The Dreaming » 2001 » October
Oct 26
Gaiman To Write MARVEL Mini
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From ZENtertainment:

Gaiman To Write MARVEL Mini
Neil Gaiman (Sandman, American Gods) has signed on to write a new project for MARVEL Comics, which is expected to be released sometime next year as a 6-issue miniseries. It’s unknown what exactly Gaiman has planned, but it will be set in the MARVEL Universe…

Additionally, MARVEL has agreed to donate all profits from the project to Gaiman’s MARVELS AND MIRACLES, LLC, which is trying to clarify legal rights to the MIRACLEMAN property Gaiman had a hand in.

“I am delighted to have this opportunity to work with Joe Quesada and MARVEL,” said Gaiman. “The MARVEL characters have been part of my life for over thirty years, and the opportunity to play in the sandbox that Stan (Lee) and Jack (Kirby) gave us back then is one I find exciting and faintly scary. I am also particularly pleased that MARVEL has agreed to donate all their profits from this project to the MARVELS AND MIRACLES enterprise, which I formed initially to help clarify the rights to the much-missed MIRACLEMAN, so that ultimately old and new stories can again be put into the hands of MiracleMan’s readers. Once those rights have become clear, I plan to dedicate all of the profits which any MIRACLEMAN publishing might generate, beyond those needed to make sure that the original creators are being properly paid, to comics-related charitable organizations.”
http://www.marvel.com

Oct 12
Chicago Humanities Festival XII
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It looks like Neil is going to be on a whole bunch of panels at the Chicago Humanities Festival in November. From their website:

  • 11/09/01, 5:30 to 6:30 PM
    Newberry Library, 60 W. Walton.
    Neil Gaiman: From Sandman to American Gods
    Author Neil Gaiman talks about the artistry of writing comic books, fantasy novels, and screenplays. Gaiman is a master fantasy writer, author of the popular Sandman comic book series, the fairy tale/novel Stardust, the novel Neverwhere, and the children’s book The Day I Swapped My Dad for Two Goldfish. He is currently at work on two screenplays. Book sales and signing follow.
  • 11/10/01, 1:00 to 2:00 PM
    Chicago Public Library: Harold Washington Library Center, 400 S. State St.
    Will Eisner: Graphic Storytelling
    Comics pioneer Will Eisner talks with author (and Eisner devotee) Neil Gaiman about words and pictures as modern media. Regarded as the grandfather of comics and “sequential art,” Eisner created the masterpiece comic strip The Spirit in the 1940s, and, in 1978, authored A Contract With God, the first “graphic novel.” Book sales and signing follow.
  • 11/11/01, 3:30 to 5:00 PM
    Northwestern University School of Law: Chicago Campus, Thorne Auditorium, 375 E. Chicago Ave.
    Comics Panel
    Michael Chabon moderates a panel discussion with comics creators Neil Gaiman, Will Eisner, Scott McCloud, Chris Ware, and Ben Katchor. Book sales and signing follow.


Ticket ordering information is at http://www.chfestival.org/november/index2.cfm?pg=4

Oct 11
Silly OT Stuff
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As if I wasn’t busy enough already, after reading Neil’s journal for October 11 I had to respond. So go read it first and then look at this. No, I don’t have any kind of compulsive disorder… I just like doing goofy things.

Oct 5
“Nightfall”
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Neil’s poem, Nightfall, appears online as part of Scifi.com’s collection of essays and poems called Reflections on September 11, 2001. Thanks to Janni for the heads up.

Oct 4

Heifetz, Merrilee. “2001 Nebula Awards appreciations: Toastmaster, Neil Gaiman .” Bulletin - Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America 35(1) (Summer 2001): 29.

I am convinced Neil Gaiman has magical powers.

I don’t mean the powers of a master storyteller, which he certainly has in spades, or the charm of a young, Jewish Paul McCartney who can bring in 700 people at a signing, but the actual ability to make the impossible happen. I cite the following:

In 1984, when Neil first asked me to represent him, he was writing comic books. Even though they were literary, stunning and ground-breaking comics, this still made him virtually invisible to the general book buying public. Nonetheless, he had big plans which included:

* Signing a million dollar book pub lishing contract

* Writing a national best-selling novel

* Signing with a major Hollywood agency who would get him screenwriting jobs and sell his film rights

I was blown away by his graphic novels and the other work he had done at this point. But how did he expect me to get a comic book writer this huge publishing contract? And then to become a best-selling author? Much less, a Hollywood screenwriter?

