on what it’s like to be 93-years-old. Women artists in their 70s, 80s, and 90s. David Hockney on making art at 77.
  10. Using Twitter’s “People You Follow” search to learn about new things.
  11. Spending more time on a private Slack channel than any other social media site.
  12. The crazy story of how I became friends with world-class violinist Vijay Gupta.
  13. Good music. The Velvet Underground, Matrix Tapes. Kraftwerk, Computer World. Captain Beefheart. Elvis Costello, Trust. Royal Headache, High. Sleater-Kinney, No Cities To Love. Sly and the Family Stone, There’s A Riot Goin’ On. Van Morrison, Veedon Fleece. Kurt Vile, b’lieve I’m goin down. Mac Demarco, Another One. King Sunny Ade. Fuzz, II. Madlib, Shades of Blue. Yo La Tengo, Stuff Like That There. Gary Numan, The Pleasure Principle. Wilco’s The Whole Love. Pandora jazz stations.
  14. Getting into classical. Listening to Beethoven with my son. Mitsuko Uchida playing Mozart’s piano sonatas.
  15. Singing my son’s favorite songs: Little Anthony’s “Shimmy Shimmy Ko Ko Bop,” Jonathan Richman’s “The Wheels on the Bus,” James Brown’s “Hot Pants,” and Buck Owen’s “Tiger By The Tail.”
  16. John McPhee’s essays on writing.
  17. Looking at the world through the eyes of my son. Looking at kid’s drawings. Looking at drawings that look like kid’s drawings.
  18. Finding a newspaper clipping from a friend who passed away.
  19. Emily Dickinson.
  20. Knowing I don’t deserve it and keeping on. Giving thanks. Writing down prayers. Drawing prayers.
  21. Morning mind maps.
  22. Seeing Kehinde Wiley’s show in Fort Worth.
  23. Dumb Amazon reviews.
  24. Nutty medieval paintings.
  25. Brian Eno’s concept of “Import and Export” and starting from unpromising beginnings.
  26. Meeting Edward Tufte.
  27. Going on a two-week vacation to Rhode Island. Reading in the hammock. Stones from Moonstone Beach. Walking trails. Outdoor showers. Newport. Walking around Providence. RISD with Ben Shaykin. A rainbow over the Dunkin’ Donuts. Monahan’s and Matunuck Oyster Bar. Rhubarb pies from the farmer’s stand. Fire pit smores.
  28. Seeing boredom as a luxury.
  29. Coming home and putting a new spin on old work with the newspaper popouts.
  30. Glitch rugs, quilts, and embroideries of microbes.
  31. Peppermint tea.
  32. T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets.
  33. That hour or two with my wife after the kids go to bed.
  34. Bourbon.
  35. Putting out The Steal Like An Artist Journal. Going on tour and perfecting the talk. Having such good fans that we had a great turnout at every event.
  36. Watching my work go out in the world. Seeing how people are using their journals. Heather Champ’s 30-day journal marathon. This photo.
  37. Saying “it wasn’t for me” and moving on. Knowing there are several potential reactions to art.
  38. Being a tourist in my own town.
  39. Practicing cursive. Jennifer Daniels on why Microsoft Word sucks. Hallie Bateman’s handwritten Pen Parade newsletter. Knowing when you should write with a pencil and when you should use a keyboard.
  40. Clive Thompson on reading War and Peace on his iPhone.
  41. Looking for the helpers.
  42. Sophia Lauren making pizza.
  43. Posters by the Stenberg Brothers.
  44. Watching Road Runner cartoons, Robin Hood, and Singin’ In The Rain with my sons.
  45. Warren Ellis’s story about Nina Simone wanting “some champagne, some cocaine, and some sausages!”
  46. Walking three and a half miles with a double stroller every morning.
  47. Going to the library with the boys. Reading James Marshall’s George and Martha, Souther Salazar’s Destined for Dizziness!, Blexbolex’s, Ballad, and Richard Scarry’s What Do People Do All Day?
  48. Doing mundane suburban stuff with my wife and the kids, like walking the mall and having lunch at the Nordstrom’s cafe, feeding the ducks at the pond, fiddling with instruments at Guitar Center, scoping the view from the top of a parking garage, eating hot dogs at Costco, etc.
  49. Playing a guitar with four strings. (Who needs more strings than fingers?)
  50. Rainbow makers.
  51. TSA pre-check.
  52. Redesigning my website so I don’t have to think about it for a few more years.
  53. Getting an original Wayne White painting for my birthday. (Related: having an amazing wife.)
  54. James Sturm’s Market Day.
  55. David Markson’s “anti-novels.”
  56. Watching Spongebob Squarepants and reading Carl Hiassen in Florida. Seeing Salvador Dali’s pixelated painting of Abe Lincoln at the Dali Museum.
  57. My son sharing my obsession with signs. Recycled signs. Hacked signs. Signs of danger. Borrowing life advice from an old Spaghetti Warehouse sign.
  58. Getting up in the middle of the night to see the blood moon over Gdansk, Poland. Looking at the moon. My son telling me it’s following us. Pluto! Getting binoculars for Christmas.
  59. Speaking at LucasFilm and seeing the Marin headlands.
