The
Dreaming's First Neil Gaiman Online Chat!This
chat took place on the 30th of October 1998
<Puck>
First, I'd like to thank Neil for joining us, and
Andy at Avon Books for helping to organize this.
<Puck> First
question is from Ehich. Ehich, go ahead.
<Ehich>
On the event horizon chat you talked a bit about
your interest in finding out the relationship
between fairy tales, myths and religion. How do
you think that this is related to philosophy? I
mean; do you think there is any bridge between
Mythos and Logos; litterature and Philosophy? and
if so; how do you think this bridge can be
explored?
<NGaiman>
Ah, right. Let's start with the small ones...
(er, typed with a small amount of irony, that).
Honest answer, I don't know. And as an
addendum... I try not to think about it too much.
Especially when I'm writing. Mostly what I'm
doing is telling stories, which is a strange sort
of occupation -- it's part instinct, part craft,
part skill and part luck. There are places I
sometimes think that it's wisest not to go... or
rather, not to go on purpose. I was fascinated
when Zelazny pointed out that the first books of
Magic followed the traditional Cambellian Heroes
quest pattern, as it was not designed or intended
to go that way: it was just where the story went.
As a final note on that... I'd hate to pretend to
be unconscious of the craft. But when it comes to
the relationship between myth and philosophy,
hell, I'm still trying to figure out why we need
fairy tales.
<Puck> Next
up is Jinx, with a question from Nightwalker, who
couldn't make it.
<NGaiman>
Jinx?
<Puck> Go
ahead Jinx213
<Jinx213>
I've been sent with a message from Trev
(NightWalker) to say thank you for the book and
it's not his fault he's not here but that was all
he wrote
<Puck> Heh,
then ask your question, I guess. :)
<Jinx213>
Well I wanted to know how it was working with my
other favorite thing Henson I mean creative-wise
<NGaiman>
Well, I wish that Jim Henson were still alive...
My first encounter with the Henson family was
with Lisa Henson when she was at Warners, back in
about 91. And she asked back then what I thought
about a Sandman movie, and I said it was a rotten
idea, and she killed it there. She is a good,
wise woman. Then she moved to Columbia pictures,
and these days she runs her own company, Manifest
Films. She's one of the coolest people in
Hollywood. In fact she read the Neverwhere novel
before anyone else did. Jim Henson Pictures are
one of the production entities on NEVERWHERE the
movie. It's them and Denise DiNovi (who made all
Tim Burton's films and just did Practical Magic)
and they've been a joy to deal with. The script
went throught hree drafts, and the third was
because they reread the book and called me up and
said "Look, we've just read the book again
and, well, a lot of the things we asked you to
change in the script... er, we were wrong. They
were better in the book. Can you change them
back?" They are fine people to deal with.
Fingers crossed we all get to make the film.
<NGaiman>
Next?
<Puck> Next
is Dylan
<Dylan>
Hi Neil, I hope you don't mind a Sandman
question. I was just wondering if the story about
how Delight became Delirium will ever be told,
since you have mentioned IIRC that you would tell
it one day But recently all is quiet on the
Sandman front it seems
<NGaiman>
Maybe. I'm having ... well, not an argument, but
a difference of opinion with DC over some stuff
<Dylan>
Oh, and thanks for the drawing from Denmark :)
<Dylan>
Does this have anything to do with the Sandman
movie rights?
<NGaiman>
mainly to do with the Sandman movie, and the
discovery that ANYTHING I do in any Sandman
related material is owned by Warners... who have
shown a remarkable lack of sympathy toward the
material in the latest Jon Peters driven
scripts...
<Dylan>
We had some Halloween style posts about that on
altfan.thingie, yes ... *fear*
<NGaiman>
and I hate the idea of spending 8 months of my
life creating a Delirium story only to have these
twits own all rights to it...
<Dylan>
It just keeps lurking in the back of my head ever
since I read you ran into a room one day stating
that you now knew how Delight became Delirium
Don't even know if that story is true
<NGaiman>
The latest draft of the script... well, the
Sandman's family were Morpheus (lord of Good
Dreams) The Corinthian (Lord of BAD dreams and
the one who had the sandman imprisoned under New
York with Giant Electromagnets)... Love, Anger
Gluttony, pride, Lucifer, and a really unpleasant
Death. I don't think the writer could have read
any of the comics.
