''I began reading The Smile at the Heart of Things as I stood in the book room, then returned to my desk and read for the rest of the afternoon . . . I now love Brian Peterson . . . [He] reflects on art and artists, on creativity and where it comes from, and along the way he bares his soul, sharing tales about his sister's death, his childhood home, his dog Sparky, and how Walt Whitman gave him 'nourishment' once as he waited at a bus station years ago.'' --Craig Wilson, USA Today Brian H. Peterson wrestles with these questions and offers some answers in The Smile at the Heart of Things , a wide-ranging and deeply satisfying collection of personal essays, journal entries, and reflections on art, artists, and art museums. Drawing on his experiences as a musician, visual artist, scholar, and museum curator, Peterson connects his own search for growth and meaning with larger issues of creativity and the human spirit, often by simply telling stories about his own life and the lives of artists, friends, and family members. For those of us who strive to juggle our career and family, our jobs and our true passions, The Smile at the Heart of Things offers insight into the ways people balance their world and contemplates how religion, family, loss, love, and even personal struggles inform our lives and make them richer. The key ingredients to a creative life, suggests author Brian H. Peterson, are nourishment, honesty, beauty, depth, and hunger. These ingredients form the five main sections of the book, within which Peterson gathers essays about art and artists, journal excerpts, and life stories--''not the entire story of someone's life,'' he says, ''but a story from life that is also a glimpse into a life.''
Craig Wilson/USA Today wrote about this book and recommends it one of his columns. It intrigued me and since I love Wilson's columns, I'd happily take his suggestions on books.