
My 2nd poem made on the iPad.
This is day 5 out of 14 that I’m posting a poem a day until the book comes out on April 13th.
You can help the release by entering the contest to win a free limited-edition screen print or pre-ordering your copy today.
Newspaper + Marker = Poetry. Buy the book.

My 2nd poem made on the iPad.
This is day 5 out of 14 that I’m posting a poem a day until the book comes out on April 13th.
You can help the release by entering the contest to win a free limited-edition screen print or pre-ordering your copy today.

Note: this post has been updated since 2010.
People always ask me when I’m going to develop an iPad app for Newspaper Blackout. I’ve always told them that I don’t want to because I think there’s something magic about feeling the newsprint in your hands, smelling the marker fumes as you make your poem.
Even though I still prefer the old analog way, there are times (mostly on the bus or out on the porch or lying in bed) when I don’t have a newspaper and a marker in front of me, so I’ve been experimenting with making them on my iPad.
Here’s how I do it, if you want to play along…
Very pleased to announce that my friend Jen Bekman and the rad gang at 20×200 are offering a new, affordable Newspaper Blackout print for sale!
Fun fact: this is the poem that Renee Montaigne read on NPR’s Morning Edition in 2008.
Never bought from 20×200 before? You’re gonna love it. Here’s an idea of what you’ll get when your print arrives. (You can also see the other 3 prints we have available through 20×200 in my store.)
Jen wrote a really lovely newsletter about the piece, some of which I wanted to share here:
I met Austin in person in Austin, TX, when I was there for SXSW, and was glad to get to spend time with him as he was on the brink of big things—spending time with artists on the brink of big things is one of the true joys of my job. His book—which you can pre-order on Amazon—was available in the conference’s bookstore. We went to dinner on the same evening that we both got to hold copies of it in our hands for the very first time. Austin was frazzled and flustered and flattered by the attention that was beginning to percolate. He was anxious about what was to come, and whether the book would sell, and what comes next when it does or it doesn’t.
There were four of us at dinner, each representing a compass point on the map of North America—California, Canada, New York and Texas—sitting at a picnic table on a scrappy patio beneath trees strung with Christmas lights, sipping sweet tea and eating barbecue and talking about poetry. I mean really talking about poetry, because as it turned out, all four of us are pretty big poetry nerds. It struck me then that for all the talk about what was to come, Austin’s accomplished some pretty amazing things already and those things deserved a good portion of the credit for convening us there that evening. And being there? That was pretty great.
With all the insanity going on in my life right now, the giveaways, interviews, reviews, Amazon rank, etc., I really needed to read this.
To remember what’s important.
As I told the group that evening: the best part (for me) of being an artist and a writer is the people I’ve been able to meet–totally awesome people–whether it’s in blog comments, or on twitter, or in person over BBQ.
I’m a very lucky guy. So big thanks to y’all, and thanks to Jen.

This is day 3 out of 14 that I’m posting a poem a day until the book comes out on April 13th.
You can help the release by entering the contest to win a free limited-edition screen print or pre-ordering your copy today.

I’m posting a poem a day until the book‘s release on April 13th. This is #2 out of 14.
I made this poem last night while listening to my friend John T Unger’s radio show, Art Heroes.
You can help the release of the book by entering the contest to win a free limited-edition screen print or pre-ordering your copy today.
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