
Here are 10 things I thought were worth sharing this week:
It’s what folks in the book industry call “Dads & Grads” season. An easy gift they’ll love: one of my books with a few crisp bills as a bookmark. When in doubt about which book of mine to give, I suggest the deluxe hardcover anniversary edition of Steal Like an Artist:
Another easy gift: a paid subscription to this newsletter! Sometimes it can feel weird giving digital presents, so I made an analog zine you can download, print out, fold, and customize that will explain everything. (There’s also a video to show you how to make it.)
“I think it’s good to stay fully, even slightly foolishly, committed to the idea that humans doing human things, with other humans, is and will remain at the vital heart of human existence. Because otherwise what on earth’s the point?” Oliver Burkeman on navigating by aliveness.
“I say in speeches that a plausible mission of artists is to make people appreciate being alive at least a little bit,“ wrote Kurt Vonnegut in Timequake. “I am then asked if I know of any artists who pulled that off. I reply, ‘The Beatles did.’” (Let’s pair that with Sarah Manguso, who I quoted in Keep Going: “The purpose of being a serious writer is to keep people from despair…. If people read your work and, as a result, choose life, then you are doing your job.”)
“We ain’t gonna make it!” Something that made me feel alive this week: comedian Roy Wood, Jr.’s standup special, Lonely Flowers. Bleak, but so, so funny.
“Do what you do, then drop it like it’s hot!” One afternoon, after reacquainting myself with the rapper Juvenile’s performance of “Back That Azz Up” on NPR’s Tiny Desk, I came across an unexpected footnote in the book Space Odyssey that included the definition of the word “callipygian.” Frankly, these are the moments of synchronicity I live for.
“Love is a mixtape.” When it starts really warming up in Texas and the death rays start glowing, I like to turn on dark, gothy, synthy music. If you dig those vibes, I made a new mixtape you can stream on Spotify, Apple Music, or YouTube.
After I shared that mixtape on Instagram, I got a comment from a young man who said he didn’t understand what a mixtape was or how you make one. So I recorded an explanatory video for him that made me feel a million years old:
“See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland.” My friend Sara Hendren on birthing prototypes.
How to create the conditions of a culture of creativity in your family home.
“We need all kinds of different brains in the world, and one thing art does is that it allows us to access another person’s mind, their way of thinking, and the way they see the world. When we get access to another person’s mind, we learn more about our own.” Do you hear an inner monologue?
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xoxo,
Austin

The video unlocked so many GenX memories for me! I was wondering how you were going to tape over the cassette, and then you applied the literal TAPE and my memory exploded. Another fun thing might be to try and erase it with a magnet. I remember borrowing a friend's Depeche Mode tape and my brother got ahold of it. He was sitting across the table from me, fidgeting with a refrigerator magnet in his hand and the tape in the other. When we went to listen to it one more time before returning the prize cassette, we were horrified to discover there were blank spots on it, apparently caused by the magnet (this made more sense when I worked at a college radio station later, and we used a cool giant "bulk" magnet to clear the "carts" that contained our promos before we recorded new ones. It would also make your watch run backwards).
I love Oliver Burkeman, and I especially loved his recent post Navigating by Aliveness. I'm also going to link to that one in my next newsletter. For the second time since I've been getting his newsletter, I replied to his email to tell him how great I thought it was, and for the second time, he took the time to write back 😭. He is quality through and through.