Neil Gaiman
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Neil Richard Gaiman (Template:IPA) (born November 10, 1960, Portchester, Hampshire) is an English Jewish author of numerous science fiction and fantasy works, including many comic books. As of 2005, he lives in Wisconsin, between Madison and Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. He is married to Mary T. McGrath, an American, and has two daughters, Holly and Maddy, and a son, Michael.
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Biography
As a child and a teenager, Gaiman grew up reading the works of C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien and G.K. Chesterton. He later became a fan of science fiction, reading the works of authors as diverse as Samuel R. Delany, Roger Zelazny, Harlan Ellison and especially Gene Wolfe. Gaiman also read and enjoyed the works of Thorne Smith to whose zany supernatural wit he attributes partial inspiration for Anansi Boys.
Although Jewish, he was educated at several Church of England schools. There he studied both standard school topics as well as religion classes. At the same time, he trained to become Bar Mitzvah with an Orthodox Jewish cantor. This training gave him a wide background in both Jewish and Christian theology/apocrypha, which he incorporates heavily into his works, perhaps most notably in The Sandman. It is rumored that he was a Scientologist until some time in the 1980s, though these unconfirmed reports are speculative.
In the early 1980s Gaiman pursued journalism as a means to learn about the world and make connections that he hoped would later assist him in getting published, conducting interviews and writing book reviews. During this time he wrote his first book in 1984, a now sought-after biography of the band Duran Duran, as well as Ghastly Beyond Belief with Kim Newman (a book of quotations), and interviews and articles for many English magazines including Knave magazine. In the late 1980s he wrote Don't Panic: The Official Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy Companion in what he calls a "classic English humour" style. Following on from that he wrote the opening of what would become his collaboration with Terry Pratchett on the comic novel Good Omens, about the impending apocalypse. [1]
After forming a friendship with famed comic book scribe Alan Moore, Gaiman started writing comics, picking up Miracleman after Moore finished his run on the series. Gaiman and artist Mark Buckingham collaborated on several issues of the series before the collapse of publisher Eclipse Comics, leaving the series unfinished. He wrote two British graphic novels with his favorite collaborator and long time friend Dave McKean: Violent Cases and Signal to Noise. Afterwards, he landed a job with DC Comics, his first work being the limited series Black Orchid.
He has written a plethora of comics for several publishers, but his best-known work is the comics series The Sandman, which chronicles the tale of Morpheus, the anthropomorphic personification of Dream. (See The Endless). The series started a small cultural sensation, gathering a devout following and making comic books respectable to many new audiences. The series began in 1987 and ended in 1996 when Gaiman ended the successful series as he had intended; a first for near-mainstream comics. All 75 issues of the regular series have been collected into 10 volumes that are still in print and selling well.
In 1989, Gaiman published The Books of Magic (collected in 1991), a four-part mini-series that provided a tour of the mythological and magical parts of the DC Universe through a frame story about an English teenager who discovers that he has a destiny as the world's greatest wizard. The miniseries was popular, and sired an ongoing series, also called The Books of Magic, written by John Ney Reiber. Many people have noted similarities between series protagonist Tim Hunter and the later and more famous Harry Potter; when referring to this similarity, Gaiman indicates that the young man as sorcerer has precedent in literature.
Gaiman also writes songs, poems and novels, and wrote the 1997 BBC dark fantasy television series Neverwhere, which he later adapted into a novel. He also wrote the screenplay for the movie MirrorMask with his old friend Dave McKean for McKean to direct. In addition, he wrote the English language script to the anime movie Princess Mononoke, based on a translation of the Japanese script. Several of his works have been optioned or greenlighted for film adaptation, most notably Stardust which will feature Robert DeNiro and Michelle Pfeiffer, according to Variety.
Gaiman is a Board Member as well as an active supporter of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, and he regularly participates in fundraisers for the group including creating materials such as the original Snow, Glass, Apples along with a book called "Gods and Tulips" to which the CBLDF owns the copyright.
In February 2001, when Gaiman had completed writing American Gods, his publishers set up a promotional web site featuring a weblog (some time before they became as popular as they are now) in which Gaiman described the day-to-day process of revising, publishing, and promoting the novel. After the novel was published, the web site evolved into a more general Official Neil Gaiman Web Site, and as of 2006 Gaiman still regularly adds to the weblog, describing the day-to-day process of being Neil Gaiman and writing, revising, publishing, or promoting whatever the current project is.
The original American Gods blog was extracted for publication in the NESFA Press collection of Gaiman miscellany, Adventures in the Dream Trade.
