
Some Paths Give You Enery is the first quarter (January 1, 2011 through March 31, 2011) of the Art Journaling Daybook, published by Heron Dance Press.
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To order the print edition of Some Paths Give You Energy, visit here. Sorry, we are sold out of the print edition of this issue.

A Poet’s Moods is the fourth quarter (October 1, 2011 through December 31, 2011) of Journal Meditations, published by Heron Dance Press.
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Issue 61 is the second quarter (April 1, 2011 through June 30, 2011) of Journal Meditations, published by Heron Dance Press. This work will also form part of a journaling guide for the fourth quarter of this year. That guide will be available in late September.
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Maniacs Seeking the New Encounter (Issue 60: April 2011) is a compendium of the first quarter, 2011, of the daily Reflections of a Wild Artist, published by Heron Dance Press. In his semi-fictional journal Archibald Campbell explores his own creative process and that of dozens of other artists. He explores his romantic and erotic life, and his connection to nature.
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To order the print edition of this book, visit here.

Simplicity is Profound: Meditations on Creativity Daybook (Issue 59: November 2010) considers ninety quotes by artists, poets, musicians, novelists and filmmakers about their creative processes—one for each day of the first quarter (it is not year specific). Each quote is followed by a reflection by Heron Dance artist and founder Roderick MacIver and a question that will invite you to delve into the processes underlying your own creative work.
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To order the print edition of this book, visit here.

Art is About the Mystery: Maybe That’s Why Artists can be a Little Odd (Issue 58: May 2010) explores artists’ connections with their inner worlds, to dreams, imagination and fantasy. It offers the view that the role of artists is to explore the border territory at the edge of the human experience, “where one reality encounters another, where light encounters dark, where scariness and beauty mingle, where demons and gods dance.”
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The Song I Came to Sing: Reflections of a Wild Artist (Issue 57: October 2009) took the form of a semi-fictional work: life through the eyes of a certain wild artist and lover of wild places, wild rivers and wild women. It explores subjects such as the human connection to the natural world and the human search for meaning, but through the eyes of a character who lives on the fringes of our culture, who reads a lot, thinks a lot and who spends a lot of time wandering around in the woods and paddling rivers.
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To order the print edition of this book, visit here.

