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Posts tagged neil gaiman

11 months ago
June Wrap UpJune could have been better. I didn’t read as much as I needed to. That’s because health-wise, it was a wreck of a month. I had a huge fibromyalgia flare that left me foggy and fatigued. And then I got Covid-19 to end the month (although...

June Wrap Up

June could have been better. I didn’t read as much as I needed to. That’s because health-wise, it was a wreck of a month. I had a huge fibromyalgia flare that left me foggy and fatigued. And then I got Covid-19 to end the month (although I will say, I read a lot during this past week). 

But still, I read some gems. I read some great German lit that will be coming to you in the form of a Book Riot piece very soon. I finished my read of the Neil Gaiman Reader, a deep dive back into all those old favorites and short tales. I read classics that had been sitting on my shelf too long, like The City & The City by China Miéville, Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys, and The Plague of Doves by Louise Erdrich. I read I Love You But I’ve Chosen Darkness by Watkins, a wild ride, and learned a lot from How We Go Home, a collection of small autobiographies and stories from indigenous activists. It was a long month, but the books and I made it through.

Jul 5, 2022 . 6:48 PM . 20 notes
1 year ago
An Evening with Neil Gaiman in ChicagoOn a warm night on Friday the 13th, Neil Gaiman strode on stage in the Auditorium Theatre in Chicago. A packed crowd held their recently purchased signed books close as he settled in at the podium, dark blue and...

An Evening with Neil Gaiman in Chicago

On a warm night on Friday the 13th, Neil Gaiman strode on stage in the Auditorium Theatre in Chicago. A packed crowd held their recently purchased signed books close as he settled in at the podium, dark blue and grey cloud shifting on a curtain behind him. He had to ask the crowd to calm down, before noting that Chicago is one of the first places he did readings back in the day.

Over the course of the evening, Gaiman read “Orange,” requested by Cat Mihos, and a poem about Batman dedicated to Neal Adams; to my delight, he read “The October Tale,” one of my favorite short stories; and he read “The Price,” which he described as a Midwestern story, “a story as much about living here as it is about anything else.” 

He would finish out the night with a reading of “What You Need to Be Warm,” a poem he wrote in his role as United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees ambassador to usher in a 2019 winter emergency appeal to help refugees. The night held hushed, teary silences, but also many laughs.

@neil-gaiman interspersed readings with answering pre-submitted audience questions—he mentioned early on that our stack of post-its, index cards, and torn-off pieces of paper held the best set of questions he’d seen on his tour.

Here are a couple highlights.

Favorite character to write?

Delirium. “Because she did her own dialogue. And most characters don’t.”

A lot of your works are inspired by religion. How do you do that research?

“I would have loved to have been a practical theologian.” Actually, no, he corrected—he would have liked to be “somebody who professionally made up religions.” The job doesn’t exist, he said. “But it ought to.”

How does he feel about people idolizing his works and teaching them in classrooms?

“Uncomfortable.” Why? “Because I loathe Thomas Hardy.” And he suspects that if he hadn’t been forced to read Hardy at age 12, he maybe could have liked him just fine. So he worries a bit about his works being taught in classrooms.

What advice do you have for working with an artist or illustrator?

He advised asking two questions: What do you like drawing or want to draw that you haven’t gotten to much? and What don’t you like drawing? It can get you into an artist’s good graces, and you also want to be able to try and work with what they’re good at and try to amplify it, push them to be even better. McKean hated drawing big crowds of people—Sam Keith enjoyed it—Jill Thompson doesn’t like cars.

Americans Gods the show gave Laura more personhood (”It did,” he agreed). Will Anansi Boys do the same for its women characters, and how do you feel about updating of your material?

Anansi Boys has wrapped shooting and will be a six-episode miniseries. It will have more of Rosie and Daisy and who they are than in the book, and he’s very proud of this. Neil said at the start that while he would write the first and final episodes, he wanted other writers in the room. Ultimately he worked with four writers of color—two of whom were women—to produce the full product of the Anansi Boys that we’ll get on-screen.

