Lessons from a Desperado Poet: How to Find Your Way When You Don't Have a Map, How to Win the Game When You Don't Know the Rules, and When Someone ... What They Really Mean is They Can't Do it. - Hardcover

Black, Baxter

 
9780762769971: Lessons from a Desperado Poet: How to Find Your Way When You Don't Have a Map, How to Win the Game When You Don't Know the Rules, and When Someone ... What They Really Mean is They Can't Do it.

Inhaltsangabe

118 tips from America's Cowboy Poet on how to carve a living out of thin air and live with yourself while you do it

 

“Probably the nation’s most successful living poet.”
New York Times

Part memoir, part how-to, all Baxter Black, Lessons from a Desperado Poet is a humorous, witty take on making a living by doing the right thing and trying everything. According to Baxter Black, success “does not require a genius; it just requires the persistence of a glacier. Remember, often it’s not ability that gets you ahead, it’s reliability. The world is run by those who show up.”

 

A mind-tickling romp through the formation, fermentation, and fruition of the author’s career as a poet in a country where publishing poetry is “practically illegal,” Lessons from a Desperado Poet boldly injects a poem now and again when it is relevant, just to prove a point! It’s instructional for the entrepreneur, inspirational for the ambitious, and entertaining for the teeming masses.

 

Since it is also a story of continuously overcoming the odds, Lessons from a Desperado Poet leaves a trail of self-improvement and motivational tortilla crumbs that readers will follow with delight—before, that is, squirreling them away in their own cerebral pockets for later use.

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Über die Autorinnen und Autoren

Baxter Black is known to millions of NPR listeners for his incomparable voice and insights as America’s Cowboy Poet and as a large-animal veterinarian. Raised in New Mexico, he earned his doctorate in Colorado in veterinary medicine and practiced for thirteen years in the livestock business. He would still be there if, in his words, “cowboy poetry had not hijacked my life.” His books include, most recently, The Back Page: The Best of Baxter Black from Western Horseman, and Hey, Cowboy, Wanna Get Lucky?. For thirty years he has performed cowboy poetry across the United States and Canada.



Cowboy poet and large-animal veterinarian, Baxter Black, says "I was raised with the coyotes. No, this is serious. I was raised in New Mexico, did three years at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces, then four more years at Colorado State University to earn a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree. Veterinary school was hard for me. (The price of a gallon of gas was higher than my GPA!)

"Throughout the summers of my college years I worked at different livestock operations as 'cowboy labor.' To help support myself, among other things, I had a band and rode bulls. Upon graduation I practiced for thirteen years in the livestock business and would still be there if cowboy poetry had not hijacked my life.

"Since poetry is virtually illegal in the United States, I have had to work around the edges of the mainstream to make a living - outside the box, as it were. For thirty years I have been successful performing cowboy poetry (think of Shakespeare rather than Robert Frost) at venues across the country and in Canada. The greatest blessing in my business is that I have never had to solicit appearances. It has all been word of mouth.

"To augment my performances, over the years I have expanded into best-selling books, CD and DVD publishing, a regular column, a commercial radio program, National Public Radio appearances, cable television, and producing commercials.

"Our entertainment business, my wife’s and mine, began in Colorado. Twelve years ago we moved to Arizona to take care of my folks. I still have a heavy travel schedule and we have five employees in our office. We have a married daughter and a teenage son.

"We live on a small ranch close to the Mexican border and I punch cows when I’m not on the road. It ain’t a bad life."

Aus dem Klappentext

Part memoir, part how-to, all Baxter Black, Lessons from a Desperado Poet is a humorous, witty take on making a living by doing the right thing and trying everything. According to Black who provides 118 life lessons through the course of the book success, at least in the form to be had by working outside the system, does not take a genius; it just requires the persistence of a glacier. . . . Remember, often it is not ability, it s reliability. The world is run by those who show up.

A mind-tickling romp through the formation, fermentation, and fruition of the author s career as a poet in a country where publishing poetry is practically illegal, Lessons from a Desperado Poet is instructional for the entrepreneur, inspirational for the ambitious, and entertaining for the teeming masses. In three sections How I Learned, What I Learned, and Why I Was Able to Learn the man the New York Times called probably the nation s most successful living poet takes us through everything from his Basque Infusion (i.e., the lessons he learned working for a hard-headed Basque) and how he became a self-sustaining poet, to such chapters as Me and NPR, How to Control Your Tech Addiction, and Controlling Your Own Life Big Decisions Like Turning Down Johnny Carson.

Since it is also a story of continuously overcoming the odds, Lessons from a Desperado Poet leaves a trail of self-improvement and motivational tortilla crumbs that readers will follow with delight before, that is, squirreling them away in their own cerebral pockets for later use.
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Part memoir, part how-to, all Baxter Black, Lessons from a Desperado Poet is a humorous, witty take on making a living by doing the right thing and trying everything. According to Black who provides 118 life lessons through the course of the book success, at least in the form to be had by working outside the system, does not take a genius; it just requires the persistence of a glacier. . . . Remember, often it is not ability, it s reliability. The world is run by those who show up.

A mind-tickling romp through the formation, fermentation, and fruition of the author s career as a poet in a country where publishing poetry is practically illegal, Lessons from a Desperado Poet is instructional for the entrepreneur, inspirational for the ambitious, and entertaining for the teeming masses. In three sections How I Learned, What I Learned, and Why I Was Able to Learn the man the New York Times called probably the nation s most successful living poet takes us through everything from his Basque Infusion (i.e., the lessons he learned working for a hard-headed Basque) and how he became a self-sustaining poet, to such chapters as Me and NPR, How to Control Your Tech Addiction, and Controlling Your Own Life Big Decisions Like Turning Down Johnny Carson.

Since it is also a story of continuously overcoming the odds, Lessons from a Desperado Poet leaves a trail of self-improvement and motivational tortilla crumbs that readers will follow with delight before, that is, squirreling them away in their own cerebral pockets for later use.

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