Gaiman has also written at least three drafts of a screenplay adaptation of Nicholson Baker's novel The Fermata for director Robert Zemeckis, although the project was stalled while Zemeckis made Polar Express and the Gaiman-Roger Avary written Beowulf film. Beowulf is a motion capture film starring Ray Winstone and Angelina Jolie with a scheduled release date of October 2007.
Several of Gaiman's original works are in various stages of being adapted for film. Gaiman may direct the film adaptation of Death: The High Cost of Living. Matthew Vaughn is directing the film adaptation of Stardust and Henry Selick is directing a stop-motion version of Coraline.
Gaiman forged an intense friendship with singer Tori Amos in the early nineties. Before she achieved stardom, she sent him a demo tape of her album Little Earthquakes, and they became fast friends. As such, references have been made to Gaiman (often rather cryptically) in at least one of her songs on each of her albums. He also wrote the forewords to several of her tour programs as well as short stories to accompany her album Strange Little Girls and Scarlet's Walk. (Excerpts appeared in the album booklet.) Some of her lyrical mentions:
- "If you need me, me and Neil'll be hangin' out with the dream king / Neil said hi, by the way" ("Tear In Your Hand," 1992)
- "Where's Neil when you need him?" ("Space Dog," 1994)
- "Will you find me if Neil makes me a tree?" ("Horses," 1996)—Gaiman based the character of the talking tree in Stardust on Amos at her request after Neil stayed with her while beginning work on the novel
- "Where are the Velvets?" ("Hotel," 1998)—the Velvets being vampire-like characters from Gaiman's novel Neverwhere
- "Get me Neil on the line... / have him read Snow, Glass, Apples" ("Carbon," 2002)
The lyric "Where's Neil When You Need Him?" is also the title of Neil's 2006 album. Tori and sixteen other artists wrote songs about their favorite Gaiman stories or characters; Neil wrote the liner notes and Dave McKean did the artwork.
Gaiman is also a friend of science fiction and comic book writer J. Michael Straczynski, creator of the television series Babylon 5. There is a species of aliens on that series called the Gaim; their heads closely resemble the helmet worn by Gaiman's Sandman character. However Straczynski has stated the aliens' appearance was based more on gas masks than on the King of Dreams' helm (itself inspired by the gas mask worn by the original World-War-2-era Sandman), and that the name came after the resemblance was noted. Gaiman is also the only writer other than Straczynski to have contributed to the series' final three seasons; he wrote the season 5 episode "Day of the Dead". Additionally, Gaiman wrote the foreward to the first volume of Straczynski's Rising Stars.
In 2002, Neil Gaiman filed and won a lawsuit against Todd McFarlane involving three supporting Spawn characters: Cogliostro, Medieval Spawn, and Angela. In 1991 McFarlane had asked Gaiman (as well as other recognized authors like Frank Miller and Dave Sim) to write one issue of his Spawn series. While doing so, Gaiman introduced the three previously-mentioned characters. McFarlane had agreed that Gaiman was not signing away any rights but later claimed that Gaiman's work had been work-for-hire and that McFarlane owned all of Gaiman's creations entirely. McFarlane had also refused to pay Gaiman for the volumes of Gaiman's work he republished and kept in print. Gaiman won a sizeable judgement against McFarlane and against Image Comics.
This legal battle was in part funded by Marvels and Miracles, LLC, which Gaiman created in order to help sort out the legal copyrights surrounding Miracleman (see the ownership of Miracleman sub-section of the Miracleman article). Gaiman wrote Marvel 1602 in 2003 to help fund this project. All of Marvel Comics' profits for the series go to Marvels and Miracles.
As of 2005 he has completed a new novel, titled Anansi Boys which had a worldwide simultaneous release. The book deals with Anansi ('Mr. Nancy'), a supporting character in American Gods, who dies at the beginning of the novel. Specifically it traces the relationship of his two sons, one semi-divine and the other an unaware Englishman, as they explore their common heritage. It hit the New York Times bestseller list at number one [2].
In 2006, he will return to Marvel to work on a remake of Jack Kirby's the Eternals.
He is one of the Guests of Honour at Orbital 2008 the British National Science Fiction convention (Eastercon) to be held in London in March 2008. He is one of very few writers to be honoured by being invited to be a Guest of Honour for a second time, other writers so honoured have included John Brunner and Bob Shaw.
