This is poem 19 out of 30 for International Newspaper Blackout Poetry Month.
A SHOUT-OUT! goes to Nate Baird—he posted a blackout poem to the Flickr Pool. Thanks, Nate!
This is poem 19 out of 30 for International Newspaper Blackout Poetry Month.
A SHOUT-OUT! goes to Nate Baird—he posted a blackout poem to the Flickr Pool. Thanks, Nate!
This is poem 18 out of 30 for International Newspaper Blackout Poetry Month. Phew!
A SHOUT-OUT! is due to Emily Davis! She said some really sweet things about my drawing, and posted her own blackout poems! After you read those, go say hi to her on Twitter.
This is poem 17 out of 30 for International Newspaper Blackout Poetry Month.
So this is weird: I showed this poem to my wife and she told me about this ritual called a “blessingway” that some expecting mothers do. Sometimes it involves henna (“painting yr hands”). I had no clue. I thought “painting yr hands” was like painting your fingernails. Just a cool image. (OH, BEHOLD THE MAGIC of blackout poetry! The poem knows more than you, etc.)
TODAY’S SHOUT-OUT! goes to Dragon Writing Prompts for their post about the poems. Thanks!
This is poem 16 out of 30 for International Newspaper Blackout Poetry Month.
TODAY’S SHOUT-OUT! goes to the SuperViva blog. Thanks for the mention!
I’m good at keeping my posts on the tumblelog tagged, and the other day I was clicking around and thought, “Hey, you could make a pretty decent bio out of those tags…”
My name is Austin Kleon and I am a writer and a cartoonist and a web designer. I make these things called newspaper blackout poems, which some call poetry.
I grew up in a small town in southern Ohio, and still have family there. I think you are where you were, and so place, worldbuilding and maps are obsessions of mine.
Writing, storytelling, songwriting, cartooning, and drawing are all ways that I play so I can feel alive and happy.
I’m fascinated by how we see and process the world around us, which involves vision, memory, and neuroscience.
I believe that visual thinking is one of the best tools we humans have to solve problems and that we should, like the cavemen, practice drawing on the walls. Sometimes a picture is better than words, and so we have Isotype and wordless stories. Most of the time a picture is better with words, and so we have comics, information design and infographics.
I love pure black and white, but I’m trying to learn color.
For artists, I think that sometimes you don’t have to go to college, you should keep your day job, and write the book you want to read. I also wonder, what if we give it away?
Like most people, I like music and movies. Sometimes I talk politics and religion.
These are just a few of the folks who blow my mind: Lynda Barry, Kurt Vonnegut, Charles Schulz, Edward Tufte, Anders Nilsen, Kevin Huizenga, Tom Gauld, Saul Steinberg, Otto Soglow, Bill Callahan, and Joann Sfar.
I believe life is a story and often that story is just a collage or remix of who/what came before us.
I’m married to a wonderful woman and I live in Austin, Texas.
Forgive me if this is really f***ing cheesy.
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