  60. New York City. Walking the Highline at sunset. Running into Kelli and Frank at the Whitney. Walking the Hudson at sunrise. Neue Gallery with Maria K. Brooklyn bagels. Paulie Gee’s pizza.
  61. Good television. Broad City. Fargo. Louie. Justified. The Americans. South Park.
  62. Having people make you a list. Adam Koford’s list of favorite old movies. Making a soul playlist for my friend Mike.
  63. People getting fed up with authenticity nonsense and artisanal crap. The Search For General Tso.
  64. Jon Ronson’s So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed.
  65. Accepting that a life in the arts is like Groundhog Day and that “tomorrow is another day, another chance to work and play.” Accepting the dailiness of it all. Getting up on The One. Edward Tufte on how to have better mornings. Tim Gunn’s Sunday routine. David Letterman’s paper cups. Azealia Banks’ 3 a.m. routine. Forgetting the noun and doing the verb.
  66. David Allen’s Getting Things Done. Buying a filing cabinet and practicing inbox triage.
  67. Not worrying too much about productivity. Christoph Niemann on the importance of inefficiency. Agatha Christie on having messy notebooks.
  68. Trying to be a teacher while remaining a student. Re-thinking art education. Sister Corita Kent. Paul Thek’s Teaching Notes. John Waters’ RISD commencement address. Robert De Niro on being screwed. Draw It With Your Eyes Closed: The Art of The Art Assignment.  Re-mystifying art. Wendy MacNaughton on Periscope. Teaching blackout poetry workshops to high schoolers.
  69. Being real about money and fighting the “do what you love” crowd. How Deerhoof makes a living on the road. Having 90,000 Instagram fans and still serving brunch.
  70. Looking at art. The woodcuts and paintings of Felix Vallotton. The work of Margaret Kilgallen. The work of Hedda Sterne. Jim Darling’s airplane window drawings. Penelope Umbrico’s Flickr suns. Paul Thek’s 96 Sacraments, butterflies, and notebooks. Georgia O’Keeffe’s watercolors. Paintings by Souther Salazar. Paintings by Matt Forsythe. Animated GIFs by Lille Carre. Paintings by Shane Walsh. Flying saucer paintings by Esther Pearl Watson. The illustrations of J. Otto Seibold. Paul Klee’s arrows. Drawings by Andy Warhol. Watching Saul Steinberg and Tove Jansson draw. @rabihalameddine’s Twitter feed.
  71. Texting my wife when we’re in the same room.
  72. Long phone calls with artist friends.
  73. Paper. The work of Kelli Anderson. Gay Talese’s love of collage. Articles with headliness like “Don’t write off paper just yet” or “Paper notebooks are as relevant as ever.” Nick Bilton on seeing the value of print books after his mother’s death. Merlin Mann on the problem with fancy notebooks. Neil Gaiman’s notebooks. Basquiat’s notebooks.
  74. Great writing about art. Dave Hickey’s lectures, Air Guitar, and Pirates and Farmers. Blake Gopnik on Corita Kent, Andy Warhol’s student work, and Andy Goldsworthy’s throwing sticks.
  75. Oliver Jeffers’ dipped paintings.
  76. Grimes’ demo for “Realti.”
  77. Music stories. Synth Britannia. John Seabrook’s The Song Machine: Inside the Hit Factory. How the Eurythmics recorded “Sweet Dreams.”  How two white synth geeks helped Stevie Wonder make his best records. The producer who got Ace of Base’s demo stuck in his tape deck. Elvis singing to an actual hound dog.
  78. Learning how to be a better parent. Andrew Solomon’s, Far From the Tree. The best parenting advice: “Don’t Kill Them.” Thinking about toys for children. Raul Gutierrez on the best kinds of toys.
  79. The power of a simple kitchen timer.
  80. Sharpening pencils and sniffing them.
  81. Buying a house. Never spending another second on Zillow. Courtney Barnett’s “Depreston.”
  82. Animals attacking drones.
  83. Ron Swanson on creativity. Kimmy Schmidt on following your bliss. Crazy Eyes on her writing process. Marty McFly on creative frustration. Dana Scully on genius.
  84. Oliver Sacks on a motorcycle.
  85. The inside cover of ZZ Top’s Tres Hombres.
  86. Unpretentious restaurants. Maudie’s. Mi Madre’s. Tam Deli. Little Deli. S&H Donuts.
  87. Detroit-style pizza from Via313.
  88. Record shopping as therapy.
  89. Los Angeles. The Last Bookstore. Echo Park with Vijay. LACMA with Adam. Mexican with Mike and Erika and the gang. Taking the train to Pasadena. Seeing the Martian at the ArcLight with Jamie.
  90. Tove Jansson. Moomin comics. Being Moominpapa.
  91. Patrice O’Neal, Elephant in the Room.
  92. Watching movies. Mad Max: Fury Road. Creed. Only Lovers Left Alive. Don Hertzfeld’s World of Tomorrow. Sullivan’s Travels. John Wick. Magic Mike XXL. Das Boot. Far From The Madding Crowd.
  93. Re-reading books like Slaughterhouse-Five.
  94. Re-watching movies. No Country For Old Men. Road House. Best In Show. Forgetting Sarah Marshall. Jurassic Park. Moonrise Kingdom. Zoolander. Moonstruck.
  95. Doing it yourself.
  96. Figuring out how to stay alive.
  97. Turning the ship around.
  98. Hot fudge sundaes with nuts and whipped cream.
  99. The birth of my son Jules.
  100. Taking a nap.

