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    /wiki/Neil Gaimancreator
    Neil "Scary Trousers" Gaiman, master of modern horror[1]

    A contemporary British writer of stories. Of all known kinds.

    He's especially famous for his Urban Fantasy works, including the renowned The Sandman comic series, which was the first (and only) work in its medium to win a World Fantasy Award for Best Short Story [2]. Two of his novels, Stardust and Coraline, have been made into movies. He's also written scripts for other projects, such as Mirror Mask by Dave McKean and the Neverwhere TV series. In addition, he worked on the translated script of Princess Mononoke. Most recently, his young adult work The Graveyard Book became the first book to win both the Newbery Medal and the Carnegie Medal.

    A masterful storyteller, he excels at building believable, yet fantastic settings for his stories. His works are marked by extensive use of mythological references and symbolism, often times in "modern" settings. Also a notable One of Us, and despite his work's breathtaking popularity, he has remained remarkably humble and personable, managing to remain faintly bemused every time he finds hundreds of people waiting for him to sign their books or whatnot. Also, he's a highly respectable marsh-wiggle with a very Nice Hat. Adorkable? Quite.

    Gaiman has some affection for Canon Defilement- and is living proof that this particularly negative trope isn't bad. He described Snow, Glass, Apples, a Perspective Flip of "Snow White", as a mindvirus that he hoped would prevent the reader from ever experiencing the original innocently again. His External Retcon of Beowulf pulls a similar trick. The Problem of Susan is something of a meta-twist on the concept, riffing off of Susan's exile from Narnia: her embrace of adolescence means that, retroactively, she experienced the original adventure as a Darker and Edgier pagan allegory. He is also fairly preoccupied with, though not necessarily an apologist for, Muse Abuse.

    Stephen King thinks Neil Gaiman may well be the greatest storyteller alive today, and has said so publicly. Considering this is Stephen King talking, that's saying something.

    He's married to Amanda Palmer of The Dresden Dolls. He has a Twitter account and a Tumblr blog.

    Sung a song about Jeanne d'Arc with Ben Folds on piano. It is magnificent.

    He once delivered an awe-inspiring (and quite hilarious) commencement speech to the 2012 graduates of the University of the Arts in Philadelphia.



    Comic Books


    Novels

    Short story anthologies

    • Smoke & Mirrors
    • Angels & Visitations
    • Fragile Things
    • M is for Magic
    • How to Talk to Girls at Parties


    Picture books

    • The Wolves in the Walls
    • The Day I Swapped My Dad for Two Goldfish
    • Blueberry Girl
    • The Dangerous Alphabet
    • Crazy Hair
    • Instructions


    Films


    Live Action TV

    • He has written an episode for the 2011 series of Doctor Who, "The Doctor's Wife".
    • Wrote an episode for Babylon 5: "Day of the Dead".
      • Especially notable as the only episode of the show not written by J. Michael Straczynski after season two.
      • The Gaim, one of the alien races in Babylon Five, is named for him. And just to hammer the homage further, they all strongly resemble Dream Of The Endless.
    • Neverwhere.
    • American Gods upcoming in 2013 from HBO as a miniseries.
    1. epithet and nickname given by Alan Moore
    2. To prevent it happening again, they changed the rules so that comic books had to be relegated to their own special category, and couldn't be judged alongside prose works
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