The Dreaming » 2003 » September
Sep 20
Associated Press
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Deepti Hajela reported the following for the Associated Press today:

NEW YORK (AP) – It’s a fan’s dream come true: the Sandman is back.

Seven years after he stopped writing his ground-breaking, history-making comic book series, author Neil Gaiman has returned, once again telling stories about Morpheus, the King of Dreams, and his six siblings, collectively known as the Endless.

“The Sandman: Endless Nights” was released last week to mark the 10th anniversary of Vertigo comics, the publisher of the series during its run in the 1990s. The new book is a collection of seven short stories, one for each member of the Endless, illustrated by artists from around the world.

While Gaiman has written a prose story about Morpheus since the series ended, this was the first time he returned to the comic book form. He admitted to a slight case of nerves, but said he soon felt right back at home with the characters.

“I felt, ‘Oh my gosh, I’ve missed you people, this is so much fun,’” Gaiman said. The author is in New York City this weekend to speak about “Endless Nights” at the New York Is Book Country festival.

Gaiman started writing the Sandman comics in 1989, and finished in 1996 after 75 issues. Along the way, he revolutionized the whole genre, introducing a piece of work that stood out for its quality writing and adult themes rather than superheroes in costumes.

“‘Sandman’ has been the key book that really got Vertigo noticed, and not only Vertigo but literary comics in general,” said Karen Berger, vice president and executive editor at Vertigo, which is part of DC Comics.

Berger, who worked as Gaiman’s editor, invited him to be part of Vertigo’s anniversary celebration when planning started two years ago.

“When you look and you say, ‘Can comics be considered as literature?’, you look at Sandman and say yes,” Berger said.

The series broke all kinds of preconceptions: It brought in non-traditional fans, like women, to the comic book world. It won every major comic book award. And most telling, it still sells a LOT of copies.

“It was a demographics-buster in terms of the normal comic book fan you think of,” said Matt Brady, editor of Newsarama.com, a Web site dedicated to the comic book world. “It really helped to open the doors for comics as they are today.”

“For me, it’s something that I started 14 years ago,” Gaiman said. “But for so many people it’s completely new, and people are coming to it all the time.”

For the new book, Gaiman was able to work with a host of artists who had never worked with him. He also moved away from solely focusing on Dream to telling tales from the perspective of the other members of the Endless — Death, Destiny, Destruction, Desire, Despair, and Delirium.

“When I was writing Sandman … I always felt that sometime the others got short shrift,” he said.

And it was also a chance to step away from the novels and other prose works he’s concentrated on since the series ended.

“When I’m writing a novel, I find myself missing comics,” he said.

After working on “Endless Nights” for the last two years, Gaiman is heading back to prose. He is contracted to write two books, which means saying goodbye to Dream and the Endless for at least the immediate future.

“I have to put my novelist hat back on,” Gaiman said. But “when my novelist hat comes off again, I will look around and blink and call Karen and say, ‘OK, what are we doing now?’”

Mind you, I don’t know whether this actually appeared in Newsday‘s print edition or not, but it would be really neat if it did; that’s been my local paper most of my life.

And yes, I will put up a post about the very very very very very long signing at the Equitable Center, but probably tomorrow, when I am making a bit more sense. From a person waiting on line from midday to six sorta perspective, though, I have nothing but kudos for everyone involved for making it very casual, and a lot of fun.

Sep 20
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From the “Children’s Books In Brief” section of today’s New York Times
THE WOLVES IN THE WALLS. By Neil Gaiman. Illustrated by Dave McKean. HarperCollins. $16.99. (Ages 5 to 8) The author and illustrator of the Sandman graphic novels collaborate on a semi-scary story about Lucy and her family, her old house and the wolves she hears living in the walls. When the family moves into the walls, the wolves move out, party and move on.

Sep 19

With many thanks to Laura Watkinson for all her work in translating this profile reported by Bart Holsters in De Morgen from the original Dutch!


American Gods
Original title: American Gods
Translated by Hugo and Nienke Kuipers
Luitingh-Sijthoff, Amsterdam,
524 p., 26.95.

Coraline
Original title: Coraline
Translated by Henny van Gulik and
Ingrid Töth
Luitingh-Sijthoff, Amsterdam,
173 p., 21.95.

Neil Gaiman on his writing
If you’ve read American Gods, you’ll know that Neil Gaiman is an author to keep an eye on. His career path is an illustration of the theory of evolution: he began at the bottom of the ladder as a reviewer, has demonstrated his command of a variety of genres and is now on the verge of breaking into the mainstream. So there is still hope!

Neil Gaiman (1960), a Brit who has lived in the United States for years, began his career as a journalist and reviewer for racy English magazines such as Penthouse and Knave, then became a creator of quality comic strips and gained a huge cult following in America with his Sandman series. But that was only the beginning. He published children’s books, wrote a fantasy novel together with Terry Pratchett, made the British television series Neverwhere, a strange story set in a mysterious world under London, wrote screenplays and worked on his first big novel between these projects. Since the publication and international success of American Gods, Gaiman has not stood still: this spring saw the publication of Coraline, a dark tale about a small girl who enters a sinister parallel world and does not know how to get back, and in the United States, Wolves in the Walls, another children’s book that can also be enjoyed by adults, has just come out.

Everything that Neil Gaiman touches seems to turn to gold (so we’d rather not shake hands with him), but he remains very level-headed about it all. When reviewers compare Coraline to Alice in Wonderland, he takes it with a healthy pinch of salt: “Of course it’s flattering, but you might as well compare apples and pears. I love Carroll, but Alice is completely different from Coraline. Alice is just a guide to Lewis Carroll’s fantasy world, she doesn’t actually do anything and you don’t find out much about her; Coraline is a much more real character.” What the books do of course have in common is the fact that big people can enjoy them just as much as little people. Gaiman: “For adults, Coraline is a horror story. I’ve noticed that children find it a lot less creepy, because they miss some of the references. But they do find it exciting.”

Hasn’t a horror book written for young children unleashed negative reactions in America, where some schools and libraries have in the past had no qualms about putting books such as the Harry Potter series on the banned list? “It’s not that bad. The success of Harry Potter has changed a lot of things.”

He explains that the process of writing Coraline was a long one: he began the book at some point in 1990 for his first daughter, Holly, then moved to the United States and couldn’t find the time to write, so the manuscript lay untouched for seven or eight years. “Then my second daughter came along and I thought: it’s now or never. But when I showed my publisher the first few chapters in 1991 or 1992, he said: this is the best thing you’ve ever written, but we can’t publish it, a book written for adults and for children, a kiddies’ spine-chiller, no one will buy it. I am convinced that what he said was true at that moment in time. But that was before Harry Potter. People understand that this sort of book is not really about the dark arts, but that it’s all about metaphor.”

He repeats the G.K. Chesterton quote that is used as the introduction to Coraline: “’Fairy tales are more than true: not because they tell us that dragons exist, but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten.’ I have had hostile reactions in the past, with Sandman. When my publisher received a letter from Concerned Mothers of America, who vowed to launch a campaign against what they referred to as the violence, sex and magic in the stories, we knew that it would be a bestseller. (laughs) But it is true; there are a lot of mad people in America. In many respects it’s a crazy country.”

That madness is portrayed in abundance in American Gods, a surprising fantasy thriller with leading parts played by a mishmash of gods that have accompanied different groups of immigrants from all corners of the globe and are slowly being forgotten. Gaiman’s American gods have become marginal figures:

“It is a metaphor for the experience of the immigrants. If you come as a Greek to live in Amsterdam, you’re not expected to stop being Greek. If you move to London as a Turk, no one asks you not to be a Turk anymore. But if you emigrate to America, you want to become American and are prepared to give up your culture and your past. That’s where the metaphor of the gods comes from.”