But he made it all happen, a step at a time, and one thing followed another, making sense and not really seeming miraculous. Until you stopped, and thought about it, the brilliant reviews, the enormous output, the sheer quality of his work - and…well… it had to make you wonder.

And now he has written his best book yet, American Gods, which is about what happens to the gods everyone has brought to our continent over the centuries, and then abandoned as they became assimilated. But the gods, being gods, are immortal and thus still stuck here, eking out an existence as things like prostitutes and cab drivers and …uh…transplanted English comic book writers?

Oct 4

Bay, Mark T. “American Gods.” Library Journal 126(14) (Sept 1, 2001): 153.


Gaiman, Neil. American Gods. PerfectBound: HarperCollins. 2001. 529p. Adobe. ISBN 0-06-001060-6. Gemstar. ISBN 0-06-001062-2. Microsoft. ISBN 0-06-001061-4. $19.95. www.perfectbound.com

Adobe Acrobat eBook Reader 2.2 Gaiman, the award-winning author of the “Sandman” series of graphic novels, has written an absorbing work that unites traits of fantasy, mythology, and travel writing, along with mystery, horror, philosophy, and black humor. After protagonist Shadow is released from prison early to attend the funeral of his wife, a mysterious stranger offers him a job as bodyguard and assistant. Shadow’s new employer, revealed as Odin from Teutonic mythology, soon draws him into a battle between the old and forgotten gods, brought to America by immigrants, and the new “gods” of technology, media, and information. The novel goes on to examine the roles of ancient beliefs and explain what happens to those who encounter American culture. While this is a great choice for e-book format–especially because the target audience, adults in their twenties and thirties, will be comfortable with the technology-the layout is rather disappointing. Blank pages throughout are distracting, and the font does not translate well to computer monitors. The story simply cries out for hyperlinks to information resources, artwork, and sounds. Still, the entertaining plot compensates. Highly recommended.

Oct 4

Wiersema, Robert J. . “American Gods .” Edmonton Journal 08-19-2001: E11.

Allow me to depart momentarily from review conventions and say right at the top that Neil Gaiman’s book American Gods is utterly, breathtakingly sublime.

It will cost you sleep, cause you sunburn and have your family sending out search parties to find you. To read it is to place yourself in the hands of a gifted storyteller, to abandon yourself to the power of timeless themes, to remind yourself of the sheer, dizzying thrill of the written word.

I wanted to make my opinion clear because there are some readers (you know who you are) who dismiss fantasy writing as not worthy of attention. But even strong defenders of the fantasy genre will have to admit that Gaiman has created something far greater than a standard fantasy novel.

With American Gods, he has created both a new mythology and a vivid, heartbreaking human story.

As American Gods opens, Shadow has spent three years in prison, quietly serving his sentence, learning coin tricks to pass the time.

On the eve of his release, he receives the news that his wife has died in a car accident.

En route to her funeral, he repeatedly meets the mysterious Mr. Wednesday, a complete stranger who nonetheless seems to know him.

Shadow accepts a job offer from Mr. Wednesday, sealing the deal not with a contract but with three drinks and an oath.

As Shadow and Wednesday embark on a surreal road trip across America, the job description remains unclear, but the truth soon emerges: Mr. Wednesday is a participant in a war between the gods.

You see, in Neil Gaiman’s America, gods walk the earth with people.

As a time of crisis approaches, they divide along tribal lines.

In one side are the old gods, with familiar names like Odin, Anubis and Loki.

Brought to America from their Old World pantheons by immigrants, they are reduced, by diminishing belief, to shadows of their former grandeur.

On the other side are the new gods, the American gods, manifestations of contemporary belief and energy. Gods of Media, Money, Technology and Credit, riding in limousines, driving SUVs and Humvees, they are rich and powerful, imbued with strength by the ardour of their followers’ worship.

Gaiman is a visionary talent with both a rich imagination and an open- hearted sensitivity. The British writer, winner of the World Fantasy Award, first came to attention with the prize-winning comic book series The Sandman, an epic that told, in 75 monthly instalments, the story of Morpheus, Lord of Dreams.

