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Mark McGuinness Books

1 book·~10 min total read

Mark McGuinness is a British poet and creative coach known for his work on creativity and productivity.

Known for: The Artist’s Way at Work: Riding the Dragon: Twelve Weeks to Creative Freedom

Books by Mark McGuinness

The Artist’s Way at Work: Riding the Dragon: Twelve Weeks to Creative Freedom

The Artist’s Way at Work: Riding the Dragon: Twelve Weeks to Creative Freedom

creativity·10 min read

The Artist’s Way at Work: Riding the Dragon brings Julia Cameron’s influential creative-recovery method into the realities of modern professional life. Co-authored with Mark McGuinness and Catherine Allen, the book adapts the spirit of The Artist’s Way for people whose creativity must survive meetings, deadlines, office politics, burnout, and the pressure to perform. Rather than treating creativity as a luxury reserved for artists, the authors argue that it is a practical, renewable force that improves problem-solving, resilience, communication, and meaning at work. Structured as a twelve-week program, the book combines reflection, habits, and experiments that help readers identify what blocks their imagination and reconnect with curiosity, courage, and purpose. Practices such as morning pages, the artist’s date, honest self-inquiry, and conscious risk-taking are translated into workplace terms, making them relevant for managers, entrepreneurs, writers, consultants, and anyone trying to do original work inside demanding systems. What makes this book matter is its insistence that creative freedom is not separate from professional success. Cameron’s longstanding authority in creative development, combined with McGuinness’s coaching perspective and Allen’s organizational expertise, gives the book both soul and practical credibility.

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Key Insights from Mark McGuinness

1

Begin by facing your creative blocks

Creativity rarely disappears all at once; more often, it gets buried under habits of fear. The opening stage of the book asks readers to begin not with ambition, but with honesty. In professional settings, many people operate with hidden assumptions: I must get it right the first time, I should not ...

From The Artist’s Way at Work: Riding the Dragon: Twelve Weeks to Creative Freedom

2

Use morning pages to clear mental clutter

A crowded mind cannot hear subtle ideas. One of Julia Cameron’s signature tools, morning pages, is presented here as a discipline for professionals as much as for artists. The practice is simple: write three pages by hand every morning, without editing, censoring, or trying to sound smart. The point...

From The Artist’s Way at Work: Riding the Dragon: Twelve Weeks to Creative Freedom

3

Schedule inspiration through the artist’s date

Creative people do not thrive on output alone; they also need replenishment. The artist’s date is the book’s answer to the starvation that many professionals mistake for discipline. This practice involves setting aside regular solo time to do something that sparks curiosity, delight, or fascination....

From The Artist’s Way at Work: Riding the Dragon: Twelve Weeks to Creative Freedom

4

Recognize and outwit creative resistance

Resistance is often smartest when it sounds reasonable. One of the book’s most valuable insights is that creative avoidance rarely announces itself as fear. Instead, it arrives dressed as efficiency, fatigue, realism, or busyness. You tell yourself you need more research before starting, that now is...

From The Artist’s Way at Work: Riding the Dragon: Twelve Weeks to Creative Freedom

5

Reclaim play as a source of innovation

Serious work often improves when people stop being so serious about themselves. The book insists that play is not the opposite of professionalism; it is one of its hidden engines. When adults lose access to experimentation, humor, surprise, and improvisation, their work becomes rigid. They may still...

From The Artist’s Way at Work: Riding the Dragon: Twelve Weeks to Creative Freedom

6

Attention shapes the quality of work

What you repeatedly notice becomes the raw material of your creative life. The book emphasizes attention as a discipline: the ability to observe what is happening within you and around you with freshness instead of autopilot. In overstimulated work environments, attention is fragmented by notificati...

From The Artist’s Way at Work: Riding the Dragon: Twelve Weeks to Creative Freedom

About Mark McGuinness

Mark McGuinness is a British poet and creative coach known for his work on creativity and productivity.

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Mark McGuinness is a British poet and creative coach known for his work on creativity and productivity.

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