He is somewhat of an emigrant himself – he has been living in the States for more than ten years – and is still fascinated by “what isn’t in America and what is. What isn’t there? The image that you bring with you as a European. You think that you know America, because you’ve seen it in films and on TV so many times. I was attracted to all that American mythology – America as a black-and-white film from the 1950s, but I soon found out that the mythology is wafer-thin. Instead, you discover a completely new dimension, a land full of surprises, with places and people that you could never make up.”

American Gods was a bull’s eye. It scored just as well with the critics as with readers and won not one, but all three of the top American prizes for science fiction, fantasy and horror: the Hugo Award, the Nebula Award and the Bram Stoker Award. Does that make him the Genre King?

“What meaning does that have now, a genre? The distinction between genre and mainstream is becoming more and more blurred. This is partly because culture itself has changed. We now live in the world of the old science-fiction stories. Clones, mysterious epidemics, terrorists carrying out insane attacks… the world has turned into a Hollywood B-movie. Terrorists hijacking planes and crashing them into the Twin Towers and the Pentagon – that’s Schwarzenegger, isn’t it? Reality has caught up with fantasy and many definitions have become irrelevant. And, actually, you do notice that modern mainstream writers, people like Michael Chabon, have been inspired by genre fiction. They still aren’t genre writers, but they are genre readers. And, conversely, can you still call someone like Elmore Leonard a genre writer?

“A long time ago I read a book by a film critic – I can’t remember her name right now – who made a very interesting comparison between hardcore porn films and musicals. She saw an identical scheme in them. In a musical, the plot is there to keep the songs apart. You have different kinds of song – the boy’s song, the girl’s song, the chorus, the two girls together, and so on – and the plot makes sure that they don’t all get sung at the same time. It’s just the same with porn: the plot is there to keep the different kinds of sex apart. When I read that, I realized that you could use the same rationale to sort out what is genre fiction and what isn’t. It shows the difference between a Western novel and a novel that is set in the Old West: in the first one, the plot’s just there to keep the gunfights apart, but in the second there might not even be a gunfight. Or it shows the difference between a spy novel and a novel about spies… To me, that’s the best way to look at genre and mainstream.”

But there still is a distinction?

“Nowadays it’s mainly a handy way to find what you’re looking for when you go into a bookshop. No one says that Coraline’s fantasy; no, it’s a children’s book. But what they really mean is that you can find it in the children’s department in the bookshop. American Gods is placed in the literature section almost as often as it is in the science-fiction and fantasy section, so I suspect that in ten years or so I’ll be mainstream myself.”

Coraline also demonstrates the blurring of the genres. But isn’t writing for children a little different from writing for adults?

“It’s more difficult, because adults know a number of conventions that are still new for children. Every word has to count. And you know, even though American Gods won all those prizes, I think that Coraline will outlive it. I often think of A.A. Milne, the spiritual father of Winnie the Pooh. In the 1920s he was the assistant editor of Punch and had a great deal of success as a playwright. In just one season, five of his plays were on at the same time in the West End. He wrote dozens of books and was a famous author. If someone had told him that fifty years after his death we’d only know him because of his children’s books… So you see how relative it all is.”

Sep 19

Something to reiterate: My policy is always to remove articles posted here by request. It is doubly so with this, as National Public Radio is one of the last, best voices that we have available to us in the States. It’s a resource that is definitely worth both your attention, and support. End of caveat.

The interviewer for Talk of the Nation is Neal Conan, and the audio is available here.

It might be hard to imagine needing Cliff’s Notes to read a comic book, but if you’re not familiar with the work or writer Neil Gaiman, his stories and characters are a little distinct from the usual tights-and-cape crowd. Gaiman’s plots jump from history to mythology to everyday life. Cain and Abel, Orpheus, Shakespeare and Satan have all made appearances. Gaiman may be best known for his long-running comic book series The Sandman. The books revolve around the very dysfunctional personalities of a family of abstract concepts, everything from Desire to Destiny to Dream, the eponymous Sandman. Like Greek gods, they tend to dangle up human affairs with their family infighting on a cosmic level.

Neil Gaiman is also a best-selling author of fantasy novels and children’s books, screenplays, rock ‘n’ roll lyrics and radio scripts. If you have questions about his work or about writing comics in general, join the conversation. Our number here in Washington is (800) 989-8255. That’s (800) 989-TALK. And the e-mail address is totn@npr.org.

A new collection of stories hit comic book shops yesterday. It’s a hard-bound book called “Sandman: Endless Nights.” Neil Gaiman joins us here in Studio 3A. And good to have you back on TALK OF THE NATION.

Mr. NEIL GAIMAN (Author, “Sandman: Endless Nights”): Thank you, Neal.

CONAN: As you go through life, you once gave–in the beginning of this book you give a wonderful less-than-25-word summation of The Sandman series, which it should be said ran for nine years once a month, more or less. Start us off with that.

Mr. GAIMAN: I think the summation that I give, which was given as a sort of very desperate attempt to summarize a 2,000-plus-page story that ran over 10 volumes, was that the Lord of Dreams learns that you must change or die and makes his decision.

CONAN: Well, those of us who have read the comics know what choice he made. But tell us, this is now the second book you’ve done in The Sandman series since the comic book series actually ended. Why come back to it now?

Mr. GAIMAN: It felt like the time was right. When I stopped, I stopped still enjoying it. It was a very conscious decision. I’d finished the story that I began in Sandman No. 1, Sandman 75, and I’d done these 10 volumes and I still loved it. And I thought, `If I stop doing it now while I still love it, it’ll be good to go back to. If I keep doing it until I’m sick of it, it’ll be like one of these TV shows that everybody remembers fondly and just wishes that people would put out of its misery.’

So I stopped and came back a few years ago for Sandman’s 10th anniversary to do a book called “Dream Hunters,” which was a written novella illustrated by a wonderful Japanese artist called Yoshitaka Amano, where I completely made up an old Japanese folk story and had Amano illustrate it. For this, it’s now the 10th anniversary of “Vertigo,” the imprint that Sandman was the flagship of, I suppose. And my editor, Karen Berger, asked if I would do something for the 10th anniversary, and I thought about it and said yes. What I’d really love to do is go and get some of the European artists I love, go and get a bunch of artists I’ve always wanted to work with and never have, and I’ll do a story for each of them.

CONAN: After all that time, though, were you afraid that maybe, you know, you’d been in these voices, in these characters for nine long years and, as you say, the first redux was not so long after that, but that you were afraid that maybe the voice, the feel for these characters had gone?

Mr. GAIMAN: Oh, terrified, absolutely. It was like going to a party with a bunch of your best friends from seven years ago and you haven’t seen them in seven years and you really don’t know what they’ve been doing and whether you’ll have anything in common. And you get there and there’s maybe two minutes of awkwardness and suddenly you realize how much you’ve missed them. And it was lovely. I really–it didn’t feel like work. Again, going back and writing seven stories–I think there’s about 160 pages–and it was just wonderful. And in each case I had the excitement of getting to work with a master artist, Milo Manara, the Italian.

CONAN: When you’re working with an artist–we’re going to be talking with one of your artists later in the show and we’ll bring this up later, but when you write, you know, a story line, do you write it with a particular artist and what he or she can do with his or her style in mind?

Mr. GAIMAN: Yes, absolutely, 100 percent. And I won’t write a story unless I know who’s going to be drawing it because you’re trying to play to the artist’s strengths. You’re trying to figure out, `What do they bring to something?’ And normally if I’m going to do a long story line with somebody, find out what kinds of things they’d like to draw that they never have or what they don’t want to draw. You can phone somebody up and they can say, you know, `I just don’t want to draw cars,’ or whatever. You go, `OK. Then I’ll do something with no cars in it. That’s easy.’

