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Meet
Jan Eliot
Jan was
born in San Jose, California, moved briefly with her parents
(they were the ones who could drive) to Detroit, Michigan, and
then spent the remainder of her childhood in St. Charles, Illinois.
She studied art at Southern Illinois University, got married
and had a baby, moved to Sitka, Alaska for one year, moved to
rural Oregon, had another baby, and eventually settled in Eugene
with aspirations of finishing her education. Over time she discovered
that it doesn't rain in Oregon quite as much as they say. It rains more.
Jan
earned a degree in Women Studies and English at the University
of Oregon (they occasionally try to deny this), having temporarily
given up on the value of studying art. (Apparently
her last truly good teacher was Mr. Arloff, in the eighth grade.)
After
graduating in the middle of a recession,
she landed a series of jobs that ranged from bookmobile librarian
to car sales. A
position in the production
department of a newspaper eventually led to a career in graphic
design... and back in art, where she had started. Along the
way Jan optimistically tried freelance cartooning as a career,
but a single mom with kids to put through school must eventually
come to her senses. After hailing down the owner of a new design
studio on a local byway and begging him for a job, she ended
up spending seven happy years in his design/advertising agency,
earning a good living expounding on and illustrating the glories
of capitalism.
Though
it all, Jan continued to cartoon -- working with three greeting
card companies, illustrating computer manuals and textbooks,
contributing to a few magazines, persuading her local paper
to run her comic strip "Sister City" (an early version
of "Stone Soup") on a weekly basis. Raising two daughters
with less than enough money, less than enough time, and less
than enough patience, cartooning was the perfect outlet for
life's frustrations and a safeguard for
Jan's sanity. After the creation of two different cartoon strips,
many ups and downs, and many thoughts of quitting, Jan arrived,
happily, here. Her goal is to reflect real life in her strip,
because finding the humor in reality is the only way to survive
it.
If you're curious about the strip's name, it comes from an old fairy tale that illustrates how a community turned its limited resources into a grand feast and celebration -- creating something from nothing. This is what parents, especially single parents, often must do.
Jan
lives with her husband Ted, who is very tolerant of what it
means to share your life with a cartoonist... and her dogs Lily
and Sydney, who are occasional models for the character of Biscuit.
Stone Soup has been
syndicated since 1995. There are four book collections available
- "Stone Soup," "You Can't Say Boobs On Sunday,"
"Stone Soup the Comic Strip," and “Road Kill
In The Closet”, all from Four Panel Press.

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