Jessica Palmer was born in Chicago, Illinois. Her
mother became a professional clown when she was in her teens, leaving Jessica irrevocably altered. She received her degree in nursing and worked in
hospitals, starting with medical-surgical units. Eventually, she settled into
psychiatric nursing where she got along famously with her patients.
Her medical background presented
opportunities to write. In 1976, she was asked to develop a script for
educational television, entitled Journey
To Nowhere, about the medical aspects of addiction. Later she became a
technical writer for the safety and health department at Schlumberger Well
Services with an emphasis on explosives and radiation. The job took her to
England where she became a British subject.
The fates decreed her combined
experiences constituted a hazard to herself and others. Jessica returned to her
first love, genre fiction. She wrote her first novel at the age of nine –
ninety-nine typewritten pages about her then-hero Max Smart of Get Smart. Altogether, she has had 28
books published in fiction and non-fiction, including university textbooks
about Native American history and culture.
Jessica has received numerous awards in journalism, spanning a period from 1980 to 2014. Lullaby, published by Pocket Books, was nominated for the Horror Writers Association's Bram Stoker award in 1991. Now she concentrates on satire. Parallel Universe Publications released her collection of short stories, Other Visions of Heaven and Hell in 2015, and will be publishing her latest collection, Fractious Fairy Tales later this month.
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