<Dylan>
Maybe he just looked at the pictures :)
<NGaiman>
But yes, I know the Delirium story, and would
love to get Jill Thompson to draw it. So we'll
see if anything can be worked out. You're welcome
for the drawing from Denmark by the way.
<Puck> Go
ahead Kranguejo.
<kranguejo>
hello neil, i was just wondering if you feel at
all "intimidated" when writing new
versions of old myths and tales?
<NGaiman>
Not really. I feel like they're handed to us by
the people who went before us, and it's our job
to burnish them, shine them up a bit, play with
them, and hand them over to the people who come
after us. I have occasional arguments with
folklorists, who maintain that no-one ever
created any story, they all just evolved. Which I
think is arrant nonsense. And it doesn't really
matter what you do to the great stories -- as I
said in Sandman 13... they return eventually to
their original forms. Or they evolve into forms
which allow them to survive.
<Puck> Go
ahead ScarletGH. (I've noted scarlet is about 30
seconds lagged - the question may take some time)
<ScarletGh>
Mr. Gaiman, do you have any comic projects
upcoming in the near future? I caught the Cherry
story in Cherry Delux #1 (roommate found it in
New York), so what's next?
<NGaiman>
Well, the Cherry story was written about 5 years
ago -- it was a favour at the time for Kate
Worley, when she lived locally. The next comic is
a 6 page Death thing (it's not exactly a story)
that jeff Jones drew. And there are a couple of
odd projects like a Batman graphic novel with
Simon Bisley that it turns out I was contracted
to do in 1990 called The Night Circus, which, if
Simon still wants to draw it, I've said I'll
finish writing (it was started back then, and
then Simon signed an exclusive deal with tundra,
and the whole thing was forgotten). But right now
most of the upcoming projects are things that
aren't comics.
<ScarletGh>
thanks
<Puck> Go
ahead bafog
<bafog>
neil, do you have a favourite alcholic beverage.
we need to know for our Halloween party
(currently in progress)
<NGaiman>
Gosh. happy Hallowe'en. Is that you Michelle?
<bafog>
Also (since there are three of us here) can we
ask whether you planb to do anything with Brian Froud, ever?
<bafog>
No, but Michelle says hi. :-)
<bafog>
There are four of us here
<NGaiman>
It depends on my mood. (The alcohol question.) I
like a good chablis, and most good red wines; in
my journalist days I used to drink enormous
quantities of scotch adulterated with ginger ale,
cos I found it was something that didn't make me
drunk (I have no idea why not).... and ont he
last tour I started drinking -- I forget the
name, Cosmpolitans or Metropolitans: a sort of
martini with cranberry juice and that weird blue
stuff in it, because they were a wonderful grey
colour and looked like drinks from an SF film.
<Puck> (I
can attest to that - odd, but pleasant flavour)
<NGaiman>
I was at a con earlier this year with Brian (and
Wendy and Toby Froud)... and we got on very well,
and love each other's work. And on the last day
of the con we were sat together signing stuff and
someone came over and asked if we'd work
together... we'd both been too shy to bring it
up, and we both looked very grateful and said
"Like a shot!" so I hope so. Er the
blue stuff is blue curacao.
<Puck> Go
ahead salas2
<salas2>
Hello Neil. I think you once mentioned that
neverwhere was a small hit here in
Germany/Austria. Is this true, and will you
eventually come to visit us? How about a trip to
Vienna, with a signing session at the British
Bookshop?
<NGaiman>
Hi Salas. The BBC told me that the Hoffman and
Campe edition of Neverwhere was a bestseller....
I was invited to Erlangen this year to receive
the MAX & MORTIZ award as best writer of
comics, but I was already committed to be in
Finland. Or Denmark. Or Providence RI. Or
wherever I had to be that weekend. I'm sure that
I'll do a German signing at some point. And I'd
love to visit Vienna -- it's been ages since I've
seen Jonathan Carroll, and he lives there. Be a
good excuse to say hi.
