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Content provided by Carter Johnson and Colby S., Carter Johnson, and Colby S.. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Carter Johnson and Colby S., Carter Johnson, and Colby S. or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.
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29 | We Tried Hemingway’s Creative Practice (Write One True Sentence Daily)

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Manage episode 359933415 series 3399316
Content provided by Carter Johnson and Colby S., Carter Johnson, and Colby S.. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Carter Johnson and Colby S., Carter Johnson, and Colby S. or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of The Craft, Carter and Colby discuss a specific creative practice. During his recent solo road trip to California, Carter adopted (with Colby’s prompting) Hemingway’s maxim “one true sentence” as a way to document his journey. He attempted to articulate an essence from each day in a single sentence, forgoing note-taking for a practice of small, dense creative acts. They discuss the process of generating new ideas, choosing which ideas to pursue, and developing small creative practices into larger, more refined work.

Sentences:

Day 1: I wonder if Jesse James ever watched that big Missouri sky and wondered what it would look like rolled up like a scroll.

Day 2: Above the gentle sweep of the train tracks, a red church was bivouacked against a cliff of smooth red stone - like some ancient relief carved by the hand of a Spanish sculptor.

Day 3: Sand turns into snow as I reel toward the rough sockets of skull rock.

Day 4: A gust of Pacific wind, tinged with salt, hits my face as I watch the breakers from Hawk Tower, the same perch where Jeffers watched the sun set with his glass of red wine and cigarette.

Day 5: The redwoods’ brawny trunks and dark green boughs, soaked in cold rain, remind me of my frailty.

Day 6: Steinbeck’s shadow stretches long past California, but one can never quite fix where it ends.

Day 7: The shade of a cloud passes over a green hill near San Luis, darkening the purple impressions of sage and lavender.

Day 8: Tempered blue steel in the predawn light, the snow-covered faces of Coloradan mountains stare into my tired eyes with terrible silence.

Send feedback or topic ideas to [email protected].

·

·

Cover art was designed by Elizabeth Newell. Learn more about her work at elizabethnewelldesign.com or on Instagram @elizabethisadesigner.

  continue reading

54 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 359933415 series 3399316
Content provided by Carter Johnson and Colby S., Carter Johnson, and Colby S.. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Carter Johnson and Colby S., Carter Johnson, and Colby S. or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of The Craft, Carter and Colby discuss a specific creative practice. During his recent solo road trip to California, Carter adopted (with Colby’s prompting) Hemingway’s maxim “one true sentence” as a way to document his journey. He attempted to articulate an essence from each day in a single sentence, forgoing note-taking for a practice of small, dense creative acts. They discuss the process of generating new ideas, choosing which ideas to pursue, and developing small creative practices into larger, more refined work.

Sentences:

Day 1: I wonder if Jesse James ever watched that big Missouri sky and wondered what it would look like rolled up like a scroll.

Day 2: Above the gentle sweep of the train tracks, a red church was bivouacked against a cliff of smooth red stone - like some ancient relief carved by the hand of a Spanish sculptor.

Day 3: Sand turns into snow as I reel toward the rough sockets of skull rock.

Day 4: A gust of Pacific wind, tinged with salt, hits my face as I watch the breakers from Hawk Tower, the same perch where Jeffers watched the sun set with his glass of red wine and cigarette.

Day 5: The redwoods’ brawny trunks and dark green boughs, soaked in cold rain, remind me of my frailty.

Day 6: Steinbeck’s shadow stretches long past California, but one can never quite fix where it ends.

Day 7: The shade of a cloud passes over a green hill near San Luis, darkening the purple impressions of sage and lavender.

Day 8: Tempered blue steel in the predawn light, the snow-covered faces of Coloradan mountains stare into my tired eyes with terrible silence.

Send feedback or topic ideas to [email protected].

·

·

Cover art was designed by Elizabeth Newell. Learn more about her work at elizabethnewelldesign.com or on Instagram @elizabethisadesigner.

  continue reading

54 episodes

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