Now collected in 10 beautiful trade paperback editions, The Sandman is a triumph of storytelling.

I consider it one of the greatest works of creative genius of the 20th century. Gaiman is also the co-author, with Terry Pratchett, of the hilarious cult classic Good Omens.

Neverwhere and Stardust, his two previous novels, were somewhat worrying to some of his longtime fans. While both were well worth reading, Gaiman seemed to have taken a step back from the sweeping audacity of The Sandman into urban fantasy and the pastoral, respectively.

Thankfully, that retreat does not continue with American Gods, which is a sprawling, diverse and impressive work, drawing skilfully on dozens of mythological traditions, dancing through history and geography with abandon.

Gaiman has a tremendous visual sense and is able to set a scene with minimal effort. And what scenes he sets! From the House on the Rock (home to the World’s Largest Carousel) and the centre of America (marked by a grungy motel where the gods meet) to a battlefield that bridges two realities and a small town where children disappear, he pulls out all the stops.

In his America, anything can happen, and the tawdriest of roadside attractions may conceal magic at its heart.

This sense of giddy sprawl and possibility, however, belies the tightly controlled nature of Gaiman’s storytelling, and the intimate, personal story at the novel’s heart.

American Gods is very much Shadow’s story.

Although much of his past (including his parentage and the crime he was serving time for) are shrouded in mystery, Gaiman brings him to vivid life.

As he struggles to deal with his wife’s death and the mysterious job to which he has sworn himself, his life becomes more complex and puzzling.

Each answer seems to lead to a greater mystery — until Shadow’s life reaches a crucial turning point that brings the personal and the mythic strands resolutely together.

From that turning point, American Gods unfolds with startling surprises. As each piece slips into place, most readers will shake their heads in amazement at Gaiman’s skill and audacity.

By drawing on the strongest of archetypal forces and rescuing the stories of gods and heroes from their dusty schoolbook prisons, Gaiman has created a contemporary mythology that resonates with emotional and symbolic truth.

Oct 4
Interview - Vancouver Sun
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Mallon, Matthew . “Neil Gaiman in the U.S. of A.” Vancouver Sun 07-28-2001: H17.

Once the leather jacket and the shades come off, Neil Gaiman is all floppy locks and a storyteller’s soothing lilt. He’s at the very end of a six-week book tour, a tad crumpled from a cross-country Canada 3000 flight, and he’s been talking about his book for so long that there’s no question for which he doesn’t have a thoughtful response. A charming, sweethearted and generous professional who likes an audience, he’s poised to gain a massive, Stephen King-sized one with his latest novel, American Gods.

Sitting across the table from me in front of a mountain of sushi, he’s a little bit rock star (the leather jacket), a little bit self- deprecating English schoolboy. (He tells an amusing anecdote about the jacket: It was a gift from friend and fellow writer Jonathan Carroll, who’d bought it for himself but then realized that some people can wear a leather jacket and look good, while others just look “like complete dickheads.” FYI, Gaiman looks pretty cool in it.)

Fuelled by green tea and raw fish, Gaiman says that having started work in the much-maligned medium of comics opened him up as a writer. “I was essentially free to work in any genre I wanted within comics, and nobody cared. That was where I did my apprenticeship as a storyteller.’ ‘

He has since moved on to prose and film but hasn’t really left comics behind. “I’m hoping to go back and do some more comics around the second half of this year, write some stuff for a book for DC, which they’ve apparently announced is coming out by December.”

About nine years ago, Gaiman moved from England to America. But not glitzy N.Y./L.A. America: He lives in the heartland, Minnesota. The move was initiated by his American wife, who had family roots in the Minneapolis area. “When the children were of an age when she felt they should encounter that side of the family, I told her if she could find me an Addams Family house, I would move.”

He stops, delivers a smile of domestic happiness. “She took it as a challenge, and she went over, found me an Addams Family house.”

That change of locale led directly to American Gods. His relationship with America is “like one’s relationship with Disney World or Las Vegas. Initially you cannot believe them. Then you realize they exist without irony. And then you realize they go down much further than you think. And then you realize that, as a writer, you have an awful lot to say about them.

“Coming out to the U.S., I discovered there was a whole world that not only had I not written about, but it didn’t seem like anybody had ever written about. All this strange Middle American stuff. There’ s all these Los Angelenos and New Yorkers who would say, `Why have you set an entire novel in fly-over country?’ And it’s like, well, because nobody else does. Because I was living out there and seeing all this weird sh–.”