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My reading year, 2015

December 31, 2015

I read 60+ books this year, not as much as last year, but I also quit a bunch of books, and we had another baby, so, here are 20 favorites:

Tove Jansson, Moomin: The Deluxe Anniversary Edition

No book gave me more pleasure this year. When my son Owen was born, all I seemed to be able to read was oldNancy comics. After my son Jules was born, it was Moomin. These comics are so, so wonderful. They belong in everyone’s library.

 

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Jon Ronson, So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed

A book that made me rethink the way I operate online. You know this is an important book because it seems like every week there’s an additional chapter to be written in it. Ronson’s writing is smart and hugely entertaining — if I hadn’t already read Shamed, The Psychopath Test probably would’ve been on this list, too.

 

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James Sturm, Market Day

A beautiful comic about the struggle of the artist to produce work of value in a market economy.

 

tumblr_npr2unjAFC1qz6f4bo1_1280Dave Hickey, Air Guitar: Essays on Art & Democracy

Some of the best writing about art and culture I’ve ever read. My highlights.

 

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Sally Mann, Hold Still: A Memoir with Photographs

Mann is that rare master of both pictures and words, and her memoir shows off that mastery: the visual images are perfectly woven into the text to tell her story. My highlights.

 

tumblr_nisrdf6X2x1qz6f4bo2_r1_540Sarah Ruhl, 100 Essays I Don’t Have Time To Write

Short essays about making art and raising children, and the interesting ways that one influences and provides insight into the other. I really liked it. My highlights.

 

tumblr_nld0o2fxAI1qz6f4bo1_1280 (1)Blexbolex, Ballad

I read this book to my son so many times this year I couldn’t count. Fantastic illustrations, weird and bizarre. A modern fairy tale.

 

tumblr_nr4wklTRTO1qz6f4bo1_1280T.S. Eliot, Four Quartets

A classic book of poems to read when you’re traveling, or moving from one place to the next. (When aren’t we?) My highlights.

 

tumblr_nn4h3osZvH1qz6f4bo1_1280The Gorgeous Nothings: Emily Dickinson’s Envelope Poems

A perfectly-executed book in form and content. My highlights.