I admit I was personally proud that he answered this one, as it was my question.

What fountain pen and ink are you using right now?

He is using a Pilot 823 and a Namiki Falcon, primarily to sign books. He uses a lot of Pilot inks, because they offer well-packaged, secure sample sizes, which he can buy in a wide variety of wonderful colors, and which then won’t be as much of a liability to the rest of his luggage while traveling on tour.

Who is the coolest person you’ve worked with and why is it Terry Pratchett?

Terry was always certain that he wasn’t cool “and he was terrified that I ‘was.’” But Neil will never forget when Terry called him and said, Do you remember that story you sent me? Are you doing anything with that? And Neil said no, he was very busy with Sandman. “I know what happens next,” Terry said. So they had two options: Neil could sell him the idea, or they could write the book together. 

Of course Neil said that they should write it together. “It was like Michelangelo calling you up and saying ‘Do you want to do a ceiling together?’”

Favorite Pratchett story?

One day after Terry’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis, he called up Neil, starting the call (as he always did) with, “Hallo. It’s me.” He was writing a memoir and couldn’t remember something. Could Neil help him? Neil felt a flood of emotion. His good friend, his brilliant friend, couldn’t remember something. “I could be your memory, Terry,” he said internally.

Well, Terry said, do you remember in November 1990, we were on a book tour for Good Omens? And we went to that radio interview and the interviewer had read the cover but hadn’t realized it was fiction, and he asked us what was so interesting about Agnes Nutter and her prophecies, and we told him, and he believed us? And we would see the engineers, and they knew, because they were knocking against the glass to get his attention? And we let him go on for 15 minutes before letting him off the hook? (Neil noted here that Terry was the one who did so, and that he did it very gracefully, making it seem like the host had been in on the joke the whole time.) And remember how we left the studio and walked down the street singing “Shoehorn with Teeth” by They Might Be Giants?

Yes, Neil said. But…what did you need me to remember?

“Was it 30th Street, or 34th?”

When is Sandman coming to Netflix?

He doesn’t know. Netflix will tell us, when they figure it out. “They say they have algorithms and plans, but I think they just go into a dark room with a knife and plunge it into the wall” then turn on the lights and see what calendar date they hit.

Where would your secret lair be, if you had one?

“I’m a traditionalist, so in an extinct volcano above a shark pit.”

May 15, 2022 . 7:36 PM . 26 notes
1 year ago
For the first time, Hayao Miyazaki’s favorite childhood book, How Do You Live? by Genzaburo Yoshino, will be available in an English translation by Bruno Navasky, with an introduction by Neil Gaiman. This book about Copper’s coming of age amidst his...

For the first time, Hayao Miyazaki’s favorite childhood book, How Do You Live? by Genzaburo Yoshino, will be available in an English translation by Bruno Navasky, with an introduction by Neil Gaiman. This book about Copper’s coming of age amidst his uncle’s sage advice and the tightening of his friend group is a precious, philosophical story set in 1930s Japan about growing up and learning what it is to be a responsible, moral human being. 

The book is sweet and touches carefully and well on themes of bullying and privilege, teaching young adults crucial lessons. The uncle’s sections can be a little drawn-out and overly philosophical, but Copper’s story and that of his friends is irresistible. 

Miyazaki will be coming out of retirement to make one final feature film with Studio Ghibli, inspired by Yoshino’s classic book. He sees the upcoming hand-animated film as a gift to his young grandson for when he himself is gone. 

Content warnings for classism, bullying.

Dec 13, 2021 . 2:35 PM . 97 notes
1 year ago
“How do I know you’ll keep your word?“ asked Coraline.
"I swear it,” said the other mother. “I swear it on my own mother’s grave.”
“Does she have a grave?” asked Coraline.
“Oh yes,” said the other mother. “I put her in there myself. And when I found...

“How do I know you’ll keep your word?“ asked Coraline.

