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Designers Don't Read

By: Austin Howe
Narrated by: Erik Synnestvedt
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Summary

Designers Don’t Read is a love song to graphic design and graphic designers. Austin Howe is a creative director, writer, advocate, and cheerleader for design - but not a designer. He believes in the "wonder and exuberance of someone who gets paid - by clients to do what he loves". Howe places immense value on curiosity and passion to help designers develop a point of view, a strong voice. He explores the creative process and conceptualization, and delves into what to do when inspiration is lacking.

If there’s a villain in these elegant, incisive, amusing, and inspiring essays, it’s ad agencies and marketing directors, but even villains serve a purpose and illustrate the strength of graphic design "as a system, as a way of thinking, as almost a life style". Howe believes that advertising and design must merge, but merge with design in the leadership role. He says that designers should create for clients and not in the hope of winning awards. He believes designers should swear a "10-year commitment to make everything we do for every client a gift". If this sounds like the designer is the client’s factotum, not so. Howe also argues in favor of offering clients a single solution and being willing to defend a great design.

Organized not only by topic, but also by how long it will take the average reader to complete each chapter, Designers Don’t Read is intended to function like a "daily devotional" for designers and busy professionals involved in branded communications at all levels. Begun as a series of weekly essays sent every Monday morning to top graphic designers, Designers Don’t Read quickly developed a passionate and widespread following. With the approximate time each chapter might take to read, delight and provocation can be fit into the niches in the life of a time-challenged designer. Or it may be hard to resist reading the entire book in one sitting!

©2009 Austin Howe (P)2012 Audible, Inc.
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Editor reviews

With a work about the theory of design, it is most important that the ideas are clearly presented, as they are in Erik Synnestvedt’s plainspoken, smart, and serious reading of Austin Howe’s series of short essays. The self-proclaimed "design advocate" began to reach out to others in the field and was then encouraged to share a vision that can teach and inspire as well, from someone, "... not speaking as a a design critic or (importantly) as a designer, but as a writer and creative director with an appreciation for - and a point of view about - design."

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A self gratifying and ill informed rant

I was really excited by the blurb of this book but it's honestly one of the worst I've read in a long time. Clearly Howe has experience and knowledge of the industry given his career but unfortunatley he lacks the narrative ability or sense of humour that would have made this book at least palatable. He has a condescending tone that seems to establish him as the authority and all designers or industry sectors that he disapproves of are 'the bad guys' and all those that he approves of he constantly quotes, those quotes being the most useful parts of the book. The whole thing just reads like a long social media rant.

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