A craftsman's legacy Why working with our hands gives us meaning

Eric Gorges

Book - 2019

"The host of PBS's A Craftsman's Legacy makes the case that the craftsman's way--the philosophy, the skills, and the mindset--can provide a blueprint for all of us in our increasingly hurried, disposable world. In this book he tells the stories and shares the collective wisdom of these modern-day makers while also celebrating the culture of all craftsmen"--

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Subjects
Published
Chapel Hill, North Carolina : Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Eric Gorges (author)
Other Authors
Jon Sternfeld (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
244 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [239]-244).
ISBN
9781616208363
  • Introduction: From Our Hands
  • 1. The Battle for Perfection
  • 2. Tearing Up Floors
  • 3. Focus
  • 4. Forethought
  • 5. Sacrifice
  • 6. Falling for Bikes
  • 7. Respect
  • 8. The Give-and-Take
  • 9. Underwater
  • 10. Finding Peace
  • 11. Discovery
  • 12. Tradition
  • 13. Shrinking the World
  • 14. Legacy
  • 15. Individuality
  • 16. A Special Kind of Stupid
  • 17. Connection
  • 18. Purpose
  • 19. A Craftsman's Legacy
  • Conclusion: Day One
  • Appendix: Featured Craftsmen
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • About the Authors
Review by Booklist Review

Is craftsmanship dead in this age of technology? The answer, says Gorges, host of PBS' A Craftsman's Legacy, is an emphatic no. Though, unlike its European counterparts, American business does not encourage apprenticeships, every year any number of graduates, corporate dropouts, and career transitioners turn to some kind of craft for work, be it metalworking, pottery, furniture making, or glassblowing. With coauthor Sternfeld, Gorges chronicles the trajectories of 24 artist-craftsmen, explaining a bit of the subjects' backstories as well as their craft, then describes a slice of their actual time spent in fashioning. It's a serious tome that deals with the significance of work and with principles like honesty, integrity, and purpose, which oddly mirror the world of business. There is indeed much to ponder: where craft and art meet, how to deal with imperfection, harnessing concentration and drive, and finding and living a purposeful life? Kentuckian furniture-maker Mark Whitley summarizes it best: The universe will let you know one way or another if you are where you should be. Includes the author's notes.--Barbara Jacobs Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Metalworker Gorges, who has profiled artisans of all stripes as host of the PBS series A Craftsman's Legacy, revisits some of his favorite interviews in this invigorating survey. He highlights woodworkers, blacksmiths, and even a maker of high-end blue jeans to learn about their approaches to and appreciation for their crafts. Without resorting to banal platitudes, Gorges weaves the various stories together to explore the philosophical aspects of working with one's hands. In discussing his own experiences as an artisan, Gorges illustrates the therapeutic qualities of craftsmanship: finding solace in the rhythmic thrum of a potter's wheel to ease the pain of his mother's recent death, and how working in his garage offered him safe harbor from debilitating panic attacks. Digressions on the very real dangers of many of these jobs, the challenge of determining price, and the often circuitous path many artisans take before finding their place (as well as the role of failure in that path), satisfyingly round out the book. This is an impressive and emotionally rich appreciation of the work often taken for granted. Agent: Alison Fargis, Stonesong. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Both this book and the PBS show of the same name, which is hosted by Gorges, are love letters to people who make things with their hands. Gorges visits some of his favorite makers, including a glass blower, a calligrapher, potters, a stone carver, and an engraver, as well as sharing his own work as a metalcrafter. His enthusiasm for handmade work is palpable though at times it's expressed in clichés. While he shows great respect and affection for the work of these makers, the book is most engaging when Gorges talks about his own journey into customizing motorcycles and the metalworking apprenticeship that lead to his own shop and television show. The author narrates; his years of experience as a TV host stand him in good stead. VERDICT Imperfect but enjoyable, this pleasant escape might just inspire listeners to try a new craft. Recommended for creatives of all types, fans of the show, and anyone who likes working with their hands.--Tristan Boyd, Austin, TX

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

"I wanted to be the driver of my own life." Metalworker/mechanic/TV host Gorges writes about the pleasures ofand lessons fromworking with one's hands.Handwork is challenging, and, as the author writes by way of an affable if admonitory opening, sometimes it involves pain: "My hands bleed all the time," he writes, "their skin is rough and cracked like a dirt road, and there's a gnarly scar across my right index knuckle." Yet, he reflects, such disfigurements are really badges of honor, pointing to the things that one learns through artisanal work that calls on the practitioner to step away from the "larger churning machine" that wants to chew us up and instead do cool stuff. This is a book full of cool stuff and the people who do it, from making swordsswordsmiths are "our last line of defense from this craft being completely lost to history"to rebuilding vintage motorcycles and carving gargoyles for cathedrals. Gorges, who hosts a TV show of the same title as the book, also notes that doing such pursuits can take passion to levels of mania, with no such thing as time off, no social or family life, and no chance of ever winning that "never-ending struggle to find that work-life balance." Nevertheless, like the kindred-spirit book Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, Gorges' narrative serves up the lessons that one learns from hard, deliberate, artful work, including persistence, planning, gumption, stick-to-itiveness, and focusabout which he writes memorably, "some of the frame has to be blurry in order to sharpen the object you're shooting," which goes a long way to explaining that whole work-life balance thing.A friendly, pleasant manifesto; without the philosophical depth of Matthew Crawford's Shop Class as Soulcraft, but still a fine read for DIYers looking to up their gameor get their hands callused in the first place. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.