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2022-05-12 18:07:43

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2022-05-12 18:07:43

Austin KleonBlogBooksNewsletterSpeakingAboutContact10th anniversary edition of Steal Like an ArtistFriday, March 4, 2022 In celebration of the 10th anniversary of Steal Like an Artist, we’re releasing a limited gift edition on March 15th:first time in hardcoverbigger trim sizefancy ribbon bookmark & endpapersnew afterwordIf you’d like a signed and personalized copy, purchase from Bookpeople.Otherwise, head to your local bookstore or buy it online.PermalinkWelcomeWednesday, March 18, 2020 Click here to subscribe.PermalinkMapping your booksThursday, May 12, 2022 A list is one thing, but making a map of the books you’ve read often reveals connections between them that you might have missed. (More in Tuesday’s newsletter: “A cluster map of books.”)PermalinkHomework every night for the rest of your lifeThursday, May 12, 2022 Filmmaker Lawrence Kasdan once said, “Being a writer is like having homework every night for the rest of your life.”That’s the thing about the job: you’re never “off.” If “everything is copy” (Nora Ephron) then you’re always “on,” even when it looks like you’re doing nothing. (Arm yourself with Gertrude Stein, if only as a joke: “It takes a lot of time to be a genius. You have to sit around so much, doing nothing, really doing nothing.”)“All things are potential paragraphs for the writer,” wrote Shirley Jackson in her lecture, “Memory and Delusion” (collected in Let Me Tell You):I cannot find any patience for those people who believe that you start writing when you sit down at your desk and pick up your pen and finish writing when you put down your pen again; a writer is always writing, seeing everything through a thin mist of words, fitting swift little descriptions to everything he sees, always noticing. Just as I believe that a painter cannot sit down to his morning coffee without noticing what color it is, so a writer cannot see an odd little gesture without putting a verbal description to it, and ought never to let a moment go by undescribed.The “always on” thing can feel like a curse, but it’s also a blessing: it means that any boring old experience (grocery shopping, getting stamps at the post office, picking your kids up from school) can become potential fodder for the work, so you’re “always on,” always paying attention, alert, awake to life, alive, casing the joint, looking for stuff to steal.Sometimes I collage my kids’ homework in my diary pic.twitter.com/4PdS14Smgb— Austin Kleon (@austinkleon) December 19, 2021PermalinkRead Like an Artist ZineTuesday, May 10, 2022 Lots of people said they weren’t able to get their hands on this zine during Indie Bookstore Day, so I posted the full text in last week’s Tuesday newsletter.Here’s a preview of the first half: Read the rest in the newsletter.PermalinkWatering the gardenThursday, May 5, 2022 “Those who go out weeping, carrying seed to sow, will return with songs of joy, carrying sheaves with them.”—Psalm 126:6“I climb up on the house / weep to water the trees”—Guided By VoicesAnother tearful week in our crumbling empire. At our house, we’re taking pleasure in our garden beds. Elsewhere, bad seeds are bringing forth rotten fruit, but here, good fruit is coming in. We’ve eaten a few strawberries plucked right off the plant. The tomatoes are getting bigger.The more I learn about gardening, the richer the metaphor for creative work. This week I’m learning more about composting. On a recent bike ride, Hank gave me a mini chemistry lesson in exothermic and endothermic reactions, anaerobic vs. aerobic decomposition, chemical bonds, carbohydrates, etc. I even got to stick my hand in to feel the heat of the heap.In Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Wall Kimmerer writes how she has “fullblown chlorophyll envy,” and wishes she could “photosynthesize” so that she could “be doing the work of the world while standing silent in the sun.” It’s hard not to envy the plants, who seem to know how to grow without anybody’s help. They know what to do without asking.PermalinkLawrence Weschler’s Taxonomy of ConvergencesMonday, May 2, 2022 Here is a map in my diary of Lawrence Weschler’s “Taxonomy of Convergences” that the writer has been working out in the past five issues of his Substack.His idea of “convergences” — when something resembles something else, or makes you go, “that reminds me of…” and you make “free associative linkages” — has been a big influence on me. (See my blog tag: “Convergences.”)Here is an example of a convergence from Everything