CONAN: Set that in Greek times.

Mr. GAIMAN: Yeah, absolutely.

CONAN: Ancient Greece. Yeah.

Mr. GAIMAN: So in this case, yes, I got to do–for Desire, I got Milo Manara, who is famed across Europe for erotic comics and for beautiful historical work. For Delirium, there was an American artist named Bill Sienkiewicz, who I wanted to work with for 15 years, and finally we got to do a story together and so forth. So you’re imagining this story for that person.

CONAN: And you mentioned, obviously, the erotic content of at least some of the stories. Comic books, you have to point out to people who are not familiar with them, these days a lot of them are not for kids.

Mr. GAIMAN: That’s absolutely true. What actually is harder these days is finding good comics for kids. I was very proud recently to have done a story for Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly’s Little Lit series, “It Was a Dark and Silly Night…” and the 3. And it’s got me and Lemony Snicket and people actually doing children’s comics because people aren’t doing many children’s comics anymore.

CONAN: Let’s get some listeners involved. Our phone number is (800) 989-8255, (800) 989-TALK. Our e-mail address is totn@npr.org.

And our first caller is Michael, who’s with us from Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

MICHAEL (Caller): Hi, Neil and Neal.

CONAN: Hello. It is–we were talking before the show about how strange it was to be speaking with somebody named Neil.

MICHAEL: Right. OK. Anyway, my question is I am–in addition to Neil’s work, I’m a big fan of Joseph Campbell and I see a lot of similarities and ideas, and I was wondering how much of a conscious influence, if any, Joseph Campbell was on The Sandman.

CONAN: Joseph Campbell, of course, featured in that long series with Bill Moyers on Public Television and obviously writes a lot about some of the same subjects you write about, Neil Gaiman.

Mr. GAIMAN: Yes. The series–he did “The Masks of God” with something that I was reading right at the beginning when Sandman–when I was first putting it all together, and just this wonderful sweeping lunatic look at mythology all around the world. And I loved it and it was definitely part of what I was doing. “The Hero With 1,000 Faces,” which is the thing that many people point to, actually started and realized I didn’t want to read because I didn’t like seeing the nuts and bolts of my craft exposed so obviously. What I like about writing–if you’re writing a story with a hero in it, what’s nice is somebody will come along afterwards and say, `Ah, yes, you have fulfilled the Campbellian imperatives here. Look, you’ve got the call and the rejection of the call and the old man and the gatekeeper and you’ve got all this stuff.’ But I’d much rather they came along afterwards than that I had this stuff in the back of my head and was trying to hit things along the way. Otherwise, three-quarters of the way through a book I’m going to be going, `Oh, I should have the reconciliation with the father here, shouldn’t I?’

CONAN: Too calculated, in other words.

Mr. GAIMAN: Yes, I don’t necessarily–the stuff you don’t want to know. But I loved “The Masks of God.” I just thought it was just this wonderful book and I actually stole a–in Sandman No. 8, the one that brings death in for the very, very first time from Campbell he lists an Egyptian poem about a man essentially in love with death, which begins `Death is before me today like a man returning to his home after years in a strange land.’ And I took that and put that into the first appeara–Sandman 8, which was the first time that death appeared.

CONAN: Michael, thanks very much.

MICHAEL: Thank you.

CONAN: OK. Death, I mean, we all have–you know, there’s that standardized image of death, you know, the Grim Reaper, you know, the guy in the baggy cloak and all of that. You envision death a completely different way. Was that your idea or was that the idea of the artist you were working with at the time?

Mr. GAIMAN: It was–actually, it was a very interesting combination of the two. When I came up with the idea of the whole Sandman character, I thought, well, he’s the incarnation of dreams. That’s good. That implies there are others like him. Then I thought–there’s the very famous quote from somebody like Byron or Shelley that “Death is the brother of sleep.” And I thought, `Ah, OK. I like that.’

CONAN: But you made her the sister of sleep.

Mr. GAIMAN: Well, I loved the way that the sexism of language works for you. I thought, you know, if I just say in the first episode that Death–that Dream is Death’s younger brother, everyone will assume that death is the older brother because language works for you that way. So they won’t be expecting a sister, so that’ll be nice. And I also remembered from my childhood a story about the angel of death and how when you meet the angel of death you fall in love so hard and so strongly that your soul is sucked out through your eyes and leaves your body, and that’s how you die. And I think it’s an old Jewish folk story or something. And I just thought, `That’s wonderful. I want a Death you could fall in love with.’

CONAN: Death–your character Death, mischievous, beautiful, absolutely loveable. Her brother, though, Dream, you say he’s a hero, but a hero a little unlike a lot of other heroes, not even likeable at times.

Mr. GAIMAN: He’s an incredibly gloomy bugger and is occasionally blamed for, you know, the Goth movement and stuff, which I’m not really sure that he–I think he certainly had something to do with it, but probably not as much as people think. I wanted a really, you know, byronic, screwed-up hero. I wanted somebody who was all powerful and still cannot get out of his own way. And what was then fun was contrasting him with Death, who you expect to be like that, only more so.

CONAN: Mm-hmm.

Mr. GAIMAN: And she’s very good at what she does and she likes it and she gets out and she meets people, you know, because you do if you’re Death. And actually what was interesting in “Endless Nights” was doing a story from a very, very, very long time ago, right back at the dawn of time, and you get to meet them, and she was a lot gloomier and she’s a lot posier and more melodramatic, and he’s actually a lot more cheerful and human. But you get to see why things went the way they did much later.

CONAN: Let’s go to Leila(ph), who’s with us in Tallahassee, Florida.

LEILA (Caller): Hello?

CONAN: Hello. You’re on the air.

LEILA: Hi. I actually just wanted to tell you that the Sandman comics are really amazing and the stories are beautiful and I really like the episode that has the serial killers. I was kind of wondering, why did you get so dark there and where did you come up with all that?

Mr. GAIMAN: Good question, Leila. The serial killers convention story is probably one of the darkest places I ever went in Sandman. In 1988, I was at the British Fantasy–no, the World Fantasy Convention, where fantasy writers from all over the world came together. At that point it was in London and they all came together in London. And I’d just read–I think “Silence of the Lambs” had just come out and it was a book. And I could see the romance of the serial killer just over the horizon and it bothered me. You could see that we were just about to get a wave of romantic serial killers as heroes and anti-heroes all over the place.

CONAN: And so you have them all gather in one convention…

Mr. GAIMAN: Well…

CONAN: …a little like a comic book convention.

Mr. GAIMAN: …that was the other part of it, which was I–or I’m sitting there late at night brooding over the serial killer thing and in the bar with a bunch of writers, and I looked around and I thought, `I wonder if serial killers have gatherings like this. I wonder if they just get together one weekend a year to be special and have panels on women and serial killing and…’

CONAN: Mm-hmm, and swap trade secrets.

Mr. GAIMAN: Swap trade secrets, have an art show, have the awful disco on a Saturday night, like every convention of every kind everywhere. And at that moment, of course, I also knew that having had the idea it was now in the air and I had to get it down before somebody else wrote a serial killer convention story, and it was a very long 14 months before that story came out.

CONAN: Leila, thanks very much for the call.

LEILA: Thank you.

CONAN: We’re talking with author Neil Gaiman. His new book is “The Sandman: Endless Nights.” You can join the conversation: (800) 989-TALK, (800) 989-8255. Or send us e-mail: totn@npr.org.

I’m Neal Conan. It’s TALK OF THE NATION from NPR News.

(Soundbite of music)

CONAN: This is TALK OF THE NATION. I’m Neal Conan in Washington.

