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Handmade

Creative Focus in the Age of Distraction

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In an era when there are countless competing claims on one's attention, how does one find the internal focus to be creative? For master furniture craftsman Gary Rogowski, the answer is in the act of creative work itself. The discipline of working with one's hands to create unnecessarily beautiful things shapes the builder into a more complete human being.
In the tradition of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance and Shop Class as Soulcraft, Rogowski's Handmade is a profound meditation on the eternal value of manual work, creativity, human fallibility, and the stubborn pursuit of quality work. Rogowski tells his life story of how he became a craftsman and how years of persistent work have taught him patience, resilience, tolerance for failure, and a love of pursuing beauty and mastery for its own sake.
Part autobiography, part guide to creativity, and part guide to living, Handmade is a book for craftspeople, artists, and anyone who seeks clarity, purpose, and creativity in their work—and it's the perfect antidote to a modern world that thinks human labor is obsolete.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 6, 2017
      Rambling between recollections of hiking trips and musings on craftsmanship, master woodworker Rogowski (Complete Illustrated Guide to Joinery) moves away from strictly informational texts to share his personal story and thoughts on craftsmanship. The advice and folksy wisdom he offers, much of which can be summed up as “practice” and “have patience,” rely too heavily on a hopeful artisan’s ability to follow the path the author trod nearly 50 years ago, perfecting his craft and surviving on scraps in a much different economy. With little by way of practical advice for a hopeful craftsperson, the book is steeped in nostalgia and reads like a meditative trip through the author’s memory and a love letter to traditional handcrafting as well as a lament on the lack of care put into modern manufacturing. Though the author may be an exemplary woodworker, his attempt at philosophical treatise misses the mark—or, as he puts it himself in a fable about a cobbler, “Don’t talk to him about spiritual matters; just let him teach you how to make shoes.” B&w photos.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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