Wednesday, August 25, 2010

A Little Wisdom from St. E





Truth is not that which can be demonstrated by the aid of logic. If orange-trees are hardy and rich in fruit in this bit of soil and not that, then this bit of soil is what is truth for orange-trees. If a particular religion, or culture, or scale of values, if one form of activity rather than another, brings self-fulfillment to a man, releases the prince asleep within him unknown to himself, then that scale of values, that culture, that form of activity, constitute his truth. Logic, you say? Let logic wangle in its own explanation of life.

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
Wind, Sand and Stars (1939)

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Busy Life. No Write.

There are good problems, and there are bad problems. Lately, I've got too much other good and interesting work to do, so my writing has slowed down a bit. But fortunately, I've continued to work in my books. Here's another sample from Book Seven.


As always, these spreads are also with all of their little siblings on the Book Seven page.






Thursday, August 5, 2010

Armies of Cute and Other Wonders

More tidbits from Book Seven. Bon Appétit.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Haiku Interlude: A Paean to Professional Envy

Salieri’s Roller Coaster
Who has not felt it?
Love and hate and love again
Because you’re better

Monday, July 26, 2010

Hmmm...

"In the art world there is a snobbery which suggests that the artist is meant to be a shadowy figure in the background behind the work. That kind of high-integrity marketing strategy is very common. Whether people call it a marketing strategy or integrity is another matter ... The monk-artist is an attractive archetype in a world where there are only so many - the belligerent drunk, the batty dame, the flaming tortured soul. Its a big part of the attraction of art - the work as a relic of the artist/saint/holy fool. People want to touch the cloth or whatever. It’s a part of the religion.”

British ceramicist Grayson Perry
Winner of the 2003 Turner Prize
Quoted in Dr. Sarah Thornton's Seven Days in the Art World

Meet Mr. Robot

A new poem in the Newspaper Blackout style popularized by Austin Kleon. Click on the image below to view a larger image.