American Gods is a fun read, certainly, but it contains what Gaiman self-deprecatingly refers to as “trenchant social criticism.” One of the major themes is particularly au courant in these days of anti- globalization rage — that of regional idiosyncrasies put at risk by homogenized mass culture. We’re all being dragged into the Yankee melting pot, whether we like it or not.

“Of the two models, `the melting pot’ and `the mosaic,’ I prefer the Canadian one. I like the idea that nobody is expected to give up anything. You take on the attributes and you proudly bring stuff to it. In America, one always feels there’s this sort of attitude that you are meant to arrive here and give up lots and lots of cool things.”

But Gaiman believes regionalism may be a tougher beast to kill than strident critics of globalization imagine. “There are things left around the edges,” he says.

“One of the reasons I liked writing [in American Gods] about the little bit of Wisconsin is that in the upper peninsula, that little area of Wisconsin, they have [Cornish] pasties. And I put that into the book. I just found it terribly interesting. You have this tiny little area, maybe 40 to 50 square miles, in which you can get pasties.

“The Cornishmen came over to do the tin mines at the turn of the century. They’ve all gone, but they left one food behind them. So there was this little regional thing you can only get there. That is so cool.” Big grin.

American Gods is also about the relationship between the past and the future. “I haven’t quite figured out where Canadians stand on this one,” he says. “Europeans and the English have a very nervous attitude toward the future. They sidle into the future. They are quite sure that for every cool thing you get from the future, you have to give something up.

“Yes, you can a have a big store on the outskirts of town that sells everything, but you may have just lost all those nice little corner shops that have been in that same place for a hundred years and are really handy at 11 o’clock at night when you’re out of stuff. So there’ s always sort of a going backwards and forwards.

“America tends to head into the future rather like a lover running in slow motion over a field of poppies in a Tampax commercial. They just want it. They want the future so badly. And I wanted to try and talk about that.”

In this context, Gaiman brings up one of American Gods’ more unpleasant new deities, Technical Boy.

“What was weird was when I started writing him, in 1999, the height of the Internet, I tried to make him feel ever so slightly dated. I was using Bill Gibsonian tropes, Bruce Sterling tropes, little Neal Stephenson tropes, just to build him up. He comes from a future that’ s just a tiny bit past its sell-by date…

“There was that line, which, when I wrote it, was still just about hip — where Bilquis [a minor character] says to him, `So you must be one of those dot-coms I’ve read about.’ And he says yeah. What I love is how dated that is. It’s an eight-month-old line and it’s dated. That’s so cool.

“Because everything I got to say in there about the sell-by dates on futures, about the nervousness of these new gods — yes, they get completely believed in, but they are also completely disposable.”

Oct 4

The October/November issue of Fantasy & Science Fiction has a new “diabolically clever short-short story” by Neil called Other People. Here’s hoping it will eventually end up on an audio collection as well.

Also released: a new paperback version of Shadows over Innsmouth, edited by Stephen Jones, and containing the short story Only the End of the World Again.

American Gods reviews are up at:

Speaking of such things, there was a lovely Tori interview by Glyn Brown in the Independent on Sept. 14. An excerpt:

…With each song, says Amos, a female narrator appeared andsaid in effect, “Here’s my view on this”, and those narrators are embodied in photographs for the CD sleeve, Amos got up quite startlingly in character. In a further twist, she asked her chum Neil Gaiman, author of the Sandman comic novels, to write afew words on each paired character and song. The results of that are intriguing, too. For instance, Lloyd Cole’ s “Rattlesnakes” is Amos’s favourite, the story of a complicated woman on a quest, with a “heart like crazy paving”, needing a gun to cope withall those sidewinders; Gaiman’s pen portrait reveals a superficial teen who parties a lot. I don’t agree; nor does Amos.

“But you know what?” she says, leaning forward, incredulous yet resigned. “He likes her. No, it’s true; ask him. That dope’s the one he likes…”

Oct 4

CNN has an article on Neil in their Career section entitled “Job Envy: Author Neil Gaiman” which also contains a link to their Online Chat Transcript that I missed (I think).

Thanks to my old high-school buddy Rob for ICQing me that one.