“Show the world what you really do. Be open, visual and honest.”
—Justin McMurray
The folks at Somewhere and I are on the same mission: get people to show their work.
“Show the world what you really do. Be open, visual and honest.”
—Justin McMurray
The folks at Somewhere and I are on the same mission: get people to show their work.
Show Your Work! is out in paperback and ebook Thursday, March 6th at bookstores everywhere, including Amazon, B&N, Powell’s, iBooks, eBooks.com, and your local indie bookstores.
If you want a signed copy, order one from BookPeople here in Austin, Texas. They ship everywhere. (Here’s video of me signing the last batch.)
I’ll be headed out on tour in late March. Dates here.
To get a feel for what the book is about, check out this excerpt on Medium: “10 Ways To Share Your Creativity.”
Here’s what people are saying on Twitter.
If you’ve already received your copy, please consider writing a review for Amazon, Goodreads, or your personal blog! Everything helps.
Thanks so much! Follow me on Twitter for updates: @austinkleon
See all upcoming events on my speaking page.
Follow me on Twitter for updates: @austinkleon
Date | Event | City |
---|---|---|
June 23, 2013 | HOW Design Live | San Francisco, CA |
April 11, 2013 | University of North Texas | Denton, TX |
February 21 | York College | York, PA |
Date | Event | City |
---|---|---|
Oct 28 | Texas Book Festival | Austin, TX |
Sept 2 | Decatur Book Festival | Decatur, GA |
August 24 | UX Week | San Francisco, CA |
June 27 | AIGA / AdFed Talk | Austin, TX |
June 10 | Printers Row Lit Fest | Chicago, IL |
June 9 | Weapons of Mass Creation | Cleveland, OH |
June 7 | Boulder Book Store | Boulder, CO |
June 5 | BookPeople | Austin, TX |
May 31 | 360i | New York, NY |
May 30 | McNally Jackson | New York, NY |
May 30 | 20×200 & Foursquare | New York, NY |
May 16 | AIGA See Change | Minneapolis, MN |
May 9 | Boswell Book Company | Milwaukee, WI |
May 9 | Translator | Milwaukee, WI |
May 9 | Spreenkler | Milwaukee, WI |
May 7 | Schuler Books and Music | Lansing, MI |
April 31 | Pixar | Emeryville, CA |
April 28 | FLAX Art + Design | San Francisco, CA |
April 27 | San Francisco, CA | |
April 26 | Changing Hands | Tempe, AZ |
April 24 | Museum of Contemporary Craft 12PM / 7PM |
Portland, OR |
April 12 | Savannah College of Art and Design | Savannah, GA |
April 11 | Georgia Center for the Book | Decatur, GA |
April 11 | Savannah College of Art and Design | Atlanta, GA |
April 10 | Flyleaf Books | Chapel Hill, NC |
April 9 | University of Kentucky | Lexington, KY |
April 5 | TEDxChange | Kansas City, MO |
April 4 | Ohio State University | Columbus, OH |
March 31 | AIGA Y Design Conference | San Diego, CA |
March 28 | University of Pennsylvania | Philadelphia, PA |
March 27 | Columbia University | New York, NY |
March 10 | SXSW Film/Interactive | Austin, TX |
Date | Event | City |
---|---|---|
September | The Economist’s Human Potential Conference | New York, NY |
June | Dallas Museum of Art | Dallas, TX |
March | SUNY Broome Convocation Keynote Speech | Binghamton, NY |
March | SXSW Interactive | Austin, TX |
Date | Event | City |
---|---|---|
Dec 6 | Concert at Access Contemporary Music | Chicago, IL |
Jul 11 | TEDxPennQuarter | Washington, D.C. |
Jul 8 | Exhibit at the Austin Museum of Art | Austin, TX |
Jun 15-20 | AEPL English Conference | Estes Park, CO |
May 27 | Domy Books | Austin, TX |
Apr 27 | Teleportal Reading – Hotel San Jose | Austin, TX |
Apr 13 | Reading at Bookpeople | Austin, TX |
Mar 12-20 | SXSW Interactive | Austin, TX |
Feb 18 | Pecha Kucha Night #7 | Austin, TX |
Febr 3 | Visual Thinking for Writers Workshop | Austin, TX |
Jan 30- Mar 27 |
Exhibit at The Luminary Center for The Arts | St. Louis, MS |
Date | Event | City |
---|---|---|
Nov 24 | Visual Thinking for Writers Workshop | Austin, TX |
Nov 19 | Talk at Angelo State University | San Angelo, TX |
Breakthrough this year: thinking of books as potential experiences, not just objects. Matching up a book with my mood, life situation, etc…
In 2013 I had a book to write and an infant to care for, both of which gave me a lot of hell, so I read a lot of novels and Nancy comics.