We’re talking with Neil Gaiman, a legend in many subcultures. He’s the author of several highly popular comic book series, numerous fantasy stories and novels, and recently best-selling children’s books. You’re invited to join our discussion. Give us a call at (800) 989-8255. Or you can send us e-mail: totn@npr.org.

And for those of you who last opened a comic book back when Archie cost a quarter, here’s a quick cheat sheet for some of the jargon you may hear here today. Comic books tend to come out monthly. The stories they tell may begin and end in a single issue, in which case it’s called a one shot, or they may go for several months in what’s called a story arc. Gather a bunch of them together in one volume and you have what’s often called a graphic novel. There are two main comic publishing houses, Marvel and DC. DC has a smaller mature readers’ imprint known as “Vertigo.” We mentioned that earlier. That’s the company with which Neil Gaiman’s work is most closely identified. You may also hear talk of the universe in which a series takes place. These are the fictional worlds shared by many of the different titles published by the same company. For example, the DC universe includes Superman’s Metropolis and Batman’s Gotham. It’s also where Neil Gaiman’s Sandman lives. The Marvel universe is home to The X-Men, The Hulk and Spider-Man, all of whom who have visited Hollywood recently. It’s also the setting of Neil Gaiman’s newest series, 1602.

Neil Gaiman is with us here in Studio 3A. And 1602, this is going back to–What?–the gunpowder plot and all sorts of things. And what’s the idea of this series?

Mr. GAIMAN: The idea of this was I’d agreed to do something for Marvel, I wasn’t quite sure what, and then September the 11th happened and I thought, `Well, I’m not sure what I want to do, but I know what I don’t want to do. I don’t want anything with skyscrapers in it. I don’t want anything with planes. I don’t want anything with guns. I don’t want anything that goes boom in a big way.’ And seeing that most of the Marvel heroes are famed for swinging from and exploding through skyscrapers, that sort of changed the way that–with that set of perimeters. I thought, `Wouldn’t it be interesting to do a story set with all of these old characters and to do the Stanley, Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko characters that I remembered from when I was a kid and take them again, but as if they were happening 400 years early.’

CONAN: Obviously people can tell from your accent that where you grew up was, well, somewhere well east of here, an island called Britain generally. Were comic books as influential amongst kids of your generation there as they were here?

Mr. GAIMAN: Well, they were to me. I think so. I think they probably were. There’s a huge–there was a wave, which I was a part of, right in the middle of, of English writers coming to America. And Grant Morrison–Alan Moore, of course, was the first and the finest of us.

CONAN: Mm-hmm.

Mr. GAIMAN: Pete Milligan. There’s a whole slew of us Goth. And I think that part of that comes from the fact that we were reading American comics and we were reading them as these strange things. They were like postcards from another dimension. In my case, of course, I was also very lucky because I got to read the Marvel comics from the very beginning. They were being reprinted when I was about seven or eight from the very first Spider-Mans and Hulks and Fantastic Fours in these English reprint editions with names like `Wham!’, `Smash!’, `Pow!’, `Fantastic!’ and `Terrific!’, all with exclamation marks.

CONAN: Let’s get another caller involved and this is Tom, who’s with us from Redford, Michigan. Tom, are you there?

TOM (Caller): Yes. Yes, I’m here.

CONAN: You’re on the air.

TOM: Hi. Well, first I’d like to say just what an honor it is to talk to both Neals. I enjoy your radio program and I’ve been following Sandman since almost the very beginning. The first story line I read was the “Seasons of Mist” story line and it’ll forever be remembered as one of the greatest story lines in comic book history as far as I’m concerned.

The question I have is, I know especially in the world of comic books when you start something as different as Sandman, you’re not always guaranteed 75 issues. When in the course of writing did you realize that you were going to be able to get to an ending point?

Mr. GAIMAN: Well, when I started it, I actually–when I started Sandman, critical success and commercial failure were more or less synonymous in the world of comics. People would talk fondly about comics they’d liked which had rarely lasted more than a year. They just tended not to sell anything and get canceled and be remembered fondly.

CONAN: The usual thing is to get a call after your eighth issue saying, `Best wrap it up after number 12.’

Mr. GAIMAN: Well, that was why Sandman, the first story line, was eight issues long, because I actually figured that what would happen was I’d tell my eight-issue story line, it would end in number eight, I would get the phone call there and I’d do four short stories to number 12, and that would be that, and people would remember Sandman very fondly as one of these minor, critical successes. No. 8 came out and we looked around and Sandman was selling more than anything comparable had sold for 20 years. And suddenly I realized that I really did have this–you know, I could keep driving this. It was about a year before I mentioned casually in conversation to the powers that be at DC Comics that I did envision an end and would like to end when I was done. And they very politely explained back that that was never how things were done and it simply wouldn’t happen, but it was nice of me to have asked. And then time went by, and a few years later it was sort of a fait accompli.

I think they’d realized that Sandman was, for whatever reasons, something unique and that putting another writer on and continuing Sandman at No. 76 after I left would just devalue that. And also, on the sheer bland, boring, bottom-line commercial side of things, one reason why a good run-on comics and a writer leaving always meant that somebody else would carry on the comic was that the comic company who owned the characters and so forth would be making some money out of it. With Sandman, when it was done, they had 10 graphic novels, they had these 10 books, and these 10 books were selling as well or better than the comic had ever sold.

So I think they realized at that point that if they just let it stop and stayed on good terms with me, I would come back and do things like “Endless Nights.”

CONAN: Tom, thanks very much.

TOM: All right. Thank you.

CONAN: Bye-bye.

As we mentioned, “Endless Nights” is illustrated by seven different artists. The volume starts off in the hands of one of Neil Gaiman’s frequent collaborators, artist P. Craig Russell. He joins us now from the studios of member station WKSU in Kent, Ohio.

And thanks very much for being with us today.

Mr. P. CRAIG RUSSELL (Artist): Oh, thank you. Hello, Neal. And hello, Neil.

Mr. GAIMAN: Hey, Craig.

CONAN: You guys first worked together on what became one of the most popular Sandman stories, an issue called Ramadan. Craig Russell, tell us how that came about.

Mr. RUSSELL: Well, Neil has a way of picking artists almost like casting actors on the basis of what they’ve been known to do and do well and might do well in the future. So Neil had seen an illustrated book I did, “The Thief of Baghdad,” that had come out a couple years before that, and knowing he was doing an Arabian Knights fairy-tale style story with a sort of modern twist to the end of it, thought of me as the artist to write the story for. He said, `Do it like you’re a thief of Baghdad, only more so.’

CONAN: Now when you get a script from Neil Gaiman, what does it look like and what’s your first reaction when you look at it? Do you say, `Oh, God, he’s basically telling me the story,’ or do you look at it and say, `How does he expect me to do that?’

(Soundbite of laughter)

Mr. RUSSELL: Well, with Neil’s scripts, the usual response is delight, especially reading the ones that are written for comics. We have two ways–we’ve done four projects together. Two, I’ve done adaptations of his short stories, and two have been scripts like “Endless Nights” and Sandman 50 that were written for comics. So those are the easiest to do, the ones that are written for comics. Everything is there, you know? Every word that’s going to be spoken is there. With the short stories, you have to be more of an editor, crossing out lines–`We don’t need this, because we’re using this picture’–which always makes you nervous when you’re crossing out lines of a living author.

CONAN: Now…

Mr. RUSSELL: You feel like, you know…

CONAN: Yeah.

Mr. RUSSELL: …he’s there behind you.

CONAN: Yeah. When you get the script from a writer, say Neil Gaiman, do you ever call him up and say, `No, no, no, no, you know, on Page 6 we really want to do this instead’?