That Rises: A Book of Convergences: late Rothko vs. the moon landingIn this recent taxonomy, Weschler proposes a spectrum of things that resemble one another, ranging from an imagined but not real connection (“apophenia”) to a connection that is being deliberately concealed (plagiarism).The only trouble is that these marvelous pieces have been sort of buried in his numbered Substack issues, so I’m hoping by sharing these images from my diary and direct links to the pieces, maybe it’ll make you want to click through. It’s a lot to sift through, but it rewards the sifter.First up is an introduction to the concept of “convergences.”Second is Apophenia, Chance/Accident, and Affinity, or “inchoate projections, vague coincidences and misty affinities” in which there is no real underlying connection other than the one we make.The third installment is “Co-Causation,” or “that part of the widening spectrum where if things happen to look alike, it’s because they’re likely to be drawing on the same sorts of sources.”The fourth installment covers “Direct Influence” and “Invocation,” or, “the kind of things that happen as one artist or thinker or group of such artists or thinkers impacts upon another—both forward and backward, and consciously and unconsciously.”The fifth installment covers Allusion, Quotation, Appropriation, Cryptomnesia, and Plagiarism. (My favorite of the batch.) Weschler ends at a point on the spectrum in which things resemble each other for a reason, but the reason is being hidden from us.I suspect that some of us are wired to see these convergences more than others. But I also think this way of seeing is very infectious. (I call it “the world keeps showing me these pictures.”)PermalinkInstapaper triageWednesday, April 27, 2022 analog InstapaperAlan Jacobs on how he uses Instapaper:Whenever I see something online that I think I want to read, I put it in Instapaper — and then I try to leave it for a while. Often when I visit Instapaper the chief thing I do is delete the pieces I only had thought I needed to read. So for me it’s not just a read-later service, it’s a don’t-read-later service. But that only works if I don’t go there too often. I try to catch up with my Instapaper queue once a week at most.Stealing this move.PermalinkWould I do it tomorrow?Wednesday, April 27, 2022 a photo from Oliver Sacks’ On The MoveA while back I found myself in the middle of doing something and thinking, Why on Earth did I agree to do this?There’s a question that helps you avoid accepting invitations you’ll later regret: “Would I do it tomorrow?”Here’s David Plotz to explain (who learned it from his wife Hanna Rosin, and her friend, New Yorker staff writer Margaret Talbot):That’s it—those five words. Not: Would I do it on some theoretical day in the future? This is the crucial question: Would I upend whatever I am doing tomorrow so that I can go there and do that?Are they paying you enough to skip your daughter’s soccer game tomorrow? Is the panel interesting enough that you don’t mind asking your colleague to cover for you, tomorrow? Is the conference important enough to your career that you would blow off your college roommate’s visit, which is tomorrow. When you get the invitation, pay no attention at all to its far-flung date: Move it mentally to tomorrow.Tomorrow makes decisions simple…A little extreme, maybe, but it helps me just a teensy bit more than Derek Sivers’ Hell Yeah or No. (I posted this on Twitter and James Kochalka responded,“ If I lived by that creed i’d just never do anything, I think. And also be happier.”)Lauren Groff (author of Matrix) showing off her NO bracelet she got on Etsy to remind her to say no* * *Related reading: the “Learn to say no” section in Keep Going.PermalinkFore-edge painting and indexingThursday, April 21, 2022 the fore-edge of my 2022 logbookThe outside edge of a book’s pages opposite of the spine is called the “fore-edge.” Like many things that are neglected or overlooked, it’s a place of great creative potential. Check out this video with fore-edge painter Martin Frost:I don’t usually do all that much with the fore-edges of my books, except for my notebooks, which I sometimes index by rubbing ink or pencil over the page edges of some sections and labelling them. (See the logbook above.)Most recently it occurred to me that I could use fore-edge indexing as a way to track the structure of a book. I was reading a book and it was going splendidly and then all the sudden I got bogged down. I suspected it had something to do with pacing and chapter length. So I did a fore-edge index and soon I had visual evidence of my suspicion: swelling