“Sometimes we are so confused and sad that all we can do is glue one thing to another. Use white glue and paper from the trash, glue paper onto paper, glue scraps and bits of fabric, have a tragic movie playing in the background, have a comforting drink nearby, let the thing you are doing be nothing, you are making nothing at all, you are just keeping your hands in motion, putting one thing down and then the next thing down and sometimes crying in between.”
—Lynda Barry
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My reading year, 2016
10 books I loved this year, in no particular order:
Marilynne Robinson, Gilead
I loved this novel, which runs on the voice of the main character, an old preacher named John Ames, who is writing a letter to his seven-year-old son about his life and struggles with his faith. Beautiful book.
Ursula Franklin, The Real World of Technology
A series of radio lectures given in 1989, and yet, 100% relevant to today, as we face the rise of techno-fascism. A book and a thinker I wish more people knew about.
Olivia Laing, The Lonely City: Adventures in the Art of Being Alone
A terrific hybrid of memoir and art writing — I particularly loved the sections on David Wojnarowicz and the AIDS crisis.
Steve Silberman, NeuroTribes: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity
A fascinating history that includes everything from Nazis to Tesla to Rain Man. A ton here relevant to education and parenting kids who think differently.
John Steinbeck, Travels with Charley in Search of America
Some people question how much of this travelogue is true, but who the hell really cares when the writing is so delicious? Steinbeck himself wrote about the impossibility of capturing a nation based on one trip.
Tom Hart, Rosalie Lightning
A devastating comics memoir about losing a toddler, using art to sort through your life, and the struggle of being an artist with a family in America. Amazing feat.
John Holt, How Children Learn
Holt’s work, first published in 1967, had more of an impact on how I parent and how I think about education than any other book I read this year. His message is simple: children are learning animals, and the best way to teach them is to trust them and get out of their way. Still feels radical.
Chris Offutt, My Father, The Pornographer
Offutt’s memoir about his upbringing and his dad’s writing career also functions as a kind of cautionary tale of working from home and making a living from your art. Really great writing.
Jon Klassen, The Hat Trilogy
It’s tough to hit that sweet spot in the venn diagram of books kids love that adults love to read, and it’s just as to tough to wrap up a beloved trilogy. I spent a lot of bedtimes reading these books.
Joy Williams, Ninety-Nine Stories of God
A weird, wonderful batch of super-short stories. Perfect pre-dream reading.
Here are 15 more books I liked, all of which could’ve easily made my top 10:
- Helen Molesworth, Leap Before You Look: Black Mountain College, 1933-1957
- Jessa Crispin, The Creative Tarot
- Chester Brown, Mary Wept Over The Feet of Jesus
- Lee Lorenz, The World of William Steig
- John Cage, Silence: Lectures and Writings
- Witold Rybczynski, Waiting For The Weekend
- Calvin Tomkins, Duchamp: A Biography
- Sarah Bakewell, At the Existentialist Cafe
- Virginia Woolf, A Room of One’s Own
- Ursula K. Le Guin, Left Hand of Darkness
- Lynda Barry, The Greatest of Marlys
- Ben Shahn, The Shape of Content
- John Taylor Gatto, Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden Curriculum of Compulsory Schooling
- Neil Postman and Charles Weingartner, Teaching as a Subversive Activity
- Daniel Clowes, Patience
Browse my notes on all the books I read this year, my tips for reading more, and a decade’s worth of my previous reading years.
Advice for the recent graduate
(For graduates, or anyone broke, in between things, or living at home.)
The chances are good that if you’ve recently graduated, you’re broke and living with your parents. (Cheer up: you’re in the majority.)
Here are 5 things you can do right now that will make your life better and won’t cost you much:
1. Treat your day like a 9-5 job.
How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives. What we do with this hour, and that one, is what we are doing. A schedule defends from chaos and whim. It is a net for catching days.