<Puck> Go
ahead Rocky.
<Rocky-NYC>
Neil, a light one about the price of fame. How
are you dealing with the notoriety of becoming
essentially the rock star of the comic world? Did
you realize how *good* The Sandman was while you
were inside the creative process? And now with
the success of Neverwhere you have begun to move
out into other media, does it still surprise you
how successful you have become? One more thing, I
enjoyed your script for B5, having you write one
at Dixon Place. We miss you!
<Puck> Heh.
Let's try to keep it to one question each,
please.
<NGaiman>
Ho Rocky. Are you the one that gave me that CD?
<Rocky-NYC>
yes! did you like?
<NGaiman>
I thought so. Thanks. let's see... mostly I'm not
very good at the fame thing. I cope okay when I'm
prepared for it, but when I'm not it can be
rather a shock. Some weeks ago I went on tour for
a few days with Tori. Charles Vess came down to
see the gig and spend the afternoon, and after
the gig I went out to walk him back to his car...
and several hundred people started screaming
"NEIL! NEIL!" at me. It was bizarre. I
hope I can do another Dixon place reading when
I'm on the road
<Rocky-NYC>
great! please do. and happy birthday early!
<NGaiman>
in January/ Feb for the Avon edition of STARDUST.
And I don't think I'm successful yet: there are
lots of things I still have to do to my
satisfaction. And thanks for the Birthday wishes.
<Puck>
(LennyB & Rise don't appear to be here) Go
ahead CarlosG
<CarlosG>
I'm from Argentina, so it's maybe no wonder I
love Jorge Luis Borges' tales... if Destiny's
garden purposefully resembles "the garden of
forking paths" and his book "the book
of sand", I'd be real happy! what do you
think of Borges, and what influence (if any) has
had his tales on yours?
<NGaiman>
Oddly enough, an hour ago I was on the phone to
an Argentinian journalist explaining the
influence of Borges on Destiny's garden.
<CarlosG>
well I assure you it wasn't me, Neil! Hehe
<NGaiman>
I think Borges was one of the finest storytellers
of the twentieth century; best short story writer
since, mm, Kipling probably. (I go to Argentina
next week.)
<Puck> Go
ahead Steve.
<LurkSteve>
Neil, do you have any plans to work with artist
Alex Ross?
<NGaiman>
Not really, Steve. I love Alec's work - he
grounds everything in such a sense of reality.
(As an aside here I saw an interview with Alex
where he talked about the enormous influence on
him that Dave McKean's work on BLACK ORCHID was.
And when I told Dave this he replied, grimly
"There you go. The one I got wrong. Why
couldn't he have been influenced by one of the
ones I got right?")
*** Puck sets
mode: +v Luna_
* Puck ducks.
<Luna_>
lol.... okay... Hi Neil. ;) I'm perfectly
harmless, I promise! What do you read and/or
watch that makes you laugh? What sets off your
sense of humor? Also, would you please someday
dedicate a book or story to the alt.fan.thingie?
<Luna_>
<---not going to faint this time :)
<NGaiman>
What makes me laugh? (Deep breath) On TV I love
Father Ted, Eddie Izzard, the late lamented Larry
Sanders Show, and watching jery Springer with the
sound turned down and closed captions on... In
terms of what I read -- let's see, PG Wodehouse
still makes me laugh; Stephen Fry turns a lovely
phrase; there's a poet named Wendy Cope whose two
books MAKING COCOA FOR KINGLY AMIS and SERIOUS
CONCERNS are very funny and very sad; and I think
Cold Comfort Farm is probably the funny book I'd
want to take to a desert island. Yes, I'll
certainly dedicate something to altfanthingie.
I'm glad you're all still there. My main mole
went to hong Kong so I hear little about the
goings on there any more, and keep expecting to
hear that it's closed down and you've all moved
on to basket-weaving or collecting old cigarette
cards or cereal boxes or something.