Mr. RUSSELL: No, not exactly that, no. We’ll talk before I start working on the adaptation or illustrating the script. Like on the story we did, “Murder Mysteries,” a couple years ago, which was one of his short stories, we talked beforehand and he let me know–sort of underlined something that was implicit in the story, which even though this was Los Angeles and it was in sweltering heat, it was Christmastime. `So be sure to put some sort of sad, tacky little reminders around that this is the season we’re in.’

CONAN: And, Neil Gaiman, similarly, if you get, you know, a look at the artwork, do you ever say, `No, no, no, there’s not enough tacky Santa Clauses in there. You need to add some more’?

Mr. GAIMAN: Not with Craig. No, I mean, the delight–it’s a lot like, I don’t know, ballet or acrobatics or, you know, those people in circuses who swing and have to be sure there’s somebody there to catch you. I normally will completely trust my artists, and they’ll always come through. Because you’re trying to give them something to do. With Craig, actually, the strangest way we’ve ever worked was probably Ramadan, because I phoned Craig up and I said, `Right, I’ve written half of this story already and I just wanted to read you what I’ve done because I need to figure out how I’m going to break it down into panels for you. and what kind of pacing you’re going to want.’ And I read it to him, and he said, `Oh, don’t touch it.’ He said, `Just finish it. Send it to me like that, and I’m going to break it down into panels.’

CONAN: So the pacing, the speed at which the story advances and whether it’s close-ups or long shots, essentially–we’re talking cinematic terms–that, you think, is the artist’s…

Mr. GAIMAN: No. A lot of the time–I mean, Craig is a lovely example of somebody who–I will say to Craig at the beginning, `I will suggest ways that you can do this that should work. If you can see a better way of doing it, you’re the artist and I trust you. Go for it.’ And with our story in “Endless Nights,” which is called “Death in Venice,” there’s a couple of places where Craig just sort of expanded things. At one point he added a panel that I hadn’t written that makes everything somehow deeper and odder and more beautiful.

Mr. RUSSELL: I think if you’re living with a script, with a writer’s script, when you’re doing layouts and your thumbnail drawings and working up to the full pages, you just live with it so long and reading it over and over, it almost feels like a three-dimensional object in your mind that you’re looking at. And once you get that intimate with it, all of a sudden, other pictures just sort of pop up that aren’t changing the story; they’re sort of underlining it and expanding it in certain directions, but always in the service of the story that’s already there. So if you live with it long enough, it just sort of takes a life on of its own.

CONAN: Let me ask you both a quick question, and that’s simply a matter of logistics. When you say, `live with it for so long,’ Craig–how long does this take to do?

Mr. RUSSELL: Well, it depends on your page count. I mean, “Murder Mysteries” was a 64-page story. The Sandman 50 was about 32. So once you really get going, I might do a half a page a day, so it can be several months…

CONAN: And…

Mr. RUSSELL: …from start to finish.

CONAN: Same to you, Neil Gaiman. How long does it take you to write a comic book that comes out once a month?

Mr. GAIMAN: Well, when I started writing “Sandman,” I was young, excited, and every single panel I was writing I’d never written before, and every panel transition I’d never done before, and I could probably write about–I could have written about two issues a month. I could write one issue in two weeks. By the time I finished that…

CONAN: So that’s about a page a day, roughly.

Mr. GAIMAN: Yeah, or a little bit more than that. By the time I finished “Sandman,” I–and there was sort of roughing-out time. I mean, there’s figuring stuff out and drawing little thumbnails and figuring out what you’re doing, and then–but I could do two comics a month. By the time I finished “Sandman,” I was up to about sort of–it took me about six weeks every month to write it, and it was just gradually getting later and later.

CONAN: Deadlines affect everybody in a lot of businesses. Neil Gaiman is with us, also one of his collaborators, P. Craig Russell. We’re discussing “Sandman: Endless Nights,” which is newly published. You’re listening to TALK OF THE NATION from NPR News.

And let’s get another caller in. Matthew’s with us from Arden Hills in Minnesota, excuse me.

MATTHEW (Caller): Hello to both Neils.

CONAN: Hi.

MATTHEW: Yes. I have a question for Neil Gaiman. I’m sorry, it’s not really about the artwork, but I was just browsing your Web site and I came across a question that you answered in which you said that you would not be surprised if the gods, demigods and etc. that you wrote about turned out to be true, but you did not expect it. Now one of your constantly reoccurring themes has been the idea that humans have a need to see past the physical world. We have a need to know about story and we have a need to believe in gods. How do you explain that need if we are living in a completely physical world, and if, obviously, there’s no evolutionary advantage to it?

CONAN: And if you could answer that in 10 seconds, if you would–no. Go ahead.

Mr. GAIMAN: Thank you, Matthew. Well, speaking as an author who makes things up, I love making things up. I like the idea of a world in which everything exists, and the joy for me of “Sandman” was creating a fictional universe in which everything could possibly exist. Everything anybody had ever believed was absolutely true. I remember during the Season of Mist story line where I had Lucifer resign as the person who runs hell, close the place down, throw everybody out and give the Lord of Dreams the key. And bringing characters on from all three stories…

CONAN: And much hilarity ensues. Yes.

Mr. GAIMAN: Yes, with hilarious results as I brought on Greek gods and Egyptian gods, and then I thought, `Well, what about fairies? Can I bring them on? Will everything collapse?’ And I brought them on, and no, the structure of belief still held. And then I brought on angels, and it still held. I love the idea that death is an awfully big adventure. I love the idea that all the things that I make up are true. Do I expect it? I have no idea. It’s–the joy for me of being a writer is you can be the kind of ultimate agnostic who gets to believe whatever you need for the story. And if ever I write a story in which there are absolutely no ghosts, no gods and nothing but this world, then that’s what I believe while I’m writing that story.

CONAN: Matthew, thanks very much.

MATTHEW: Well, thank you very much.

CONAN: OK. Bye-bye.

MATTHEW: Bye.

CONAN: Here’s a quick e-mail question from Joan Lowe in Cleveland: `I have a question about Mr. Gaiman’s new comic book series 1602. I’ve read the first two issues.’ She’s one ahead of me. `I would like to know how many are planned. I especially like the cover art. And can he tell us something about the artist?’

Mr. GAIMAN: Yes. Scott, who does the covers, is absolutely wonderful. He’s never done any comics work before. He’s mainly done playbills. And he’s…

CONAN: For what we call the legitimate theater.

Mr. GAIMAN: For the legitimate theater. And he’d sent his portfolio in to Marvel, and Joe Quesada, who’s the editor in chief there, saw it and had wanted something that he could use Scott on, and he showed me his stuff and said, `How would he work for 1602?’ And I said, `I think he’ll work very well.’ And I love his approach. And they’re absolutely gorgeous covers. It’s planned for eight issues. I’m currently halfway through issue seven and have a terrifying feeling that I will get halfway through issue eight and look around and grit my teeth and start planning issue nine.

CONAN: You could just look outside and say, you know, `And then a big hurricane arrived and everybody died.’

Mr. GAIMAN: Yes. I must have already written–I’ve already written at least one hurricane; in fact, I once wrote a hurricane in a “Sandman” story called Game of You which hits New York, so I’m hoping that that doesn’t come true tonight.

CONAN: P. Craig Russell, thanks very much for being with us.

Mr. RUSSELL: Oh, my pleasure

CONAN: He’s a comic book artist. He’s illustrated many titles, including a story in the new “Sandman” book, “Endless Nights.” He was with us from the studios of member station WKSU in Kent, Ohio. We’ll be back with a question or two more for Neil Gaiman when we come back from a break, and we’ll also go from comic books to the comics page in the newspapers. Welcome back another cult character. A hint: He’s got a big nose, herring breath and will soon wander onto a Sunday funnies page near you. We’ll be back in a moment.

I’m Neal Conan. You’re listening to TALK OF THE NATION from NPR News.