"I swear it,” said the other mother. “I swear it on my own mother’s grave.”

“Does she have a grave?” asked Coraline.

“Oh yes,” said the other mother. “I put her in there myself. And when I found her trying to crawl out, I put her back.”

Coraline by @neil-gaiman

Oct 25, 2021 . 7:04 PM . 57 notes
1 year ago
I had a wonderful day apple-picking with my love today at Keller’s Farmstand in Oswego. We walked away with a peck of Evercrisps and a stack of apple cider donuts (I’m going to freeze half and save them for this winter!) Really feeling the autumnal...

I had a wonderful day apple-picking with my love today at Keller’s Farmstand in Oswego. We walked away with a peck of Evercrisps and a stack of apple cider donuts (I’m going to freeze half and save them for this winter!) Really feeling the autumnal mood today.

Oct 22, 2021 . 9:27 PM . 19 notes
1 year ago
Balancing a stack of some of my absolute favorite graphic novels. See any favorites?
From top to bottom:
• On a Sunbeam by Tillie Walden ~ a beautifully illustrated book about a romance between two young girls in a space-age boarding school; about...

Balancing a stack of some of my absolute favorite graphic novels. See any favorites? 

From top to bottom: 

  • On a Sunbeam by Tillie Walden ~ a beautifully illustrated book about a romance between two young girls in a space-age boarding school; about found family & acceptance 
  • Speak: The Graphic Novel by Laurie Halse Anderson, illustrated by Emily Carroll ~ an adaptation of Anderson’s classic YA novel about sexual assault and recovery 
  • Boundless by Jillian Tamaki ~ a collection of short tales about millennial life, life in cities, stories about loneliness, connection, obsession, and inner beauty 
  • Snow, Glass, Apples by Neil Gaiman, adapted and illustrated by Colleen Doran ~ Doran took Gaiman’s horror tale and illustrated it in absolutely breathtaking art deco style 
  • Daytripper by Fábio Moon and Gabriel Bá ~ an emotionally heavy but hopeful story about fatherhood & the fear of death 
  • My Favorite Thing is Monsters by Emil Ferris ~ a brilliant story of a 10-year-old artist growing up in ’60s chicago, all done in sketched ink illustrations
Jul 9, 2021 . 3:59 PM . 104 notes
2 years ago
This new edition of Neil Gaiman’s The Ocean at the End of the Lane is everything. It’s been a long difficult day, but having this to add to my collection made it just that little bit better.
“Nothing’s ever the same,“ she said. "Be it a second later...

This new edition of Neil Gaiman’s The Ocean at the End of the Lane is everything. It’s been a long difficult day, but having this to add to my collection made it just that little bit better. 

“Nothing’s ever the same,“ she said. "Be it a second later or a hundred years. It’s always churning and roiling. And people change as much as oceans.”

May 27, 2021 . 12:04 AM . 180 notes
2 years ago
Yesterday morning, I looked outside my window and saw a splash of yellow that seemed to appear over night. It was flowers, blooming bright against my neighbors’ lawn. I walked today, in the wind and sun. Winter aconite and crocus are open to the sky....

Yesterday morning, I looked outside my window and saw a splash of yellow that seemed to appear over night. It was flowers, blooming bright against my neighbors’ lawn. I walked today, in the wind and sun. Winter aconite and crocus are open to the sky. Snowdrops bundle tight in the grass. Somehow, nothing makes me feel quite so hopeful as snowdrops—blame Neil Gaiman’s Stardust, I suppose, for that. These past 12 months have been difficult, but soon, it will be spring. Things won’t magically get better in spring but they will get brighter, sunnier, more flower-filled. Many of us will be able to venture outside with masks and breathe the air and read by the lake. And that’s why I love snowdrops: in usual winters, where I’m walking to and from work every day, it’s snowdrops who are usually the first to whisper to me: “Have hope. Spring is almost here.”

