Creativity: A Short and Cheerful Guide

Creativity: A Short and Cheerful Guide

by John Cleese

Narrated by John Cleese

Unabridged — 59 minutes

Creativity: A Short and Cheerful Guide

Creativity: A Short and Cheerful Guide

by John Cleese

Narrated by John Cleese

Unabridged — 59 minutes

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Overview

Notes From Your Bookseller

Don't let this slim volume fool you. The co-founder of Monty Python knows a thing or two about creativity, and he boils it down in this short guide. Believe it or not, John Cleese has been studying and lecturing about creativity for decades. It can be learned if you keep an open mind and if you're ready to have fun.

The legendary comedian, actor, and writer of Monty Python, Fawlty Towers, and A Fish Called Wanda fame shares his key ideas about creativity: that it's a learnable, improvable skill.

“Many people have written about creativity, but although they were very, very clever, they weren't actually creative. I like to think I'm writing about it from the inside.”-John Cleese
 
You might think that creativity is some mysterious, rare gift-one that only a few possess. But you'd be wrong. As John Cleese shows in this short, practical, and often amusing guide, creativity is a skill that anyone can acquire. 
 
Drawing on his lifelong experience as a writer, Cleese shares his insights into the nature of creativity and offers advice on how to get your own inventive juices flowing. What do you need to do to get yourself in the right frame of mind? When do you know that you've come up with an idea that might be worth pursuing? What should you do if you think you've hit a brick wall?
 
We can all be more creative.
 
John Cleese shows us how.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Creativity . . . is . . . [a] meditation on how anyone, whether breaking into TV or leading a corporate giant, can tap into his or her creative gifts.”The Wall Street Journal

“A versatile entertainer shares encouraging advice. . . . His candor is endearing. An upbeat guide to the creative process.”Kirkus Reviews

“[A] humorous and practical guide . . . Whether you’re hoping to write a novel or paint a masterpiece, you’re sure to feel inspired.”OK!

Kirkus Reviews

2020-08-18
A versatile entertainer shares encouraging advice.

Actor, comedian, screenwriter, and producer Cleese, co-founder of Monty Python and co-writer and star of the British TV comedy Fawlty Towers—among many other achievements—draws on his long, accomplished career to offer a slim compendium of random musings on creativity. He is convinced, he writes, that “you can teach people how to create circumstances in which they will become creative.” Contrasting “quick, purposeful thinking” with ruminating, based on Guy Glaxton’s Hare Brain, Tortoise Mind, Cleese admits he was surprised to discover the power of the unconscious in creative processes. The unconscious is “like the language of dreams. It shows you images, it gives you feelings, it nudges you around without you immediately knowing what it’s getting at.” Although, like many people, he was taught to privilege analysis and critical thinking, he came to believe that creativity flourishes in “an atmosphere of uncertainty and gentle confusion.” Creative people, he has found, “are much better at tolerating the vague sense of worry that we all get when we leave something unresolved.” Among many pages of helpful hints, Cleese suggests that people are most likely to be creative doing something they know and care about, but they should avoid complacency. When they are sure they know what they are doing, “creativity plummets. This is because they think they have nothing more to learn.” They shouldn’t be afraid of fallow periods, which can serve “as preparatory to the fertile ones”; nor of panic, which the author has found energizing. As for asking for help, Cleese writes that he always shows his work to others, alert to their responses, but not necessarily adopting their advice for how to fix something: “you and only you must decide which criticisms and suggestions you accept.” While many of Cleese’s observations and suggestions may seem obvious, his candor is endearing.

An upbeat guide to the creative process.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940178961964
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 12/28/2021
Edition description: Unabridged
Sales rank: 750,302

Read an Excerpt

Introduction

By creativity, I simply mean new ways of thinking about things. 

Most people think of creativity as being entirely about the arts—music, painting theatre, movies, dancing, sculpture, etc., etc.

But this simple isn't so. Creativity can be seen in every area of life—in science, or in business, or in sport. 

Wherever you can find a way of doing things that is better than what has been done before, you are being creative. 

Another myth is that creativity is something you have to be born with. This isn't the case. Anyone can be creative. 

When I was at school in the late forties and the fifties, no teacher ever mentioned the word creativity. Just think how extraordinary that is. 

Mind you, this was partly because I did science at school—my A levels were in Maths, Physics, Chemistry—and, of course, there wasn't much room for me to be creative in those subjects. 

You have to learn an awful lot of science before you can even begin to think about taking a creative approach to it. 

Then I went to Cambridge and studied Law. Not much creativity there. You just had to decide whether one particular set of facts fell into this category or that category. 

But, regardless of the subjects I chose to study, it's clear that nobody in charge of the English education system seemed to have realised there was any need to teach creativity. 

And you can teach creativity. Or perhaps I should say, more accurately, you can teach people how to create circumstances in which they will become creative. 

And that's what this little book is all about.

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