chapters broke up the flow. (I could probably find similar evidence based on where I happened to dog-ear a page.)This might be a good exercise for writers: make a fore-edge index of some of your favorite books, and see how they are structured and paced. For books that alternate narratives or subjects, you can use different colors. (See above.)Filed under: marginaliaPermalinkRead Like an Artist Zine + Independent Bookstore Day 2022 eventsThursday, April 21, 2022 To celebrate Independent Bookstore Day 2022 and the 10th anniversary of the Steal Like an Artist, my publisher Workman and I produced a free 12-page glossy zine called “Read Like an Artist,” with 10 tips for a better life with books.Here is a very short list of the bookstores who ordered a ton (250+) of copies:Books and Mortar, Grand Rapids, MISkylark Bookshop, Columbia, MOHighland Books, Brevard, NCMojo Books & Records, Tampa, FLhello again books, Cocoa, FLBooks Around the Corner, Gresham, ORCommonplace Reader, Yardley, PAAfterwords Books, Edwardsville, ILThe Bookstore of Glen Ellyn, Glen Ellyn, ILSweet Reads Books, Austin, MNOctavia Books, New Orleans, LAAesops Fable, Holliston, MANext Page Books & Nosh, Frisco, COReads & Company in Phoenixville, PARound Table Bookstore in Topeka, KSThe Magic of Books Bookstore, Seymour, INThere are literally hundreds of bookstores participating, so check with your favorite local indie to see if they got copies!If you live in Austin, Texas or nearby, on Saturday, April 30, I’ll be at two of my favorite bookstores here in town, signing and drawing in my books and hand-selling my favorites.10AM-12PM – I’ll be at Bookpeople, our flagship store in town. Get there early — they should have around 100 zines.2PM-4PM – I’ll be at Black Pearl Books, my hyper-local neighborhood shop. They’ll have about 25 zines, so they might be out by the time I show up.Our friends at Bookwoman should have about 100 copies, too, so that might actually be your best bet for snagging one in the 512 area code. (If you’re down south, I just found out that Reverie Books has a handful, too.)For updates, subscribe to my newsletter.PermalinkStolen plants always growTuesday, April 19, 2022 a lifted type collageIn a letter to a friend, Beatrix Potter wrote about her recent adventures in “proplifting,”Mrs Satterthwaite says stolen plants always grow, I stole some ‘honesty’ yesterday, it was put to be burnt in a heap of refuse! I have had something out of nearly ever garden in the village.Elsewhere, she said she was relieved when people offered her plants. “I don’t feel like such a robber of the village gardens.”(h/t @brookemackey, Source: Beatrix Potter’s Gardening Life)Permalink123… 273Older posts→About the authorAustin Kleon is a writer who draws. He’s the bestselling author of Steal Like An Artist and other books. Read more→FacebookInstagramTumblrTwitterYouTubeSubscribe to my newsletterJoin the 100,000+ readers who get new art, writing, and interesting links delivered to their inboxes every week:Get the 10th anniversary gift editionListen to the audiobook trilogyRead my booksOrder t-shirts on demandRecent postsMapping your booksHomework every night for the rest of your lifeRead Like an Artist ZineWatering the gardenLawrence Weschler’s Taxonomy of ConvergencesMore about meBooks I’ve writtenBooks I’ve readTumblrTwitterInstagramMy newsletterSearch this siteFollow me elsewhereFacebookInstagramTumblrTwitterYouTube© Austin Kleon 2001–2022BlogBooksNewsletterSpeakingAboutContactThis site participates in the Amazon Affiliates program, the proceeds of which keep it free for anyone to read. #simple-social-icons-6 ul li a, #simple-social-icons-6 ul li a:hover, #simple-social-icons-6 ul li a:focus { background-color: #000000 !important; border-radius: 36px; color: #ffffff !important; border: 0px #ffffff solid !important; font-size: 18px; padding: 9px; } #simple-social-icons-6 ul li a:hover, #simple-social-icons-6 ul li a:focus { background-color: #dd3333 !important; border-color: #ffffff !important; color: #ffffff !important; } #simple-social-icons-6 ul li a:focus { outline: 1px dotted #dd3333 !important; } #simple-social-icons-3 ul li a, #simple-social-icons-3 ul li a:hover, #simple-social-icons-3 ul li a:focus { background-color: #dd3333 !important; border-radius: 25px; color: #ffffff !important; border: 0px #ffffff solid !important; font-size: 25px; padding: 13px; } #simple-social-icons-3 ul li a:hover, #simple-social-icons-3 ul li a:focus { background-color: #000000 !important; border-color: #ffffff !important; color: #ffffff !important; } #simple-social-icons-3 ul li a:focus { outline: 1px dotted #000000 !important; }