<Puck> Go
ahead MillX
<MillX>
Concerning your works; is there any you wish you
could go back and add something to, or redo
completely? I guess what I'm trying to say is, do
you ever suddenly get an idea and are like
"Oh, man, I wish I'd have put that in
(insert work here)!"?
<NGaiman>
Usually, by the time that you've got sufficient
distance from something to kow why it didn't
work, you're someone else from the person who
wrote it. There's little enough that I've written
that I'm satisfied with. Sometimes it's like
wrestling, and you aren't always on top.
(Currently CORALINE, the book I'm writing, is on
top.) the only thing I've gone back to was a
story i did for Oscar Zarate's book IT'S DARK IN
LONDON, which i did as a ten page comic... and
wasn't satisfied with. And recently, when I was
asked for a short story, I went back and rewrote
it as prose, expanding it and filling it in. The
narrator is the nastiest character I've ever
written. I showed the story to my editor at Avon
and we've discussed one day my doing a whole
novel about him. maybe. We'll see.
<Puck> Go
ahead Ivar_
<Ivar_>
Hi, at first I'd like to say that there are
"Sandpeople" here in Estonia too!
Specially at 4:03 am... :-) My question may be
boring to most of the people here, but as the
historical name of Southern Estonia is Livonia, I
just can't not ask about the character in
"Season Of Mists" - Breschau of
Livonia. Who, why and from? :-)
<NGaiman>
Good lord. Are you mad? But I'm thrilled to know
there are readers in Estonia...
<Ivar_>
I hope not... :-)
<NGaiman>
Let's see. Breschau isn't a historical figure (I
thought it would be unfair to have someone who
was completely forgotten by history, who you
could find in a history book) but Livonia is of
course a real place. More real now than it was
before the break up of the Soviet Union, I
suppose....
<Ivar_>
Yes, at least Estonia is... :-)
<NGaiman>
I've been fond of it ever since I learned that it
was famous for its werewolf cults, where hundreds
of unwilling villagers would be bespelled off for
a couple of years to live as werewolves in the
desert. The idea for the Breschau character
probably came from a seed planted in Jurgen,
<NGaiman>
James Branch Cabell's novel, where he meets his
father, Coth, who is being tortured in Hell,
although not entirely to his satisfaction. The
starting point for Season of Mists was I think a
quote from Teilhard de Chardin, to the effect
that he believed in Hell, because it was church
Dogma that there was a hell, but he did not have
to believe that there was anyone IN hell.
<Puck> Go
ahead MikeyTree.
<MikeyTree>
Are there any current authors whose work you
particularly like or admire? Songwriters often
listen to a song they particularly like and think
"boy, I wish I had written that song".
How about you? What has really inspired you?
<NGaiman>
mikeytree next... let's see... (starting to run
out of steam here, a little. Deep breath, and...)
lots of authors, living and dead, do that 'gosh I
wish I could do that' thing to me. Chesterton.
Carroll. (Jonathan and Lewis.) I love Clive
Barker's short fiction, where he crafts these
Firbankian sentences. joe Orton. In comics, Alan
Moore's work still has the capacity to thrill me,
so does Dave Sim's. e.e. cummings.... Hugh Sykes
Davies. Rudyard Kipling. Cabell again, when he
was on form. Hope Mirrlees (but only in LUD IN
THE MIST).... Gene Wolfe. Geoff Ryman (you must
all go and buy 253, his new novel, for it is a
wonderful thing.) Susanna Clarke. Um... we could
be here all night. There you go.
<Irina>
Hello, Neil! Thanks for coming! I was wondering,
was there a lot of pressure involved in writing
Terry Pratchett's character of Death when you
wrote GOOD OMENS together, since the character is
so popular? Or any other pressures, for that
matter?
<Puck> We're
running out of time, and I'm sure Neil's fingers
are getting tired, so we'll have to cut this
short. We'll continue the queue posted, and then
end it.
<NGaiman>
Well, he wasn't that popular when we wrote Good
Omens,a lthough he was my favourite of terry's
characters, which was why I chose him as the
Death. (I'm allowed to tell people I wrote most
of the four horsemen stuff -- and all the Other
Four Horsemen stuff -- and Terry's allowed to
tell people that the Death of Agnes Nutter is all
his. beyond that people can guess, but may well
be wrong.) There weren't many pressures -- we
weren't even sure that anyone would want to
publish it when it was done. It was really
written, mostly, to amuse each other.
