8

Thursday, May 24, 2018
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
ARTS

1014 VAUGHN AVAIL Fall 2018
#1 is being rented by the room for $700/m 
including utilities
If you have a group of 5, rent the whole unit 
for $3100 plus Electric to DTE
#2 is a 6 Bdrm for $3720 plus Electric to 

DTE • 734‑996‑1991

1015 PACKARD
4 Bdrm Apt Avail Fall 2018
2 parking space, onsite laundry, 1st floor
$2830 + Electric to DTE • 734‑996‑1991

422 HAMILTON
2 & 3 Bdrm Avail Fall 2018
#2 ‑ 3 bdrm ‑ 2nd floor ‑ $2350
#3 ‑ 2 bdrm ‑ 3rd fl ‑ $1550
Tenants pay gas and electric to DTE

Showings M‑F 10‑3 • 734‑996‑1991

HOUSES AVAILABLE FALL 2018
1016 Packard ‑ 4/6 Bdrm ‑ 
$3080‑$4020
401 Pauline ‑ 4 Bdrm ‑ $2900
827 Brookwood ‑ 4 Bdrm ‑ $2900
Showings M‑F 10‑3 • 734‑996‑1991

Classifieds

Call: #734-418-4115
Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com

FOR RENT

WE HOPE YOU’RE

HAVING A GREAT
SUMMER!

ACROSS
1 Outdated
6 Calf-length
dresses
11 Streaming
alternative
14 Let up
15 Hacienda
material
16 Crew’s control?
17 High-end eye
makeup?
19 Hollywood SFX
20 Part of a process
21 “Pomp and
Circumstance”
composer
22 Concert souvenir
23 First words of
“Green Eggs and
Ham”
25 Creeps
27 One sterilizing
Ping-Pong
equipment?
32 Supermarket
chain with a
mostly red oval
logo
33 Con man?
34 Switches
37 Adorkable one
39 Emcee duty
42 Flute or reed, on
an organ
43 Tibetan legends
45 Fireside stack
47 Org. concerned
with emissions
48 Squad car for
soprano
Kathleen?
52 Sign of fall
54 Fish-eating eagle
55 Romp
56 Old autocrats
59 Historic times
63 Place for a bud
64 Worthless stuff
from Beijing?
66 It may be
financial or legal
67 Skin dye used in
some wedding
celebrations
68 Overdue
69 Measures for
long-distance
runners: Abbr.
70 Mystery award
71 Entertain

DOWN
1 More than casual
acquaintances
2 Touch on

3 __-Coburg:
former Bavarian
duchy
4 Idiotic
5 “If __ I loved her,
all that love is
gone”:
Shakespeare
6 __ of America
7 “Got it, man”
8 Give
9 Gibraltar’s
peninsula
10 Sun. delivery
11 High degrees
12 Ill-defined
13 Small amounts
18 Aden native
22 Simmers
24 Fashioned after
26 Canadian VIPs
27 Like some
Christmas
candles
28 Tommie of the
Amazin’ Mets
29 They’re stuck in
pubs
30 RR depot
31 IMDb search
category
35 Bishop of Rome
36 Sail support
38 Private account
40 Mythical bird

41 Fiona, after
Shrek’s kiss
44 Auto additive with
a mostly red oval
logo
46 __ La Table:
Williams-Sonoma
rival
49 Gave religiously
50 Dieting
successfully
51 Stuck
52 Command to Fido

53 GEICO
submission
57 “Mom” co-star
Faris
58 Stern
60 Wise adviser
61 Objectives
62 Inner Hebrides
isle
64 “The Motorcycle
Diaries”
revolutionary
65 In-flight update

By David Poole

©2018 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
05/24/18

05/24/18

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, May 24, 2018

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

In the Daily newsroom exists 
a leaning stack of prerelease 
books, relegated next to a fil-
ing cabinet. Too often I would 
give the pile no more than one 
passing glance. But in a flitting 
once-over, I recognized a certain 
name along one spine: Questlove.
“Questlove wrote a book?” I 
wondered aloud. “Sign me up.”
Little did I know that this was 
actually book number four in 
Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson’s 
tenure as an author, following 
a memoir, an ode to Soul Train 
and a book about chefs. His lat-
est release, “Creative Quest,” 
follows an entirely different tra-
jectory. The book offers read-
ers insight into Thompson’s 
personal creative process — as 
frontman of The Roots, as a DJ, 
as a producer, as a writer — and 
those of other acclaimed innova-
tors (J. Dilla, Björk 
and Ava DuVer-
nay appear fre-
quently). It is up to 
the reader to turn 
these insights into 
what they desire. 
Is this a book of 
lessons? A list of 
resources for cre-
ative minds? Or is 
it simply a form of 
entertainment for someone who 
likes to read? Thompson doesn’t 
tell us, but he doesn’t have to. 
Deep down, we know.
“Creative Quest” is divided 
into nine sections (should we 
call them chapters? Thompson 
doesn’t, so I won’t). They are 
ordered chronologically, the way 
the steps in a how-to book would 
be, and each depicts a unique 
tenet of the creative process.
Part one, The Spark, ponders 
what makes a person or idea cre-
ative. “The issue isn’t whether 
people can tell that you’re cre-
ative,” Thompson writes. “If 
that’s what you’re worried about, 
wear a beret. The issue is wheth-
er you can connect to your own 
creative impulses.” 
The majority of the book, the 
meat of the sandwich, delves into 
the nitty gritty of creative living. 

Thompson talks about the roles 
mentors may or may not play. He 
writes of creative stagnation and 
its web of potential outcomes. 
He explores possible definitions 
of the creative network, the pros 
and cons of imitation and cura-
tion and the yin-yang relation-
ship of success and failure. He 
gets more abstract than that, 
while still allowing for varied 
interpretation of his more anom-
alous philosophies. It’s your per-
sonal creative quest after all.
Then comes part nine, the 
final section, aptly titled No End. 
Here, Thompson reminds read-
ers that we are, in fact, mere 
specs in the creative landscape 
of the universe. Anything we do 
has already been done in some 
variation; in the future, it will 
be redone in another. He does an 
impressive job of infusing per-
sonality into this section without 
making it emotional. In his way, 
Thompson is stating what we 
already know. In 
fact, he wants us 
to know that we 
already know, that 
even this realiza-
tion has already 
been 
made, 
by 
each of us, in our 
own heads.
“There is spe-
cies-wide 
pro-
gramming,” 
he 
writes, “and then there’s individ-
uality, and the overlap between 
those two opens up a space for 
creativity. Live in that space. 
I’m here to. Maybe I’ll see you 
around sometime.”
Each 
section 
offers 
up 
Thompson’s two cents, but, as 
I’ve said, he never tells us how 
to think of them. Rather, at the 
end of every section lies a blank 
sheet of graph paper. No prompt 
is given, only blank space. More 
than anything, that’s what “Cre-
ative Quest” provides readers: 
Space to be. Whether that being 
is creative in a prescribed way is 
not his concern. In his mind, the 
simple act of existing is enough 
to stir up genius.
To answer my earlier ques-
tion, yes. Questlove wrote a book. 
Or maybe it’s not a book. I’ll leave 
it up to you to decide.

BOOK REVIEW
Questlove, as an 
author, returns

TESS GARCIA
Daily Style Editor

“Creative 

Quest”

Ahmir “Questlove” 

Thompson

Harper Collins

April 24