(Announcements)

CONAN: This is TALK OF THE NATION. I’m Neal Conan in Washington.

Tomorrow, join Ira Flatow and “Science Friday” for a special broadcast from San Antonio, Texas, and a discussion of preservation efforts that are under way to try to save the city’s missions. That’s tomorrow on TALK OF THE NATION.

Today we’re talking with Neil Gaiman. His new book is “The Sandman: Endless Nights,” which is newly available in a store near you. We’re wrapping up our conversation. Let’s go to Cal(ph), who joins us on the line from Cheyenne, Wyoming.

CAL (Caller): Hi there.

CONAN: Hi, Cal. You’re on the air.

CAL: Yes. I was wanting to provide Neil an opening to speed up the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund if he wished to.

CONAN: And do you work with that?

CAL: I contribute by buying nearly everything related in comic T-shirts and Neil’s videos and so on.

CONAN: All right. What is the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund?

Mr. GAIMAN: I’m very grateful. Thank you. The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund is the First Amendment organization that defends the First Amendment rights of comic books and comic book creators and comic book publishers and comic book retailers, who actually are out there on the front lines selling comic books and are the people who are most likely to suddenly find themselves arrested for having sold an adult comic to an adult police officer.

CONAN: I see. In comic book stores, or at least many of them these days, there are front sections for everybody, and in the back an adult comic book section.

Mr. GAIMAN: That’s true. And as a retailer in Texas recently discovered, that doesn’t matter if they don’t like the comics they can buy there. No, but the Legal Defense Fund, it’s an organization that’s now about 14 years old and has been fighting, sometimes successfully, sometimes not. We managed to prevent the state of California tax authorities reclassifying comics from literature over to sign-painting in order to be able to collect tax on them, which was actually a very, very long, hard-fought battle. And, you know, occasionally, we lose. There was a guy called Mike Diana–still is–in Florida who was arrested for doing a self-published sort of fanzine comic called Boiled Angel; found guilty of obscenity in the state of Pensacola, Florida, and sentenced to a three-year suspended jail sentence, $1,000 fine, thousand hours of community service; couldn’t be within 10 feet of anybody under the age of 18, and the local police force were ordered to make 24-hour spot checks of his place of residence, randomly, to make sure he wasn’t drawing anything in future. So sometimes you lose.

CONAN: Cal, thanks very much for the call. Appreciate it.

CAL: Thank you.

CONAN: And very quickly, Neil Gaiman, another–well, I’m not sure–well, I guess it’s in part legal, but comic book writers and artists have for years struggled with ownership with comic book publishing companies over who gets the rights to what. Has that been resolved? Do you have the rights to “The Sandman”?

Mr. GAIMAN: No. No, it hasn’t–things are getting better, but there’s a sort of one-step-forward-two-step-back thing going on. “Sandman” is owned by Time Warner. It’s completely owned by that conglomerate. They could do what they want with it. They don’t ’cause they want to keep me reasonably happy. But they absolutely could. Some of the work I’ve done for DC since has been creator-owned. I did a beautiful series called Stardust, which was a fairy tale with Charles Vess, which we owned, we kept the rights to.

But on the whole, it would be a good thing if–yeah, it’s one reason why I spend more and more time now doing novels. The last novel, “American Gods”–the joy of that is I own it. It’s all mine, every word of it. Coraline, the children’s stuff, it’s all mine. When people phone up and say they want to make movies, I can say no if I don’t want to do it. I wouldn’t have that control over “The Sandman.”

CONAN: Well, thanks very much for coming in, and thank you very much for this new book. It’s a wonderful piece of work. “The Sandman: Endless Nights.” Neil Gaiman with us here in Studio 3A. Thank you very much.

Mr. GAIMAN: Thank you, Neal.

Sep 18

For those of you keeping score at home, Neil has been mentioned in (in no order of importance) USAToday, CNN, Forbes, the Village Voice, and the New York Times in the last four days.

And the audio for his interview with Neal Conan on NPR’s Talk of the Nation will be available online after 6pm EST.

***

From the September 18, 2003 USAToday:
For the dark and sometimes mystic Neil Gaiman, this is the stuff dreams are made of.

The Englishman’s last novel, American Gods, was a surprise best seller. His last two children’s books, Coraline and The Wolves in the Walls, are subversive, cuddle-up-and-shudder favorites.

Now the book world is anticipating the return after seven years of Gaiman’s most famous character, the Sandman, the tormented Dream King who rules the world of our nightmares but who can find no rest of his own.

With 7 million comic books and graphic novels in print, the character made the soft-spoken writer a favorite on the cult-and- angst circuit. Sandman just might be the smartest comic book ever written.

Fans are evangelical. He’s friends with Tori Amos, hailed by Norman Mailer. A poster of Gaiman’s dysfunctional family of godlings from The Sandman — Dream and his siblings Death, Desire, Destiny, Destruction, Delirium and Despair — was hung each week in rebellious Darlene’s room on Roseanne.

“I don’t tend to look at it as conquering the world,” says Gaiman, 42, choosing each word as deliberately as he fills thought balloons, in an interview from his home in Menomonie, Wis.

“It’s really fun to have a comic book out. You’re doing these numbers, and you’re read, and yet nobody knows you. I continue to be The Most Famous Writer Nobody’s Ever Heard Of. I don’t think that’s necessarily a very bad thing to be, but it’s a very odd thing to be.”

“Neil seems very nice,” says songwriter and creative soul mate Amos, “but don’t let that fool you. He’s a very dangerous man!”

Dangerous or not, the book industry hopes Sandman: Endless Nights, a hardcover collection of seven stories — released Wednesday and illustrated by a who’s-who of American and European artists — will kick the $100 million graphic-novel category into higher profitability.

“This is absolutely his day in the sun,” enthuses Maggie Thompson, editor of industry newsletter Comic Buyers Guide. “I won’t say the field wouldn’t be here today without him, but it can only have profited from his experience.”

Comic books used to cost a dime and sell in the millions. Now they are in ever-pricier formats and are sold at bookstores. Much of that is a result of Gaiman’s head-turning work on the Sandman from 1988 to 1996.

So great is the demand for new Sandman tales that the hardbound Endless Nights has a record first printing of 100,000 copies priced at $24.95.

“Anyone you hand the book to says, ‘Wow,’ ” says Paul Levitz, publisher of DC’s Vertigo Comics, which has a huge stake in matching the success that such collections enjoy in Europe and Japan. “What Neil and his collaborators have achieved is America’s first world- class graphic novel.”

On the Gaiman bandwagon

Graphic novels “are of utmost importance,” says Joe Quesada, editor in chief of DC’s chief competitor, Marvel Comics. “Newsstands are going the way of the dinosaur, and there’s been a huge increase in our business thanks to the bookstore trade.”

Marvel, too, is on the Gaiman bandwagon with the release of 1602, his six-part look at the X-Men set in 17th-century England. It was the best-selling comic book in America in August, and will hit bookstores in a collection once the run is done.

“It was fantastic to land Neil,” Quesada says. “Something’s happening out there, and Neil is in the forefront of the resurgence.”

All this began when Gaiman, part of a restless pool of comic- book intellectuals from England, persuaded DC to give him a shot at reviving a forgotten crimefighter from the 1930s, the Sandman.

Gaiman and illustrators Sam Kieth and Mike Dringenberg ignored superhero restrictions and renamed him Dream, a new Sandman who ruled the dreams of mortals. For 76 issues, the stories were about myths and death, Shakespeare and Ramadan, tales told from the edges about doomed heroes, hope and hypocrisies.

In one story, a bored Lucifer gives up the keys to Hell and walks away like an absentee landlord. In another, a meeting of nerds in the Midwest turns out to be a convention for serial killers.