Awards
Gaiman received a World Fantasy Award for short fiction in 1991 for the Sandman issue, "A Midsummer Night's Dream" (see Dream Country). (Due to a subsequent rules change disqualifying comics for that category, Gaiman is the only writer to win that award for a comics script.)
He received the 2002 Hugo Award for best novel for American Gods, which also won the 2002 Nebula Award.
In 2003 Coraline won the Hugo best novella award.
In 2004, his short story "A Study in Emerald" won another Hugo (in a ceremony the author presided over himself, having volunteered for the job before his story was nominated).
In addition, he has won 13 Eisner Awards for his comics work, two Nebula Awards and three World Horror Awards.
Stardust won the Mythopoeic Award.
He has also won the Comics' Buyer's Guide Award for Favorite Writer in 1992 and 1993, and received nominations in 1997, 1998, 1999, and 2000. His current website is NeilGaiman.com
Neil Gaiman and Shakespeare
Like Terry Pratchett (with whom he collaborated on Good Omens), Neil Gaiman draws on Shakespeare as a literary source. Allusions to the writings of the bard can be found in Anansi Boys, where several lines of Hamlet have a cameo appearance and where the situation the protagonist is in is compared to Macbeth more than once. In The Sandman Shakespeare himself appears in three stories in the series, in which he makes and fulfils a deal with Morpheus, who grants Shakespeare the gift of writing in exchange for two plays 'celebrating dreams': A Midsummer Night's Dream and The Tempest.
Bibliography
Comics & graphic novels
- Violent Cases (1987) - Template:Cite book
- Black Orchid #1-3 (1988) - Template:Cite book
- Light Brigade-Trident Comics-(1988)
- The Sandman #1-75 (1991-1997) - Ten-volume collection: Template:Cite book
- Miracleman #17-24 - Reprinted as: Template:Cite book
- Books of Magic #1-4 (1991) - Reprinted as: Template:Cite book
- Being an Account of the Life and Death of the Emperor Heliogabolus (1991) (a self-illustrated 14-page 24-hour comic published in Cerebus #147) - Also republished in Template:Cite book
- Signal to Noise (Dark Horse Comics, 1992) - Template:Cite book
- Death: The High Cost of Living #1-3 (with Chris Bachalo) - Template:Cite book
- The Tragical Comedy or Comical Tragedy of Mr. Punch - Template:Cite book
- The Last Temptation - Template:Cite book
- storyline based on Alice Cooper's album The Last Temptation, co-plotted and written by Mr Gaiman and Alice Cooper
- Angela #1-3 - Template:Cite book
- Death: The Time Of Your Life #1-3 (with Chris Bachalo) - Template:Cite book
- Stardust (Being A Romance Within The Realm of Faerie) #1-4 - Template:Cite book
- Neil Gaiman's Midnight Days (collection of early work with various artists) - Template:Cite book
- Green Lantern/Superman: Legend of the Green Flame (previously unpublished script with various artists) - Template:Cite book
- Harlequin Valentine - Template:Cite book
- Murder Mysteries - Template:Cite book
- Marvel 1602 #1-8 - Template:Cite book
- Endless Nights - Template:Cite book
Prose
(includes works consisting of illustrated text as opposed to comic-book form)
- Duran Duran: The Book - Template:Cite book
- Ghastly Beyond Belief: The Science Fiction and Fantasy Book of Quotations - Template:Cite book
- Don't Panic: The Official Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy Companion (A guide to Douglas Adams' 'trilogy') - Template:Cite book
- Good Omens - Template:Cite book
- Angels and Visitations (a collection of short stories) - Template:Cite book
- Now we are Sick - Template:Cite book
- Anthology of Nasty Verse with poems by Alan Moore, Ramsey Campbell, Gene Wolfe, R.A. Lafferty, Terry Pratchett, Brian Aldiss, Kim Newman, Diana Wynne Jones, etc.
- SimCity 2000 (1995). Gaiman wrote the text under the description of the library under the button "Ruminate". (The basic idea came across in the first story in The Sandman: Worlds' End.)
- Neverwhere (1996, 1997 US) - American edition: Template:Cite book
- On Cats and Dogs: Two Tales (1997) (chapbook containing two short stories)
- Smoke and Mirrors (a collection of short stories) - Template:Cite book
- The Day I Swapped My Dad for Two Goldfish (a children's book) - Template:Cite book
- Stardust - Template:Cite book
- Sandman: The Dream Hunters - Template:Cite book
- American Gods - Template:Cite book
- Murder Mysteries: A Play for Voices (Biting Dog Press) (2001) (Limited edition script for the voice play with illustrations by George Walker)
- Melinda (Hill House Publishers) (2003/04) (Limited edition "sketch" story. Only 1500 were ever printed, with 400 going to the author, and 100 to the illustrator. Illustrations by Dagmara Matuszak.)