 

tumblr_nm3kvshSlL1qz6f4bo1_1280Andrew Solomon, Far From the Tree: Parents, Children and the Search for Identity 

Joe Hill called this “the Moby-Dick of parenting books,” and he’s right: it’s too-long and it takes forever to get through, but you get taken somewhere, and you’re really glad you read it. I would lie in bed at the end of the day, exhausted, listening to my loud newborn honk and coo and wheeze and snore in the next room, read about the struggles of all the parents and their stories in the book, and I’d think, “Shit, man, I can handle tomorrow.”

 

tumblr_nlew61pKbp1qz6f4bo1_1280Jenny Offill, Dept. Of Speculation 

A wonderful novel about art, marriage, and motherhood that you can read it in one sitting. My highlights.

 

Screen Shot 2015-12-31 at 3.47.39 PMJames Marshall, George and Martha: The Complete Stories of Two Best Friends

When you find books you love reading to your kid as much as they love being read to from, you know you’ve got something special. These books are perfect in format, and so much fun.

 

tumblr_nj5rp3O1XT1qz6f4bo1_540David Allen, Getting Things Done

“One of these things is not like the other…” A productivity classic for a reason. I went out and bought a filing cabinet after reading. My highlights.

 

tumblr_nhx82gzISp1qz6f4bo1_540Corita Kent and Jan Steward, Learning by Heart: Teachings to Free the Creative Spirit

A wonderful book about making art that deserves a better cover, better production value, and probably a re-release. My highlights.

 

tumblr_nogki1Bp1e1qz6f4bo1_1280Maggie Nelson, The Argonauts

I don’t think this one hit me the way it hit some readers I know, but it’s very good, with a really smart system of quotation, and a good, solid ending.My highlights.

 

tumblr_numsotcM2r1qz6f4bo1_1280Oliver Sacks, On The Move 

Messy and loses a little steam at the end, but it’s incredibly readable, and just a tad smutty at times, which is pretty delightful. Damn, what a life! (My highlights.)

 

tumblr_nxz6v9E2Xw1qz6f4bo1_1280John Seabrook, The Song Machine: Inside the Hit Factory

If you’ve suspected lately that you’re not just old and pop music really is getting worse, Seabrook does a great job of explaining why. My highlights.

 

tumblr_nvvrhfH9gG1qz6f4bo1_1280Mary Karr, The Art Of Memoir 

Hey, it’s a Mary Karr book, so there was a helluva lot of underlining. She sure can write a sentence. (My highlights.)

 

 

David Markson’s four “anti-novels”markson

I don’t know why these books work for me — they’re like stumbling on the Twitter feed of the most fascinating art buff, and scrolling and scrolling, but yet, they build and build towards something. I read them at night, and they put me into a kind of hypnotic state. (I got through about 20-30 pages until I fell asleep.) I consider these one big book and would love to see a collected edition of all four.

 

Crazy_from_the_heat_book_DLRDavid Lee Roth, Crazy From The Heat

If I believed in guilty pleasures, this would be one of them. So ridiculous and good.

 

 

If you liked this list, you might like my books.

If you’d like to read more this year, here are my tips on how to do so.

See also: my reading years 2006-2015

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The benefits of boredom

December 17, 2015

having become bored out of her gourd the artist started working

Leslie Barker, a writer at the Dallas Morning News, got in touch with me way back in October and asked me about a subject I consider myself an expert on: the benefits of boredom.

Here’s what I wrote in Steal Like An Artist:

the benefits of boredom

By the way, “Stare at a spot on the wall” was something I stole from psychologist William James of all people. I later turned it into an exercise in The Steal Like An Artist Journal:

stare at this dot until you get an idea

When it comes to the benefits of boredom, I’m certainly not the first to write about the subject…

[Read more…]

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How to find your voice

December 10, 2015

becoming me / it's been no small task

Young artists are always being told to “find your voice.”

Whatever that means!

I’ve never heard anyone explain it better than Billy Collins at a White House poetry workshop. I couldn’t find the text anywhere, so I transcribed it below. (If you’ve read Steal Like An Artist, this might sound really familiar…)

[Read more…]

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Austin Kleon

Austin Kleon (@austinkleon) is a writer and artist living in Austin, Texas. Read more→

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