—Annie Dillard, The Writing Life
This is especially important if you’re unemployed. A structureless life is a depressing life. Our days work better when they have a reliable shape. Grab a copy of Mason Currey’s Daily Rituals (if you can’t afford it, see #2 on this list) and read about the daily routines of famous artists, scientists, and creative people. Take inspiration from them. Cobble together your own daily routine and stick to it. As tempting as it is to sleep in, train yourself to get up early and do the thing that’s most important to you. (When you do something small every day, the days add up.) And at the end of the day, take Ralph Waldo Emerson’s advice to his own daughter:
Finish each day and be done with it. You have done what you could. Some blunders and absurdities no doubt crept in; forget them as soon as you can. Tomorrow is a new day. You shall begin it serenely and with too high a spirit to be encumbered with your old nonsense.
2. Hang out at your local library.
I am a librarian. I discovered me in the library. I went to find me in the library… I discovered that the library is the real school.
—Ray Bradbury
School can burn you out on reading because you’ve been stuck reading a ton of books you didn’t choose for yourself. Now’s the time to jump in and fall in love again, by reading the stuff you actually want to read. (“Read at whim!”)
A lot of young people complain they don’t have money for books — get your butt to the library! If they don’t have the books you want, ask the librarian how you can request them.(You can start by looking for my books.) When you get to the library, you might find that they also have free, fast wi-fi, access to online eBooks and databases, and a rad DVD collection. Unlike Starbucks or Barnes & Noble, you can hang out there all day without buying anything and not feel bad about it. They also have a lot of resources for people looking for work. Go up to a librarian and ask them to show you around. You’ll make their day.
3. Take long walks.
I set out to dispel daily depression. Every afternoon I get low-spirited, and one day I discovered the walk…. I set myself a destination, and then things happen in the street.
—Vivian Gormick
Walking is tremendous exercise for the body, the mind, and the spirit. Many of the great thinkers have built walking into their daily routines, for example, Dickens used to take epic, twelve-mile strolls around London and work out his writing. Hit the bricks. Find somebody with a dog who needs walked. Again, it doesn’t cost anything, and you never know what you’re going to see. (Maybe a “We’re Hiring” sign?)
4. Teach yourself to cook.
Please, America, cook your own food. Heating is not cooking. Heating heats. Cooking transforms. It matters. And it’s not hard.
—Michael Ruhlman
If you can cook for yourself, you can eat better and save a ton of money. Pick up some simple cookbooks when you’re at the library (try Bittman’s How To Cook Everything) and look up some YouTube videos. If you’re lucky enough to have a relative who’s decent in the kitchen, cooking is a nice way to spend time together, and cooking for them is a good way to pitch in for your free rent. For tools, start with a sharp knife and a cast iron skillet and go from there. (Tip: The easiest dinner in the world is roast chicken and potatoes.)
5. Keep a journal.
The point… is not to record what you already know about what happened to you in the last 24 hours. Instead, it’s an invitation to the back of your mind to come forward and reveal to you the perishable images about the day you didn’t notice you noticed at all.
—Lynda Barry
Especially when you’re down-on-your-luck or just in between phases of your life, writing in a notebook can be the easiest way to feel like you’re accomplishing something.
Set a timer for 15 minutes and fill as many pages as you can, or, if you have plenty of time, do Julia Cameron’s “Morning Pages” exercise, and fill 3 pages every morning before you start your day. (And yes, you have to do it by hand.)
You might think you know what you’re thinking, but seeing your thoughts down on the page tells you what’s really going on inside your head.
A journal is also a great place to write down all the bad ideas, bad thoughts, and bad feelings you shouldn’t tweet.
Carry your journal around with you and write in it all the time: make notes in between job interviews, doodle while you’re watching Netflix, daydream about what you want out of life, etc. Any old notebook and pen will do, but if you have $10 or a generous parent, you can grab the journal I made.
Never throw out your journals — keep them, pull them out in ten years, and you won’t believe how far you’ve come.
* * *
Update: Here are 5 more pieces of advice for graduates…
What happened when I used my own journal for a month
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.
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.
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.
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:
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:
But soon I found myself answering the prompts that were a little deeper:
I started diving into what was bothering me:
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…”
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:
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:
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.
A conversation about writing with Peter Turchi
About a decade ago, I read Peter Turchi’s Maps of the Imagination: The Writer As Cartographer. The book had a big impact on me, so I was delighted to be asked to interview him last month at the Texas Book Festival about his new book, A Muse and a Maze: Writing as Puzzle, Mystery, and Magic. I recorded our discussion and edited it down (liberally) to the post below. Enjoy. [Read more…]
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