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Parable

Stories of Faith, Love and Grace

Parable will be available from Lamp Post Inc. December, 2010. For the latest release information as well as other updates, bookmark this site or subscribe to our rss feed.


In the Spotlight: Jeremy Vanhoozer

Jeremy Vanhoozer is a freelance illustrator living in Orlando Florida with his wife and three children. He has swept the floors of many studios, including Disney, Big Idea, and Universal. When he isn’t fighting alligators or dodging hurricanes, he likes to sit down and draw stories about crazy characters and wacky robots.

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Hey everybody! This is Stephen. I hope you’re all doing fine. This week’s interview was done over IM, and I decided to include a little amusing exchange that took place before the interview started. Enjoy!

Stephen McCranie: Hey Jeremy! Ready?

Jeremy Vanhoozer: Hey! I was just changing a diaper!

S: Ha ha! Sounds like perfect timing.

J: Isn’t that the life of an artist? Creating funny stuff… and changing diapers.

S: Ha ha.

J: I am back in my chair, however.

S: Great. Okay, let me get my questions.

J: Okee dokey. And then you can edit my long winded answers, correct?

S: Right. We’ll edit ‘em down to unreadable sound bite sentences. Ready?

J: ok…. breathe, breathe…. ready!

S: As I recall, your story for Parable: Volume 1, entitled “The Picnic,” was not only one of the longest stories in the anthology, but also done in a very short period of time, because you had to fight against a fast approaching deadline. What was it like trying to beat the deadline?

J: Well, it was pretty crazy. When I was asked to be a part of Parable, I was so excited that I really didn’t stop to think about how fast I would have to work. Once I settled down and actually thought about how much drawing I had to do… it freaked me out a bit. But, when I was able to thumbnail my story out and come up with a page count, things fell into place.

S: And what inspired your story for Parable?vanhoozer_page11.jpg

J: Hmmm. I would have to say peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. When I was a kid, I never liked sharing my peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. My mother would tell me to let my sister have a bite, and I would flatly refuse. As I grew up I began to realize how nice it was to share my sandwiches. For my story, I wanted to talk about sharing sandwiches and what it felt like to be a kid with a giant imagination.

S: That’s great! I didn’t realize it until now, but peanut butter and jelly is a motif in that story. So what was it like growing up for you? Specifically, what was the journey from imaginative child to established professional like?

J: I can remember being in kindergarten and drawing tanks and helicopters all over the writing paper. I think it was at that point that I realized there might be something to this art thing. I spent my young years drawing weird monsters, huge trucks, and imaginary lands. In between my artistic endeavors I also opened a salad bar in my bedroom, recorded a weekly radio show on a cassette recorder in my hall closet, and set my parents bed on fire. All events that I look back on and credit with expanding my imagination. After graduating from high school, I was extremely fortunate to get an internship at Disney. That is where my “real” art training took place, and also where I learned how to mix art with business.

S: What a wonderful opportunity that must have been. Though, I hear internships don’t pay very well, but the contacts you made must have been payment enough.
I noticed that you know a lot of people from the Drawergeeks crew. Who do you know and where did you meet these people?

J: Lets see…. Paul Conrad used to be my boss at Big Idea. Bryan Ballinger and I played the ukulele together at Big Idea. Greg Hardin was my replacement when I left Big Idea. I started as Sarah Mensinga’s biggest online fanboy, but am now able to call her a friend. I am looking at the list of Drawergeeks contributors and I know quite a few… it would take me the rest of the night to list their names and social security numbers. Just trust me when I tell you that no friends were obtained illegally .

S: Ha ha! You know, I wasn’t really aware of how integral networking is to success in the comics industry until I went to Comic-Con and met you and Sarah and a bunch of other Parablers. But making friends who are also in the business is a wonderful experience. I can’t wait to go back to Comic-Con this year.

J: Networking is key.

S: I try to make my last question a silly one… Is there something unique or interesting about yourself that I can pry into?

J: Hmmmm… Let me think… I can’t think of anything really outstanding….. my first job was selling balloons at the Magic Kingdom. I survived a tornado. My parents raised goats when I was little, so I had to milk them. Not too much.

S: Did you have to wear any funny suits for the balloon job?

J: Only the best. I had two outfits…. For the Magic Kingdom I wore a stylish candy striped shirt, white knickers, tall white socks, an odd hat, and a smile. When I worked at the Disney-MGM Studios I wore an awesome surf print shirt, suspenders, delicious brown polyester pants, and really bad shoes. The beauty of it was, I would get such a bad sunburn… but not in the areas where the suspenders were. It was the greatest partial tan ever.

S: Ha ha, awesome.

S: Well, that about wraps it up I think.

J: Have a great night!

S: You too.

In two weeks, tune in for an interview with Josh Alves!