Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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61 of 64 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
a little too intense and heavy, April 3, 1999
I have read pretty much all the books on creativity (The Artists' Way, Natalie Goldberg, etc.) and maybe I'm just getting tired of all the "psychological work" that is beginning to get in the way of actually producing any art itself....I do like Jan Phillips' personal stories a lot, and as a fledgling writer, fashion illustrator/designer and performer I can relate to all the blocks and fears she discusses. But enough already!! I do not get the sense of "joy" that the PR blurb uses to describe her book at all, but much like Julia Cameron's, her art sounds like a prolonged, painful and complicated birthing process. Personally I am experimenting with taking a road of less resistance, trying to actually follow my own lightness and desire, and who knows, maybe I will come up with a helpful workshop of my own someday! In the meantime, I would recommend Sally Warner's "Making Room for Making Art" as a down-to-earth, practical view into how mostly unblocked, working artists effectively structure their lives and time.
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46 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
MYM is about the sacred transformation we call creativity., June 12, 1999
By A Customer
If you haven't yet realized the joy and self-empowerment of participating in one of Jan Phillips' workshops, MARRY YOUR MUSE comes as close to that experience as any book could. Jan manages to infuse the magical energy she brings to her creative sessions into print, providing a wider audience with her inspiration and her affirmation that we are creative, spiritual beings--no matter what we've been led to believe. For those lucky enough to have written, danced, laughed, cried, created in a Jan Phillips workshop, the book is further confirmation of the promise of our Muse: that we can in fact partake in the joys of creativity, that this sacred transformation isn't reserved for a few elite individuals. "Do not doubt that you are born to create," she says, "Do not believe that the realm of art belongs only to others..." MARRY YOUR MUSE evolved from "The Artist's Creed," a prayer of commitment to her creativity that Jan wrote some years ago after leading a workshop at the annual International Women's Writing Guild summer conference (an event held every August at Skidmore College in Saratoga, NY, at which she still teaches a weeklong session). However, the book is more than just "The Artist's Creed"--it's a meditation and a plan for action and a litany of stories about the joy of living a creative life. It dispels those nagging doubts about the existence of creativity in our lives-- and it stresses the importance of creating our art NOW, making time for it. My favorite Jan-quote is, "There are a lot of things we don't have in life, but time is not one of them. Time is all we have. One lifetime under this name to produce a body of work that says, 'This is how I saw the world.' Your work is worthy of whatever time it takes." As a Regional Representative for the International Women's Writing Guild and a facilitator of a women's writing group, I am often asked about books/tools I suggest for enhancing creativity, "getting started", dispelling writer's block--and MARRY YOUR MUSE is the first title out of my mouth (generally followed by Julia Cameron's THE ARTIST'S WAY, Natalie Goldberg's WRITING DOWN THE BONES and WILD MIND, and Dorothy Randall Gray's SOUL BETWEEN THE LINES: FREEING YOUR CREATIVE SPIRIT THROUGH WRITING). And then, after you've read MARRY YOUR MUSE, done the exercises, crafted your own imaginative work-- you may just find yourself wanting more... perhaps seeking to attend a live Jan Phillips workshop--to see where this creative lady is headed next and if you can thumb a ride. I know I'm looking forward to my next dose of Muse Magic in August!
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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
GENTLE support for Creativity!, May 5, 1998
This book is very encouraging about honoring your own creative gifts, without making you feel GUILTY, which was my reaction to the book everyone goes on about, THE ARTIST'S WAY by Julia Cameron - just made me want to curl up in bed and go back to sleep!! It was just too demanding - Do this! Do that!! Like you had all the time in the world to devote to "Creativity" - MARRY YOUR MUSE is a lot more accepting of who you are... there are suggestions for exercises you can do - and some good ideas and inspiring words, but they're not COMMANDMENTS - Thou shalt be CREATIVE!! Now, JUMP!!!! ("Too hard" says me - "let's see what's on TV!?") Jan Phillips takes it MUCH easier - she encourages rather than commands! My reaction is, "Sure!! This is DO-ABLE!! And worthwhile! And validating! What's next?"
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