Ladies and gentlemen, meet the multi-talented Jessa Slade, author of the Marked Souls series.
1.
What is the name of your business and what do you tell other
people you do? (such as author, teacher, designer)
Hello, I’m Jessa Slade, and I’m
an author. (This sounds like a 12-step program intro, except I use my last name
because I’m dying for people to know how word-addicted I am.) When people ask
what I do, I say I am a writer. I say writer instead of author because I like
to emphasize the verb part. I’m a writer when I write. That’s the part I
control. Technically, I suppose you could say I control the author part too,
now that I am self published, but personally, I consider the author part of
myself subject to the whims of being read. And that part I can’t control.
Sadly!
2. When did you know it was time to stop treating your art as a hobby and start it as a career?
2. When did you know it was time to stop treating your art as a hobby and start it as a career?
When I got paid! That sounds a
little mercenary, doesn’t it? I guess I’m going by the IRS’s definition :) I’ve
always written with the intent of being read, and until that happened, I wasn’t
ready to call myself an author, which is the career part. But to be honest, I
didn’t make that many changes moving from writer to author. The deadlines are
more deadly :) but the work is pretty much the same: words on the page, one
after the other.
3. What are some of the aspects of your job that people don’t see? For example, most people don’t understand how much marketing is done by the authors themselves instead of a publisher, and most audience members don’t see how costumes and props are designed/chosen.
I did a booksigning at the
Powell’s Books at the Portland International Airport with a couple other
authors, and I was surprised how many people were surprised we were authors! I
mean, we were sitting at tables surrounded by our books next to a sign that
said Meet The Authors, and yet when we said we were the authors, people invariably
said, “You’re the authors?” in simultaneous tones of surprise, pleasure and
suspicion. Apparently we did not look like authors! I wonder what would have
convinced people.
Most people don’t see the hours
that go into writing a book. Nathaniel Hawthorne said “Easy reading is damn
hard writing.” I suspect most people think writing is easy because all of us
learn our alphabet from our very earliest years, so how hard could it be,
stringing those same 26 letters together over a blank page? (Insert maniacal
laughter here.)
4. Who inspired/inspires you on those inevitable rough days?
I belong to a great romance
writers’ organization, Romance Writers of America. The women and men in my
local chapter are a fabulous source of inspiration and energy. There is always
someone querying or getting published, just starting or just finishing a book,
touring blogs or going off-line to concentrate. Seeing that constantly ebb and
flow of mindful effort, excitement, determination, and passion helps keep me
going when the works aren’t going.
5. Name a few of your current projects. For example, conferences, publicity, design process, what you have for sale.
For the holiday season, I
published a Christmas novella in my Marked Souls demonic possession series.
(What? Christmas and demons go together like children and lots of sugar.) THE
DARKEST NIGHT is about two lost souls finding each other at the darkest
time of the year. Also, the second book in my Steel Born dark fairy series, A
LITTLE NIGHT MUSE, is out in January. I’m currently working on the second
book in my science fiction romance anthology series and the third book of the
Steel Born. I gotta write faster!
6. (OPTIONAL) This question is a chance to meander or talk in greater depth if you’d like. Here you can talk about what hobbies you pursue, how you refresh your well of ideas, what you would recommend to other women interested in a career in the arts, or just anything you'd like other people to know.
I truly
believe in the power of a creative outlet to change for the better the way we
live, think and love. I don’t doubt that entropy is out to get us, and our only
way to battle the inevitable chaos is to create. Whether that’s writing, music,
painting, sewing, cooking, gardening, or compiling supercuts of cute baby
animal videos, find the thing you love and share it with the universe. The
universe is waiting for your art!
You can find me online at:
Thanks for letting me play on your blog, Linda! I'm not as flexible or beautifully dressed as your other artistic women, but I feel like part of a wonderful group :)
ReplyDeleteAnd thank *you*, Jessa, for being one of my inspirations and Muses. :)
DeleteGreat interview Linda and Jessa. I loved this line: "I’m a writer when I write. That’s the part I control." So true. So true. The only part we can control.
ReplyDeleteInteresting philosophy on entropy. I assume you are suggesting that "creating" is an input of energy into the system, and it is that input of energy that perhaps creates order of chaos. Not that order is always good.
In my mind, order can only be produced by increasing entropy. This is because producing order out of chaos involves a change in the system, which can only be produced by expending energy. The expenditure of energy is never perfectly efficient and so it always increases the overall amount of energy that is irretrievably disordered, even as order is produced from the remaining energy.
Just wrapping my mind around that makes things rather disordered. Bottomline is entropy is good but I agree that constant creation is needed in any system. :)