- Adventures in the Dream Trade (a miscellany) - Template:Cite book
- Snow, Glass, Apples: A Play for Voices (Biting Dog Press) (2002) (Limited edition script for the voice play with illustrations by George Walker)
- A Walking Tour of the Shambles - Template:Cite book
- Coraline (2002) - Template:Cite book
- The Wolves in the Walls - Template:Cite book Illustrated children's book.
- Little Lit: It Was a Dark and Silly Night (with Gahan Wilson), compilation of stories by various writers and artists, edited by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly) - Template:Cite book
- Anansi Boys - Template:Cite book A novel featuring the son of the spider god Anansi, who only finds out about his father's true nature after the latter's death. Moreover, not only is the protagonist quite chagrined to find out he didn't inherit any of his father's powers, but his heretofore unknown brother did. Tangentially related to American Gods. This novel debuted at Number 1 on the New York Times hardback fiction bestseller list.
Audio
- Warning Contains Language (stories read by Gaiman, music by McKean) - Template:Cite book
- Signal to Noise (2000) (audio drama with full cast and music)
- American Gods (read by George Guidall) - Template:Cite book
- Coraline (2002) (US ed. read by Gaiman, UK ed. by Dawn French) - American edition: Template:Cite book
- Two Plays for Voices (Snow, Glass, Apples and Murder Mysteries with full cast & music) - Template:Cite book
- Featuring the voices of Bebe Neuwirth, Martin Carey, Brian Dennehy, and Anne Bobby.
- Telling Tales (2003) (Neil tells us stories: A Writer's Prayer; Harlequin Valentine; Boys and Girls Together; The Wedding Present, and In The End. Percussion by Robin Adnan Anders)
- Speaking in Tongues (2005) (contains "Daughter of Owls," "Instructions," "The Price," "The Sea Change," and "The Case in the Case of the Disappearance of Miss Finch."
- Where's Neil When You Need Him? (2006) (Seventeen bands wrote songs based on Neil's work for this disc. Dave McKean created the artwork and Neil wrote the liner notes)
- Mr Gaiman's song-writing and collaboration is also featured on:
- Alice Cooper's The Last Temptation
- The Flash Girls' The Return of Pansy Smith & Violet Jones, Maurice & I and Play Each Morning Wild Queen
- Folk UnderGround's Buried Things and Get Y'er Hands Off Me Booty!
- Lorraine-a-Malena's Mirror, Mirror
- One Ring Zero's As Smart As We Are
- The Mirrormask soundtrack "If I Apologised"
- Gaiman has also been mentioned in albums by Tori Amos
(Citation information taken from WorldCat.)
Film and television
- Neverwhere (tv series) (1996) A BBC miniseries whose story was written by Gaiman and Lenny Henry; screenplay by Gaiman.
- A Short Film About John Bolton (2003) Written and directed by Gaiman.
- Mirrormask (2005) Story written by Gaiman and Dave McKean, screenplay by Gaiman.
External links
Template:Wikiquote Template:Commons
- Neil Gaiman's personal web site
- Official site for children's books with Dave McKean (UK publisher)
- Official site for children's books with Dave McKean (US publisher)
- Official Neil Gaiman Online Storefront
- Coraline video interview
- The Wake - Information about Neil Gaiman's Sandman
- Website for The Flash Girls
- Neil Gaiman Chronology
- Website for Folk UnderGround
- Website for Lorraine-a-Malena
- Joseph Campbell and Everyday Mythology
- Neil Gaiman on Internet Movie Database
- Template:Isfdb name
- Template:Hour25
- Gaiman's attempted 24-hour comic
- Neil Gaiman interview
- Using Genre to Effect - Neil Gaiman interview
- A Conversation with Neil Gaiman, published in Otium
- Stripped Books: Neil Gaiman at the 2005 Nebula Awards -- Comics-form adaptation of Neil Gaiman's keynote address
- Neilgaimania: an Italian site about Gaiman's work (IT)
- Press release on ComicBookResources.com in 2001 announcing the launch of Gaiman's as-then unknown new series for Marvel Comics
- I, Cthulu - short story by Neil Gaiman
- The Case of the Four and Twenty Blackbirds - short story by Neil Gaiman
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