“Sandman was always a big resilient structure that was never about superheroes,” Gaiman says of his eight-year run. “The giant 2,000-page story is an enormously upbeat tragedy, if such a thing is possible.”

The series grew in reputation when the stories were reprinted in 10 best-selling collections.

The saga was helped along enormously by Gaiman’s invention of six other members of “The Endless” family, including Dream’s terrible sister Death, who is always drawn as a Winona Ryder-type teenager.

“One by one, you will all come to me,” Death tells the gods and mortals in Sandman stories.

Amos was so taken by the stories that she included the line “Hanging out with the Dream King” in her Tear in Your Heart song in 1990.

Gaiman met her in London and they became artistic buddies. Gaiman wrote much of his epic novel, American Gods, at Amos’ beach houses in Florida and Ireland.

“Neil does his research and knows his archetypes,” says Amos. “You really have to do character studies of the myths. You can’t just do Athena ‘your way,’ because if you do, it won’t be true.”

Their give-and-take works, Amos says, because “first of all, we can’t fire each other. We want the other one to win, not getting anything out of it except the happiness of the work. I tell him, ‘I’d rather hear it from you, Neil, than read it in The New York Times.’ ”

Fan speculation has flourished at this meeting of mysticism’s two cultural bookends, but Amos says they are “sister-brother. We’re not kissing cousins.”

Says Gaiman: “Tori’s someone I’d known forever as soon as we met. It was like discovering a sister, or an oldest friend I didn’t know I had. She’s fairy godmother to my daughter, and I’m fairy godfather to her daughter.”

Gaiman, his hair tousled Tim Burton-style and wearing black T- shirts by Armani, lives in a 123-year-old “Addams Family house” with his wife and college-age kids. He has lived there since 1992, so long that when he goes back to England, “I don’t know if I’m English anymore. I’ve achieved a general state of ‘You’re not from around here, are you?’ ”

The Dream weaver

The decision to return to Sandman was not a hard one.

“When I stopped doing Sandman in 1996, people said, ‘Why? Do you hate the character or something?’ I said, ‘No, no, I love these characters. That’s why I’m going to stop.’ When I came back to them, they were still waiting for me.”

Gaiman’s enthusiasm grew when he was able to line up superstar illustrators from Europe, such as Milo Manara and Miguelanxo Prado, all but unknown in the USA.

“You get things like the Delirium story, where I essentially write about madness from five different points of view. I do things like the Destruction story, the Desire story. In the Dream story, I get to tell the first-ever Sandman story, which was really fun, almost a ‘secret origins.’ ”

Gaiman stops the show with a withering sequence called “15 portraits of Despair,” with artist Barron Storey. “I felt that was about as ‘out there’ as anything I’ve ever done, challenging what makes comics, what we can do with words and with pictures.

“That’s the joy of comics. It really is that ‘picture worth a thousand words’ thing. It’s the joy of looking at Will Eisner’s work, where one raised eyebrow, one tiny fraction of a line, says more about what’s going on inside a character’s heart than anything a writer could possibly say.”

Gaiman is a big draw at bookstores. He signed copies of American Gods in June 2001 at the Borders at 5 World Trade Center, which was destroyed three months later.

“They just reopened down on Wall Street, and I went and did a signing there,” Gaiman says quietly. “It felt very appropriate, and I wanted to show my support for that store, and those people.”

“In a sense, it was a homecoming,” says Daryl Mattson, a spokesman for the relocated Borders Wall Street. “His fan base has grown so much over the years. There are people who arrive hours ahead of time at the signings just to get a glimpse of Neil. Endless Nights is going to be huge.”

Asked about his appeal, Amos says Gaiman tries to describe how characters “taste in their mouth.”

“We all have different combinations,” she says. “You can see it when someone walks in a room. Maybe there’s lots of Destiny and very little Delirium. We’re able to play out these different parts of ourselves.”

And Neil Gaiman, the creator of Dream. Is he, in truth, the Sandman?

“Of course,” says Amos. “But he’s all of them. Despair, I think he knows. I think he enjoys Desire sometimes. He enjoys them all.” She laughs. “That’s his big lie.”

* To hear Gaiman talk about his work, visit life.usatoday.com

Neil Gaiman’s Sandman takes place in The Dreaming, where a squabbling family of demigods called “The Endless” carry on a cosmic soap opera worthy of mythological prime time. Some musings:

Dream

“Tell me, Lucifer. What power would Hell have if those imprisoned were not able to dream of Heaven?”

Death

“When the first living thing existed, I was there waiting. When the last living thing dies, my job will be finished. I’ll put the chairs on the tables, turn out the lights and lock the universe behind me as I leave.”

Desire

“Human beings are the creatures of Desire. They twist and bend as I require it. If I thought otherwise, I would crack, like Delirium.”

Despair

“She is in a thousand thousand waiting rooms and empty streets in grey concrete buildings and anonymous hotels. She is on the other side of every mirror.”

Destruction

“Poor Despair. I remember when first she became Desire’s twin.”

Destiny

“Not even Destiny knows where each twist and turn will lead. Even if Destiny could tell you, he will not. Destiny holds his secrets.”

Delirium

“Have you ever spent days and days and days making up flavors of ice cream that no one’s ever eaten before? Green mouse ice cream was the worst. I didn’t like that at all.”
–David Colton

Sep 14

From the DC Comics press release:

September 10th, 2003 – DC Comics is the sponsor of the first-ever graphic novel block at the nation’s premier non-profit literary festival, New York Is Book Country, announced Paul Levitz, DC Comics’ President and Publisher. This year’s 25th anniversary festival will feature a Neil Gaiman special event and a limited edition New York Is Book Country poster illustrated by Jim Lee and Scott Williams as well as all-day signings and giveaways at the DC Comics and MAD Magazine booths…

…New York Is Book Country is featuring a ticketed special event for Neil Gaiman and his new graphic novel THE SANDMAN: ENDLESS NIGHTS on Saturday, September 20 at 11 AM. Gaiman will speak in depth about his creative process and the first SANDMAN graphic novel in seven years. Gaiman will also kick off the graphic novel platform at Sunday’s street fair with a one-hour signing at 11:30 AM on the Graphic Novel Block platform…

…At Sunday’s street fair, the Graphic Novel block is located on Fifth Ave at 49th Street; DC Comics is booth #9 and MAD Magazine is booth #8…

DC Comics and MAD Magazine New York Is Book Country Schedule:

Saturday, September 20, 2003
11:00 AM – 12:00 PM
Equitable Center
787 7th Ave New York, NY 10019
Neil Gaiman discusses THE SANDMAN: ENDLESS NIGHTS
Neil Gaiman won the Hugo Award for his New York Times bestselling novel American Gods, and his bestselling children’s book Coraline has been praised all over the world. But before Neil became a blockbuster prose novelist, he was best known as the creator and author of the DC Comics revolutionary comic book series THE SANDMAN.

Critically acclaimed and award-winning, Neil’s SANDMAN set new standards for comics as literature; the ten volume Sandman library is recognized as one of the medium’s greatest achievements. Join Neil this September as he discusses the return to the Sandman with the graphic novel THE SANDMAN ENDLESS NIGHTS, a collection of seven dark and beautiful stories illustrated by top artists from around the world. Presentation will be followed by a book signing.

Ticketed event. Tickets are available for $20 at http://www.nyisbookcountry.org/.

Sunday, September 21, 2003

11:30-12:30 PM
Graphic Novel Platform
New York Is Book Country festival
NEIL GAIMAN SIGNS VERTIGO’S THE SANDMAN: ENDLESS NIGHTS

Directions:
While I’m not finding an Equitable Center website, Wired New York provides plenty of pictures and visual landmarks, as well as a link to a map.
If you’re between 51st and 52nd Street and 7th Ave and Avenue of the Americas, and you notice a building with a statue of a rabbit and another of an elephant in an outdoor plaza, you’re in the right neighborhood.

