New book coming May 2017!
Posted by
Angelica R. Jackson
In case anyone is wondering what I've been working on lately, I've been getting a collection of my photographs ready to print. I'll be releasing it in May, but you can preorder through my IndieGoGo campaign at https://igg.me/at/Capturing-The-Castle through April 19. Then it will hit stores (through Ingram distribution) starting May 16. I'm particularly proud of this one!
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Procrastination and Creativity
Posted by
Angelica R. Jackson
I turned on a TED Radio Hour podcast while I was chopping onions to
freeze, and found this one on how procrastination (or more precisely, leaving
things unfinished so your brain is still working on them at some level)
works to boost creativity. It struck me how this particularly applies to
writing, and how putting your project away for a bit gives you a new
perspective when you come back. And I'm not talking about just the
ability to see errors and typos that you passed by before, but on a deeper, story-building level.
For me, continuing to think about a project while not actively working
on it is how I come up with dimension and layers to both characters and
plot. It's a way for me to set aside those obvious, linear plot devices
and come up with an unexpected twist, or see relationship dynamics
between characters that I hadn't even known were there.
Well, it seems there are actual studies that have shown this is true, and Adam Grant talks about them here
Well, it seems there are actual studies that have shown this is true, and Adam Grant talks about them here
Cost of Books
Posted by
Angelica R. Jackson
I don't know what brought it to mind, but today I remembered going to a local swap meet when I was about 10 years old and finding an old journal at an antiques stand. Just a thin paperback, yellowed with age.
I breathlessly separated the pages, expecting treasure maps or something--but instead, someone had used it to record their shopping lists and how much they'd paid for the items in 1908. I could actually know how much things cost over a hundred years ago!!!
My eyes got really big, and I counted up the change in my purse as I took it to the seller. She turned the journal over in her hands, and looked at me with a funny expression. "You know this--this is really old, right?"
"I know!" I said. "It's full of time travel!"
In the intervening years, it got lost in one of a dozen moves (I wish I was exaggerating) and I've always wondered if some other child acquired that magical journal. It was one of the things that set me on my path to writerhood, so maybe it was magic!
Illustrator blogs
Posted by
Angelica R. Jackson
As a YA writer, blogs have been an invaluable source for me
to learn craft and catch up on industry info. Now that I’m also my SCBWI region’s
Illustrator Coordinator, I took advantage of the private Yahoo group for ICs
and asked my peers for their favorite blogs—and I couldn’t resist sharing their
recommendations with everyone through my blog!
Most of these blog
links are illustrator-centric, but many offer writing advice also, so you
author/illustrators and writers may want to take a look too. Happy clicking!
In
no particular order:
The How
To Be A Children’s Book Illustrator site has great features like Guest
Critiques and an Illustrator Matchup service
The Kidlit Artists blog has an SCBWI connection, since it’s the group blog of recipients of the SCBWI Illustration Portfolio Mentorship Program (LA Summer Conference).
Illustrator and art director Guiseppe Castellano has some tips for you under his #ArtTips page
Find interviews and inspiration on Chris Oatley’s site
Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast is a blog about books, that features heavily on picture books and illustration
Wow, you could really get lost following all the links and features on Kidlit411
The Kidlit Artists blog has an SCBWI connection, since it’s the group blog of recipients of the SCBWI Illustration Portfolio Mentorship Program (LA Summer Conference).
Illustrator and art director Guiseppe Castellano has some tips for you under his #ArtTips page
Find interviews and inspiration on Chris Oatley’s site
Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast is a blog about books, that features heavily on picture books and illustration
Wow, you could really get lost following all the links and features on Kidlit411
Kathy Temean’s
blog features some great illustration examples and how-tos
Art of the
Picture Book is dedicated to “exploring design and illustration of
children's picture books” and features some great interviews
The Children’s Book Academy site has a blog “Mondays
with Mandy or Mira!”
Children’s
Illustrators blog: be sure to check out the “blogging illustrators” links
in the sidebar to make some new connections!
Feel free to link your favorite blogs for illustrators in
the comments!
