About Jennifer de Guzman is a writer and comics publishing professional living in the San Francisco Bay Area. She writes stories about sad girls, seawater, bottomless wells, airborne plagues, and horses. You can find links to some of them them in the Selected Works section or read them at her Scribd page.
What Are Possible Impossiblities? “The Poet ought rather to chuse Impossibilities, provided they have Resemblance to the Truth, than the Possible, which are Incredible with all their Possibility.” - Henry Fielding, quoting Aristotle in The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling
|
April 7th 2012 I just turned in the eight-page story I collaborated with Traci Hui on for Unite and Take Over Volume 2! Here’s the first page.
Traci and I spent time finding the perfect fountain for this story, one that is in the Bay Area, has some kind of symbolic resonance, and is in the kind of [...]
February 28th 2012
I left the office about twenty minutes early today because my brain stopped working. I think it was just beginning to comprehend what happened in the past month.
I started as Image Comics’ PR & Marketing Director on January 17, five weeks before Image Expo. Everyone was in a flurry of organizing — and [...]
February 12th 2012 Cover by Jason Pedersen
Hey, everyone! I wrote a story based on one of my favorite Smiths songs, “Reel Around the Fountain” for Unite and Take Over Volume Two drawn by Traci Hui. It’s being Kickstarted, so please do what you can to support it and spread the news. We have only four days to meet [...]
January 17th 2012
The news is out: I am now working at Image Comics as their PR and Marketing Coordinator. Today was my first day and it was a whirlwind.
Please note that Sarah deLaine, who previously held that title is still here — she is now the Event Coordinator and focusing on conventions, trade shows, and [...]
January 15th 2012
This is a post that I’ve been trying to write for a few days.
Friday was officially my last day at SLG Publishing, the company where I began my career in the comics industry and worked for ten years, most of them as Editor in Chief. My decade at SLG was, I suspect, like [...]
|
|