Writer Spotlight: Adam J. Kurtz
Happy New Release Tuesday, Booklr. Weβve got a very special treat for you today. To celebrate the launch of YOU ARE HERE (FOR NOW), we asked writer, artist, and designer Adam J. Kurtz (@Adam JK) about his process, the new book, and what to do when change comes for you. Adamβs illustrative work is rooted in honesty, humor, and a little darkness. His books have been translated into over a dozen languages. His offbeat creative work has been featured in NYLON, Adweek, Vice, and The New Yorker.
Read on for Adamβs answers and a very special giveaway treat at the end ;)
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Can you tell us a little bit about YOU ARE HERE (FOR NOW)?
YOU ARE HERE (FOR NOW) is a collection of art and essays around themes of change and personal transformationβbasically, the way we navigate change and intentionally grow, either because life threw some shit our way and we have to adapt, or because we realize we want something more, or something different.
My goal was to make a book that feels like staying up late talking to a friend about life and purpose and wanting so much more, and your fear of fucking up, and why everything is so hard sometimes, and umm, is it normal if I slightly want to die sometimes and wondering what comes next.
But you know, itβs chill. Iβm not an expert, Iβm not a therapist, Iβm trying to work it all out too, and I do that through my art. I needed to change some things, so I made my life into an βart projectβ so I would be forced to actually do it. And surprise, it helps.
YAHFN combines essayistic musings with visual artwork. Can you tell us about your work process? How do text and image speak to each other across the pages?
Iβm kind of most known for my shorter writing style and aphorisms. I boil down bigger emotions into a bite-size catchphrase, then print it on balloons, planners, and keychains as weirdly personal but highly accessible art. This book combines a lot of the shorter writing, the handwritten reminders, with longer, themed essays wherever I realized I had more to say this time.
The bookβs art is composed of a series of folding sequences photographed step-by-step. A sheet of paper transforms into a ribbon, or a star, or confetti. I wanted to represent the way we all start out as a blank slate and are bent, rolled, and torn by realityβuntil we eventually emerge transformed but no less whole.
Whatβs something thatβs good to remember about being a human person when overwhelming change happens?
Comparison isnβt helpful, BUT I like remembering that everybody has experienced difficult, scary, complicated shit. Even me, before this. And if I was able to find my way through then, I can do it again. Life is hard, and yet so many of us are HERE and DOING IT and PRETTY okay, and that can and will be the case for you, too.
When it comes to mental health, the number one thing to remember is that just because it feels real doesnβt mean it is objectively real. If thereβs a way to safely step outside of yourself, it can help. Get another opinion! Talk to someone else you can trust. And no offense, but science is real. Like, brain chemistry is a thing, and you canβt just βtoughen upβ until mental illness goes away. So ask for what you need.
Who do you write for? Do you imagine speaking to a specific person/type of person/audience while writing?
Honestly, I kind of write for myself and then try to open it up to others. Iβm not sitting down to write in the voice of whoever I want to connect with (Iβm literally not smart enough). I just write the way I speak, and itβs just sort of honest and full of dad jokes and a little nerdy, and I hope thatβs okay because too late, Iβm already this person.
Over the years, through my other books, social media, and public speaking, Iβve heard from enough people who DO get me that it is helpful to hear something so close to their inner monologue communicate the same things theyβre thinking or worrying or obsessing about. Iβve come to embrace that my power is in being comfortable opening up, putting something in simple words, pairing it with graspable visual metaphor (itβs paper and pencil, we get it!!), and sharing it.
How do you practice self-care when juggling the different creative processes of writing and making visual art, as well as being a person?
I just donβt!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I mean, jk, but like, sometimes I am a real asshole to myself; I drink three coffees, and then Iβm like, βwait, why is this happening to me,β as if I donβt exist in a physical body. It really comes down to balance in everything. Balance doesnβt mean Iβm going to be exactly 50/50 on the scale. It just means that if I tip too far one way, I need to work to tip back. Most of the time, Iβm too far in either direction, so thereβs a lot of swinging.
The answers are easy: Drink water, get enough sleep, go for walks, wear clothing that is comfortable, sit up straight. Itβs the questions that are more complicated. Weβll talk about it in the book.
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