On Coming Out and Reaching Out
Posted by
Angelica R. Jackson
Other than RTing some tweets and sharing selected Facebook
posts, I haven’t reacted much publicly about the massacre in Orlando at Pulse
nightclub. My default mode when I get overloaded with emotion is to withdraw
and try to process things at my own pace, but the attack has deeply affected me—moreso
than even the Boston Marathon bombings, because as a bisexual woman this one
hit closer to home.
My bisexuality may actually be news to some family members
and friends (though I’ve never made a secret of it), but I consider this post
more of a reaching out than a coming out. Because in some ways over the years,
I’ve acted more like an ally of the LGBT community than an active member of
that community, and with this tragedy comes the impetus to stop minimizing my
voice. And to reach out.
While I hadn’t always felt welcomed by the gay community as
a bi woman in my 20s (I was once told that bisexual women are only gay when it
suits them, and able to “pass” the rest of the time—with the implication that
bi people can never understand what it means to be gay), I have been so
encouraged by the strides that have been made in civil rights and for all LGBT
people.
And especially among writers of YA, I’ve found a sense of
belonging both within the pages they’ve written, and their openness about
telling their own truths. They’ve helped me to feel more secure in my identity,
even though as a woman married to a man, my own bisexuality felt like a less
relevant part of my identity for a time.
And no, I haven’t been spared over the years from worries
about how I would be perceived as a bisexual or lesbian—I was shocked when my
otherwise-progressive Dad and stepmom hid from my younger brother that another
family member was transitioning. Why was that so difficult for them to explain,
and what did they fear would happen if they did? Speaking for myself, I am so
heartened by my niece’s courage to live and love as she sees fit—but also
heartbroken for her every time she gets harassed on a train or passed up for
jobs.
And the water aerobics class that I attend with about 15
other (older) women, who have been so supportive through all my health challenges—will
they feel differently about sharing a locker room with me as a bisexual? In
spite of the fact that we’ve shared a locker room for over ten years and I’ve
never hit on anyone?
Places like Pulse are havens for LGBT people to be
themselves, and to not feel like an “other.” They will only become more
important in the days to come, as all of us—all of us Americans—try to wrap our
heads around the events in Orlando, and whether they will eventually yield
positive changes for tolerance.
I’m still processing a lot of the heartbreak myself, but did
manage to catch a guest on Capital Public Radio from Equality Florida, and he
mentioned that his group has started a Go Fund Me for the families of the
victims, to cover funerals and other expenses. If you’d like to contribute, it’s
at https://www.gofundme.com/PulseVictimsFund
Pens for Paws Starts Today!
Posted by
Angelica R. Jackson
Just a reminder that this year's Pens for Paws Auction starts today! New items will go up through Fri the 6th, with bidding on the final items closing on the 8th. If that sounds confusing, please check out the How It Works page for a fuller explanation. I've included a flyer with all the items listed below (click on it for a larger image) or you can go to the Items Featuring page to see another list.
Also, I posted an album of more recent pictures of the Fat Kitty City residents on the P4P Facebook page. Enjoy, and please help spread the word so we can raise some much-needed funds for the kitties!
P.S. In other news, I've taken on the position of Illustrator Coordinator for the SCBWI CA North/Central region--so expect some more art-oriented posts!
Also, I posted an album of more recent pictures of the Fat Kitty City residents on the P4P Facebook page. Enjoy, and please help spread the word so we can raise some much-needed funds for the kitties!
P.S. In other news, I've taken on the position of Illustrator Coordinator for the SCBWI CA North/Central region--so expect some more art-oriented posts!
Introducing Crow And Pitcher Press!
Posted by
Angelica R. Jackson
I'm doing a spring cleaning of my writing and artwork, and most of it will be moving to my new project, Crow & Pitcher Press!
What does that mean, you ask? Crow & Pitcher Press will serve as the home of my independently-published books (such as more titles in the Faerie Crossed series, which began with Crow's Rest) and a range of gift items featuring my artwork (wall art, apparel, journals, etc).
I'll be sure to update you all on when new books are in the works, and the final links where you can find my writing and art projects. For now, I have a temporary website set up and you can see it here.
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