That said, here are my 10 favorite books I read in 2013:
Patrick DeWitt, The Sisters Brothers
This book couldn’t have been more perfectly matched to my tastes: it’s a great story, a Western, it’s funny, it’s violent, it features a digressive narrator, it has tight, short chapters, and it’s 300 pages long. I heard from at least a half a dozen people who read this book on my recommendation and loved it.
Oliver Burkeman, The Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can’t Stand Positive Thinking
When I was writing Steal Like An Artist, I wasn’t really aware that it would eventually be shelved in the self-help section. So after finding myself there, I became increasingly interested in self-help as a form. One of my favorite things about this book is that it riffs on self-help books without totally abandoning the structure of many self-help books—in each chapter, there’s usually a story, mentions of a few studies, and a lesson, or extrapolation. (The Malcolm Gladwell-ish “story-study-lesson” formula.) It’s a slick trick, and it works. Burkeman is also a good follow online: @oliverburkeman
Ernie Bushmiller, Nancy Is Happy: Complete Dailies 1943-1945
As I mentioned before, this was not an easy year. There were many, many nights when I sighed at my Kindle, sighed at the books on my nightstand, and then picked up a Nancy book and read until I fell asleep. Go out and buy this or the second collection so that Fantagraphics will print another one!
Mohsin Hamid, How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia
Once again, a book with self-help ties: the novel’s structure “mimics that of the cheap self-help books sold at sidewalk stands all over South Asia, alongside computer manuals and test-prep textbooks. Each chapter begins with a rule—‘Work for Yourself,’ ‘Don’t Fall in Love,’ ‘Be Prepared to Use Violence’—and expertly evolves into a narrative.” The whole thing is written in second person, and none of the characters have names. It might sound gimmicky, but it doesn’t come off that way — the execution is pretty perfect, and really moving.
Shunryu Suzuki, Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind
I started meditating last year, so I got interested in Zen Buddhism. I had this book on my shelf for years, but only read it recently. A lot of my favorite artists have Zen backgrounds, but it was really surprising to me how much of this book applies to creativity and art. (Of course, half of it makes no sense to me at all.) Contrast Suzuki’s line, “When you give up, when you no longer want something, or when you do not try to do anything special, then you do something,” with Andy Warhol: “As soon as you stop wanting something you get it.”
And then there’s my favorite line, which I quoted in Show Your Work!: “In the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities; in the expert’s mind there are few.”
Nathanael West, Miss Lonelyhearts
Another breakthrough for me this year: realizing the value of re-reading books. So I’m doing something out of the ordinary and putting a re-read book on my list. In a way, the book was a kind of dark therapy for me—as I increasingly found my inbox stuffed full of emails from desperate aspiring artists, there was Miss Lonelyhearts to suffer a breakdown so I didn’t have to. Everyone who has ever though about dishing out advice on a mass scale (is there such a species? oh dear) should have to read this first.
Mason Currey, Daily Rituals: How Artists Work
For some time, my motto has been “something small, every day,” so what’s more delicious than a book full of the daily routines of famous artists? Some of my favorites here.
Mary Ruefle, Madness, Rack, and Honey: Collected Lectures
Did I underline more sentences in a book this year? Probably not. My friend Kio wrote of the first essay, “the end of each sentence leaves me gasping the way a kiss can begin in a gasp.” What a wonderful collection of lectures.
Brian Eno, A Year With Swollen Appendices
In many ways, 2013 was my Year of Eno. Listening to Another Green World while working, Music for Airports while meditating, watching his lectures, following the Oblique Strategies — Eno had such a big influence on me that I started Show Your Work! with his concept of “Scenius.” This book is really two books: 300 or so pages are the diary Eno kept in 1995, and 100 or so pages are the “swollen appendices,” little mini-essays on various topics. Sadly, it’s out-of-print, and used copies are very expensive, but it’s worth tracking down. I downloaded a PDF online and read it on my iPad in GoodReader, which was an interesting experience in itself.
Carl Hiaasen, Tourist Season
If you ever go on vacation in Florida, this is the perfect reading material.
10 more good books I read:
And 3 good books I started, was enjoying, but somehow didn’t finish:
For fuller recaps of all of the above and every book I read this year, browse the tag: my reading year 2013
See my favorite books from the past eight years of reading here.
The holidays are coming up, which means that I’m getting a lot of email from folks who want to buy prints of my work to give as gifts.
Unfortunately, we won’t be selling prints until next year. (My wife Meg is working hard on planning the logistics—we’ll be selling signed, limited-edition screenprints of new and old poems.) Prints available now!
In the meantime, here’s how to get a cheap print:
1. Buy a copy of Newspaper Blackout and a regular ol’ 8×10 frame.
2. Razor out a poem you like.
3. Frame and enjoy!
If you’re desperate for a gift, you can also get a signed copy of Steal Like An Artist from Bookpeople here in Austin, Texas. They ship everywhere. Order one here.
If you’d like to know when prints are available, sign up for my weekly newsletter.
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