<Irina>
Good way to write, I'd imagine...
<NGaiman>
There are, by the way, good things happening on
the Good Omens movie. Or it looks like there are.
The Samuelsons, who did Wilde and carrington and
Tom and Viv are making it and, if their last
e-mail is to be believed, things are taking shape
in very good ways. And I'll say more the moment
they tell terry and me that the contracts are
signed, sealed and whatevered.
<tyg> Hi
Neil. How's the translation on Princess Monokike
(sp?) coming, as well as the collaboration with
Harlan. Also, what are you and the kids doing for
Halloween? I'm also told I should say "Happy
birthday from everyone"
<Puck> After
tyg will be LoveDream and then sybil, and then
we'll be done.
<NGaiman>
Hi Tom. I finished the mononoke script back in
June or early july, and since then they've been
dubbing it. They've done Claire Danes, Billy
Crudup, Minnie Driver and Gillian Anderson so
far. They send me tapes. It sounds fantastic.
Every now and again I find myself missing
whatever line I wrote, as it will have been
replaced by something that matches the mouth
movements more exactly (sigh)
<tyg>
Oh, and while I have visibility, thanks to Puck
for setting up and running this.
<Puck> Uh
oh... lovedream and sybil aren't here any more!
So on we go to Anubis Go ahead Anubis.
<NGaiman>
but overall I'm really happy with it. (talking
about the kids, Maddy just stuck her head in,
smelling of toothpaste, to tell me it's nearly
time for me to read her THE LION THE WITCH AND
THE WARDROBE) hang on anubis
<Anubis>
Hi Neil! Can you tell us about Coraline?
<NGaiman>
The Harlan collaboration goes well, I think. It's
like a game on ping pong, and I'm currently
waiting for him to ping. As it were. Mike is
having a Hallowe'en party and bonfire; maddy is
going to be 'A witch princess' so she can wear a
princess constume but still have witch make-up.
there... Hi Anubis...
<Anubis>
Happy birthday Neil!
<Puck> We'll
try to squeak in lucy_anne's question next.
<NGaiman>
Coraline is a book I started writing about 7
years ago, when holly was 6 or 7 (she's now
13)...
<Anubis>
Can you tell us about CORALINE?
<NGaiman>
about a little girl who goes through a door that
ought to be bricked up, but isn't, only to find
herself in a flat that looks just like the one
she left, and waiting for her is her Other
Mother... who looks like her normal mother, but
has big black buttons for eyes. It's scary and
strange. I was writing it in my own time... and
then, almost without me noticing, I ran out of
'own time'. All the time was somebody else's, or
all the writing time anyway. And one day I
noticed that Maddy was four, and I thought if I
don't write this story, by the time I get back to
it, SHE'LL be too old for it. So I sent the mss.
to Avon, who gave it to their children's editor.
And they said "this is marvellous. What
happens next?" and I said... "Well, if
you give me a contract, we will both find
out." So they did, enthusiastically. It's a
very strange book to write, and not just because
I put it down for 6 years. i expect it will be
out later this year. In my head it's illustrated
by Edward Gorey. Okay -- Maddy just turned up to
tell me she's "totally ready for bed"
and it's time for The Lion the Witch and the
Wardrobe.
<Puck> I'd
like to thank everyone for coming out and
especially thank Neil for sharing this time with
us. Most of these go an hour, but we've gone 30
minutes over that. We'll let him go read to Maddy
(I love The Lion The Witch and The Wardrobe,
btw). Good night Neil, and thanks!
<NGaiman>
Sorry to anyone who didn't get a question. I'll
be doing ANOTHER of these things on Sunday for
THE DOMINION
<NGaiman>
so maybe you can get in there. And goodnight to
everyone.
<Puck> The
Dominion's web page is www.scifi.com - I'll try to see you all
there! Good night Neil!
End.
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