Mar 10, 2021 . 11:21 AM . 35 notes
2 years ago

On Genre and Intentionality: A Conversation between Kazuo Ishiguro and Neil Gaiman

Earlier tonight, Kazuo Ishiguro and @neil-gaiman had a conversation hosted by Gramercy Books, alongside Quail Ridge Books and Books & Books, in order to talk about Ishiguro’s newest novel, Klara and the Sun. The conversation touched on everything from the slippage between genres to the immense opportunities of the art of comics (Ishiguro has plans to write a graphic novel) to the joys as well as fears of collaboration and adaptations. But at the core was Ishiguro’s new novel, a soft science fiction novel about an AI named Klara who becomes an artificial friend to a young sick teenager named Josie.

It may surprise people that Ishiguro first intended Klara’s story to be a picture book for young children. He had become preoccupied with the ways that children’s novels balance the wish of adults to protect kids from harsh realities with the “little hints, behind the clouds or in the shadows” of the darknesses and fears behind the scenes. But after Ishiguro ran the story past his daughter, she told him it was too sad. He pulled the child’s viewpoint into what would become this darker adult tale.

In 2015, Ishiguro and Gaiman took part in a magnificent conversation about genre for the New Statesman. They touched on the conversation a few times today, particularly after Gaiman commented on Ishiguro daring to release a science fiction novel, historically regarded as “genre fiction,” as his first book after winning the Nobel Prize for Literature. But Ishiguro said that while Never Let Me Go had felt like consciously bringing in the tropes and tricks of science fiction, Klara didn’t. Ishiguro had been studying and investigating developments in AI and gene editing for years, and so these began to pull into the novel quite naturally. “It felt less like something daring,” said Ishiguro, “and more like writing about something on our doorstep…something that people haven’t quite woken up to yet.”

“For many years as a fiction writer,” said Ishiguro, “I’ve been obsessed about how to make a story linger in readers’ minds.” Ishiguro got his start as a songwriter, where your goal is to make that single 3-minute song lodge in the listener, and last past its final notes. So what makes stories last?

The two writers agreed that largely, it’s making sure that the reader meets you halfway. “I always find myself on the side of not giving much information,” said Ishiguro. “Let the reader wonder.” He cited the gaps between panels in comic books: you have to bring the reader in, make it so they’re an active participant filling in the spaces. Gaiman mentioned the final chapter of The Buried Giant as a perfect example—by answering some questions but leaving others open, you are able to “force the reader to become a collaborator”—and once the reader is part of the creative process, the story tends to haunt them. 

My question was passed on to Ishiguro, to my immense gratification. I asked about the experimental imagery he uses in Klara—as he explained to attendees, when Klara is stressed or confused, her vision can split into a grid somewhat like a Zoom window. For example, if she isn’t sure why someone is staring at her, her vision splits into many pairs of eyes, some that look angry, some that look calm, and others that are even looking away. Ishiguro said that it was sort of a cubist idea—seeing a face that you can interpret many ways. He said that 2001: A Space Odyssey taught him an important lesson years ago by including the light show. “It’s pure abstract avant-garde film-making, but viewers accept it because it’s in context,” said Ishiguro. “I learned that you can do really weird things if you put them in context.” If you take experimental literature and technique and put it into an understandable context, it still connects with readers. And in Klara, with this AI protagonist, he knew immediately, “I can do this with a vengeance.”

At one point, Ishiguro emphasized that the important thing at the core of writing is always intentionality. He explained that a good jazz musician improvises every solo, but not simply by throwing out nothing riffs and well-known patterns: they improvise with intention, with a story to tell, an emotion or thread to communicate to the listener. Something that sounds like “it really had to come out.” You can play with a lot of things in your writing as long as it has that core sense; the feeling that the author was writing something that was “hovering in his head” that absolutely had to be let loose.

Mar 6, 2021 . 6:54 PM . 34 notes
2 years ago
My new piece on Book Riot begins:
Life is always going to be stranger than fiction, because fiction has to be convincing, and life doesn’t.” —Neil Gaiman
There’s a strange disconnect between the chaotic nature of real life and the consistency that we...

