Tao Lin's Blog

December 4, 2023

Moving to Substack.

Future posts will be at taolin.substack.com.

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Published on December 04, 2023 16:28

Moved to Substack.

 I moved this to taolin.substack.com.

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Published on December 04, 2023 16:28

January 16, 2023

Books I read in 2022 (and an update on my writing)

I published three essays this year—

"New Cosmologies" (Document Journal, ~2000 words) 

"The Purpose of Dreams" (UnHerd, ~1300 words)

"The Story of Autism: How We Got Here, How We Heal" (Mars Review of Books, ~7000 words)

Me and LeoI'm working on three books—


Self Heal. Nonfiction in which I share how I cured my autism, ankylosing spondylitis, eczema, migraines, chest pain, etc. naturally. Includes chapters on mind, love, and my physical deformities.


True History. Nonfiction in which I tell a fuller, m...


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Published on January 16, 2023 10:30

November 10, 2022

Mandala-print sales statistics

It's been two years since I started selling prints of my mandalas. I've enjoyed having this fully-me-controlled source of income. 

My prints were shown at Ka-Vá, a kava/kratom bar in Brooklyn, in April/May. Photos of the show are here. I didn't attend because I live in Hawaii.

Nini in a box. He likes to pee in boxes.I've sold 401 prints. I've sold these amounts of these prints:


66—water


57—mandala 13


55—numbers 


47—mandala 25


31—Dudu 


27—mandala 12


23—cats/aliens


19—torsion


17—mandala 8


13—autism


10—symbols


1...


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Published on November 10, 2022 10:00

January 11, 2022

Books I read in 2021

Dudu ascending stairsThis year, I published a novel, a ~5900-word essay on Giancarlo DiTrapano, a ~6300-word essay titled "Partnership Before Sexism and War," some poems, and I read 90 books, including ~50 nonfiction, ~22 fiction, ~7 poetry (approximations because some were hard to categorize and I probably counted wrong). 
I wrote about 30 of them below (see full list here).

NOVELS
The End of the Day (2020) by Bill Clegg
. I liked its intricacy and range—how it zoomed in and out of minds and bodies...
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Published on January 11, 2022 18:00

November 22, 2021

The Partnership-Dominator Fall

Tank Magazine published a ~6400-word essay by me on human history. It's titled "Partnership Before Sexism and War.
Referencing Riane Eisler, Marija Gimbutas, James Mellaart, and others, the essay covers the past million years, with a focus on 12,000 to 6,000 years ago. I argue that mainstream human culture across Eurasia lived in peaceful, class-and-gender egalitarian partnership societies, worshipping nature as a female deity, until around 6,500 years ago, when dominator culture began to gain ...
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Published on November 22, 2021 12:00

August 19, 2021

Microfireflies

I first noticed microfireflies on June 10, 2016, in Washington Square Park. I ended up writing about them in Leave Society, and they're depicted on the cover, though in real life they seem to be cloud-colored, not yellow. Below are all the mentions of them in my book. These passages are in third-person, about a character named Li, but they were written as nonfiction, based on my experiences.

Cover design by Linda Huang

From page 144:

Supine in Washington Square Park one day, Li saw flitting, epheme...

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Published on August 19, 2021 09:30

What are microfireflies?

I first noticed microfireflies on June 10, 2016, in Washington Square Park. I ended up writing about them in Leave Society, and they're depicted on the cover, though in real life they seem to be cloud-colored, not yellow. Below are all the mentions of them in my book. These passages are in third-person, about a character named Li, but they were written as nonfiction, based on my experiences.

Cover design by Linda Huang

From page 144:

Supine in Washington Square Park one day, Li saw flitting, epheme...

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Published on August 19, 2021 09:30

March 21, 2021

"Nothing is as it appears to be. This is not glib."

Leave Society's epigraph—"Nothing is as it appears to be. This is not glib."—is by Kathleen Harrison, whom I wrote about visiting in Trip

August 3My fourth novelIt's my first epigraph. It was easy to choose. I didn't consider anything else. 

I considered using just "Nothing is as it appears to be" but decided, at some point, to include "This is not glib" because it seems true and because I feel like some-to-many people will think or feel something like "That seems glib" after reading "Nothing is as it a...

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Published on March 21, 2021 13:10

January 3, 2021

Books I read in 2020

I read 73 books this year. 31 nonfiction books, 18 novels, 8 poetry collections, 7 story collections, 2 graphic novels, 2 literary magazines, 1 anthology. I read 2 books twice. I read 8 books I'd already read, 9 translations, and 10 unpublished books.
NOVELS
Chilly Scenes of Winter (1976) by Ann Beattie. I read this when I was 20 or 21 and again later in my twenties and a third time this year. It was like I remembered—funny, tender, bleak, vivid. 
science-fictionConcrete (1982) by Thomas Bernhard. ...
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Published on January 03, 2021 11:00