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In the comments below my COVID diaries, reader Helen noted that ours is one of the few comments sections she reads and that it’s “helpful and reassuring to read about other people's experiences.” I agree 100%. (We have the nicest bunch of people on the internet!)
Amazingly, I’ve been able to read a lot of (short) books this week. Nothing that completely blew my socks off, but the closest was cartoonist Kate Beaton’s (not short) memoir, Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands, which will get a lot of deserved acclaim when it comes out this fall. I really admire the way Beaton was able to tackle such serious subject matter while keeping the lightness and looseness of her line. Really fine cartooning. (And hats off to the folks at Drawn and Quarterly who continue to put out such beautiful books. You’ll want to check out their warehouse sale next week.)
I’d never read Jed Perl’s art criticism, but a sentence that someone posted out-of-context got me interested in his book, Authority and Freedom: A Defense of the Arts. I wasn’t all that swayed by the defense, but I like the core idea: that art comes out of the tension between embracing the authority of what’s come before and the urge to break free from it with something new. (This is a good review.)
Speaking of creative tensions, in late August I am giving a new talk at the DIY Musician’s Conference here in Austin, Texas. It will be my first in-person appearance in several years. You can get tickets here and if you use the code KLEONDIY22 you can get $50 off.
Podcast: Song Exploderhas long been one of my favorites, and now next month comes a new mini-series spinoff, Book Exploder, hosted by the great Susan Orlean. (If you haven’t read it yet, The Library Book is really good.)
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