If you are going by subway, the closest way to go is to take the 1 or the 9 to the 50th Street stop (the one with the Alice in Wonderland murals on the walls), but as the map indicates there are many other lines in the vicinity.

As for the Street Fair itself, if you are on 5th Ave anywhere from 55th Street going south to 42nd Street on the 21st after 11am, it should be pretty easy to spot – at least if it’s like it has been in previous years. 49th Street and Fifth Avenue is just outside Rockefeller Center; the closest way by subway appears to be to take the B,D,F, or V to 47th-50th Street, but you can check this map for alternative routes.

Sep 14
1602 #2 – Review
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Cody Dolan posted a review of the second issue of 1602 at Silver Bullet Comics.

Sep 14

Unfortunately, Sara O’Leary’s intelligent article from the September 13th Vancouver Sun on authors crossing into the field of children’s literature (“Writers who yield to the inner child”) is not available online; however, Wolves in the Walls plays a large part of her discussion:
…it remains a fact that a lot of literature written for children is dull, dull, dull.

But with all the adults now reading the Harry Potter books, why not regress just a little further and reach for a nice picture book? Or, as Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean term their latest creation for children, The Wolves in the Walls, “a graphic novel for children.” That would seem to be an entirely different sort of creature from a children’s picture book. For one thing the phrasing privileges the text and the images equally; but it also seems to hint at the fact that there is something satisfying here for adults.

The Wolves in the Walls does fantastically innovative things with illustration — mixing painting and digitally-altered photography with drawing. And the story is a satisfying one to read because not only does good triumph over evil, but cleverness triumphs over wickedness, bravery over commonsense and loyalty over pragmatism. How often can you get that sense of catharsis and satisfaction from a “grown-up” book?

Gaiman has gained huge popularity for his recent books for adults, American Gods and Neverwhere, but is equally popular with young readers, as the stunning sales of his young-adult novel Coraline proved last year. In an online interview with newsarama.com, Gaiman explains the significant differences for him between writing for children and writing for adults:

“One of the things I love about children’s fiction is you can simply make things happen…. Writing adult fiction is harder — you’re dealing with suspension of disbelief. And what will leave one person really happy, and feeling that everything you’ve written is utterly true will leave the person next to her shaking his head at the pitiful way you’ve tried to make him believe in junkie leprechauns.”

Maybe the reason these writers are drawn to writing for children is based on their willingness to suspend disbelief, to go along with the joke, to allow themselves to wonder. If wolves really did come out of the walls, what would you do? Good writing is good writing is good writing. And you don’t have to be a child to recognize it.

And oddly, the phrase “junkie leprechauns” only comes up once in a Google search, so I cannot seem to locate the Newsarama article. However, they did report that 1602 was the top comic for August according to Diamond; Newsarama estimates it shipped 168,134 copies.

Sep 14

Gary C.W. Chun reported the following in the September 14th Honolulu Star Bulletin:
It’s time to rediscover the wonder of the Sandman. Neil Gaiman’s tales of the somber Morpheus, Lord of Dreams, and his colorful siblings, helped set new standards for comic books as literature in the early 1990s and afterward. The richly told and illustrated stories of myth and fantasy that have rightly been praised as being among the greatest triumphs in the popular art form.

During its 75-issue run, The Sandman reportedly sold more than a million copies a year. The subsequent 10-volume collections have also sold several million copies in both hardback and paperback, and remain in print due to their popularity.

Gaiman also won several industry and genre award accolades for “The Sandman” and beyond. Throughout his storied career, he’s collaborated on other graphic novels (most notably with his fellow Brit and favorite artist, Dave McKean); created a hit BBC-TV fantasy series, Neverwhere (just released on DVD); written the English-language script for the Japanese anime hit Princess Mononoke; and become a best-selling author with his adult novel American Gods and children’s novel Coraline.

Still, new stories of the Endless family and their world have continued to be published by DC/Vertigo. Other established writers and illustrators have offered their own unique takes on the Sandman and his siblings: the androgynous Desire; her burdened twin sister Despair; the elder seer Destiny; the stout and hearty Destruction; and the youngest, the flighty Delirium, who “smells of sweat, sour wine, late nights and old leather.”

But none have been more popular than the sister Dream is the closest to, Death. The oft-described “pragmatic and perky Goth girl” has had two well-received graphic novels done on her, The High Cost of Living and The Time of Your Life. And even as recently as last month, the whimsical Jill Thompson pulled off a fun, manga-styled version of the character in Death: At Death’s Door.

Gaiman’s previous Sandman project was ’99′s prose book The Dream Hunters illustrated brilliantly by Japanese fantasy artist Yoshitaka Amano.

BUT THAT was then, and now, hitting stores on Wednesday, will be Gaiman’s first comic-book-related project in seven years. The Sandman: Endless Nights is an oversize, hardcover collection of much-anticipated short stories by Gaiman and a select group of better comic book artists from around the world.

“I’ve finally had the chance to write for my international dream team,” Gaiman said in a promotional interview. “I’ve always wanted to write a Desire story for Milo Manara. And Bill Sienkiewicz, whom I’ve known for 15 years, I finally get to write a Delirium story for him. I met Miguelanxo Prado in Spain, and I was astonished by how cool he was. I wrote him the Sandman story, and for Barron Storey, I wrote Despair.

“We’ve got some new people on the team: Frank Quitely is drawing the Destiny story, which comes at the end, and Glenn Fabry gets Destruction. The only artist whom I’ve worked with before was P. Craig Russell, who drew possibly the most beautiful ever Sandman story. We do a Death story that takes place in Venice, and Dave McKean does the amazing cover and book design.”

The book will also include a contributors’ biography section and, more important, a summary of each of the 10 volumes in the Sandman Library.

Gaiman said the “Endless Nights” book makes for a great introduction for new readers, and I agree. In fact, one of the tales, “Heart of a Star,” is set up to be, chronologically, the first Sandman story, and sets up the characters and subsequent mythos nicely.

As evocatively drawn by Prado (who is also an architect), Dream introduces his paramour Lady Killalla of the Glow to his family while conference guests at a friend’s expansive and magnificent palace floating in space. At the end of the eventful visit, Dream meets the young Sol, whose still sleeping Earth will be the site of the Sandman and his siblings’ tales.

“The Sandman: Endless Nights” should both awaken and reawaken new readers and old fans to Gaiman’s haunting genius.

Sep 14
Coraline Reviews
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From the September 14th Orlando Sentinel:

Coraline, by Neil Gaiman (HarperTrophy, $5.99, paperback)
In this deliciously dark tale, a locked door in a huge old house actually leads Coraline to an alternate world that oddly mirrors her own. Parts of it are cool — like a box of toys and great roast chicken. But parts of it are decidedly odd — like the the playful rats and a talking cat. What’s really creepy, though, are her “other” parents with their paper-white skin and shoe-button eyes. And they want her to stay with them — forever. There’s wit in the fine writing, as well as menace, all complemented by Dave McKean’s eerie illustrations.
-Nancy Pate

Nancy Pate also recommends Wolves in the Walls in a fall children’s publishing roundup article from September 12th.

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From the September 13th Globe and Mail:

Coraline, by Neil Gaiman, HarperCollins, 162 pages, $8.99.
This bestselling and multi-award-winning story comes with the suggestion it is for “ages 8 and up.” True enough — I’ve heard countless grown-ups rave about this so-called children’s book. Coraline is a young girl who finds opens a door to find another family like her own, who at first are wonderful, then increasingly sinister. A terrific modern ghost story with age-old themes and qualities
- Alison Gzowski

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