My new piece on Book Riot begins:

Life is always going to be stranger than fiction, because fiction has to be convincing, and life doesn’t.” —Neil Gaiman 

There’s a strange disconnect between the chaotic nature of real life and the consistency that we expect from fiction. Our suspension of disbelief doesn’t extend to certain inconsistencies or “errors” — even when life and our memories are riddled with them. When we’re reading, we expect a certain consistency from the plot, the world, and the characters, that real life does not always comply with.

Check out my full, twisting, philosophical piece about how we read and why we expect different things from fiction than we do from reality.

Feb 4, 2021 . 6:26 PM . 38 notes
2 years ago
So many beautiful packages came in today from Waterstones! I adored the UK Neil Gaiman Reader cover, and while I was ordering, I also got this gold and indigo Hamnet and an exclusive paperback of Such A Fun Age that has its edges painted turquoise....

So many beautiful packages came in today from Waterstones! I adored the UK Neil Gaiman Reader cover, and while I was ordering, I also got this gold and indigo Hamnet and an exclusive paperback of Such A Fun Age that has its edges painted turquoise. (Bonus: a water bottle my pen pal sent me from Australia!)

Jan 21, 2021 . 9:55 AM . 21 notes
2 years ago

Signed Saturday

I’ve been putting together my Neil Gaiman book collection for years now, and this was an amazing addition. This edition of The Ocean at the End of the Lane is illustrated by Elise Hurst, and it includes a print of one of those illustrations. The incredible story about childhood, story-telling, and memory, is recast with these vague, dark, stunning illustrations. This book, signed by both Neil Gaiman and Elise Hurst, comes in a cloth slipcase and has a ribbon to mark pages, and is numbered 206 out of 1,000. I’m treasuring this copy of a beloved favorite of mine.

Signed Saturdays is a weekly series at While Reading and Walking. I’m an avid book collector, and each Saturday, I’ll tell the story of one of my signed books. Feel free to join in at #SignedSaturdays.

Dec 5, 2020 . 10:14 AM . 60 notes
2 years ago
‘What’s your name,’ Coraline asked the cat.
‘Look, I’m Coraline. Okay?’
'Cats don’t have names,’ it said.
'No?’ said Coraline.
'No,’ said the cat. 'Now you people have names. That’s because you don’t know who you are. We know who we are, so we don’t...

‘What’s your name,’ Coraline asked the cat.
‘Look, I’m Coraline. Okay?’
'Cats don’t have names,’ it said.
'No?’ said Coraline.
'No,’ said the cat. 'Now you people have names. That’s because you don’t know who you are. We know who we are, so we don’t need names.’
Coraline by Neil Gaiman

Oct 31, 2020 . 1:58 AM . 153 notes
2 years ago
How has the pandemic changed our reading lives? I spoke to ten avid readers, including authors, bloggers, and the content curator of Chicago Public Libraries, to find out how our reading habits have shifted since the pandemic began—how the new...

How has the pandemic changed our reading lives? I spoke to ten avid readers, including authors, bloggers, and the content curator of Chicago Public Libraries, to find out how our reading habits have shifted since the pandemic began—how the new schedules and the mental weight of COVID-19 have changed how much we read, or what we’re reading.

I’m very proud of this piece, an effort that took hours of interviews and work, and I hope that you can take a few minutes to read the piece

Oct 8, 2020 . 3:43 PM . 25 notes
2 years ago
“People think dreams aren’t real just because they aren’t made of matter, of particles. Dreams are real. But they are made of viewpoints, of images, of memories and puns and lost hopes.”―Neil Gaiman

“People think dreams aren’t real just because they aren’t made of matter, of particles. Dreams are real. But they are made of viewpoints, of images, of memories and puns and lost hopes.”―Neil Gaiman

Sep 24, 2020 . 12:37 AM . 68 notes
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