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
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September 6th 2009
Henceforth the memory of Leon was the centre of her boredom; it burnt there more brightly than the fire travellers have left on the snow of a Russian steppe. She sprang towards him, she pressed against him, she stirred carefully the dying embers, sought all around her anything that could revive it; and the [...]
August 14th 2009 I’ve been reading Gabriel García Márquez’s memoir Living to Tell the Tale for months now, and I’m enjoying the feeling of being leisurely. Some books you tear through because you become so engrossed in the action and the characters; others you savor. García Márquez’s books have always fallen in the latter category for me. They’re [...]
July 3rd 2009 Perhaps one of the luckiest things to occur in literature happened when Gabriel García Márquez was attending law school and working as an apprentice journalist in Cartagena. Colombia was in the midst of violent political upheaval, which García Márquez had escaped from when he fled Quito. Bragging one night at a restaurant about his happy-go-lucky [...]
June 27th 2009 For the past few months I have been working on revising my novel Sliver of Light, at the request of an editor, to be more suitable for a young adult audience. She gave me some excellent tips for how to do this, and I did a little supplemental research by taking a look at some [...]
April 25th 2009 On the advice of an editor, I am revising Sliver of Light to be a young adult novel. From the beginning, people have commented it might be better situated in YA because of its protagonist and relatively short length (it’s about 80,000 words), but I was unsure how to tailor it for that audience. Fortunately, [...]
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