Neil Gaiman

The Imaginary Forces of Neil Gaiman

Neil Gaiman profile

Neil Gaiman

Coraline author Neil Gaiman has an ever-growing legion of fans who passionate follow his work. Nick Dawson examines just what makes him so special.

The internet was buzzing when it was announced that Neil Gaiman’s Coraline would be made into a film by stop animation master Henry Selick. But it wasn’t just fan boys online––tween girl sites, literary blogs, music zines, and more were paying attention. That’s because for the past two decades, Gaiman has carved out a niche for himself by swallowing whole genres, media and audiences into his vast creative output. But Gaiman’s talent rests not simply with his versatility, but with ability to bind the fantastic with the real, the bizarre with the banal. As Laura Miller wrote in Salon, Gaiman’s “great gift” is “his ability to blend the archetypal elements of myth and folklore with the grit and comedy of everyday life.” Indeed as others have pointed out, Gaiman’s fantasies are not escapist. Quite the opposite, Gaiman’s uses fantasy to explore the real world around us.

Growing Up In Fantasy

Growing up in a small town of East Grinstead, England, Gaiman admits he read everything he could as a child. “I was one those kids who had books on them,” he told KAOS2000 Magazine. “Before weddings, Bar Mitzvahs, funerals and anything else where you're actually meant to not be reading, my family would frisk me and take the book away. If they didn't find it by this point in the procedure, I would be sitting over in that corner completely unnoticed just reading my book.”

More likely than not the book Gaiman would be reading would be fantasy. He read the masters, like J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis and Ursula K. Le Guin, and marveled at the depth and breadth of their imaginative worlds, as well as the subtle ways their wove complex ideas into their adventures. Gaiman’s taste, however, encompassed work in many similar genres, such as H. P. Lovecraft’s mystic horror tales, or Harlan Ellison’s transgressive sci-fi, or Robert A. Heinlein’s classic pop parable, Stranger in a Strange Land.

First Efforts

Coraline

By his early twenties, Gaiman turned his reading into practice when he started working for the British Fantasy Society in the early ’80s, reviewing existing works and interviewing up-and-coming writers as well as some of his heroes. Some of the contacts Gaiman made during this time included Terry Pratchett, the hugely successful writer of humorous fantasy novels, and comic book writer Alan Moore, the groundbreaking author of Watchmen, V for Vendetta and From Hell. Unfortunately such piecemeal work hardly paid the rent. His natural ability to shift style and focus came in handy as he picked up extra money writing for the behind-the-counter “gentleman’s magazine” Knave, as well as handling contract literary work, like a biography for the ’80s pop group Duran Duran.

By the mid ’80s, Gaiman was getting his own fantasy stories out into the market.

His first piece of fiction, the short story "Featherquest", was published in Imagine Magazine in 1984. In 1986, he began writing comic-book stories, becoming a contributor to the seminal magazine 2000 A.D. (the magazine where Judge Dredd first appeared). And in 1987 he teamed with illustrator Dave McKean on the graphic novel Violent Cases. Using post-modern effects, Gaiman built his novel as multiple stories within other stories, all corroded through by the unreliable narration of childhood memories. In Violent Cases, a young man from Portsmouth (Gaiman’s own childhood town) recounts tales of his dad taking him to an osteopath who, while treating the boy, recalled the experiences he gained working for Al Capone. Gaiman often uses children’s perspective in his books, partially because children can find fantasy in what adults see as ordinary. For Gaiman, fantasy is not a world separate from reality, but a different perspective on it. In his review of Violent Cases, critic John Regehr extols how “Gaiman has a gift for describing something that most of us have forgotten -- how strange the world of adults looks to children.”

READ MORE

Share This:
Our Movies
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, SpyTinker, Tailor, Soldier, SpyNow in Theatres Nationwide
PariahPariahNow Playing in Select Theatres
Being FlynnBeing FlynnIn Select Theatres March 2, 2012
ParaNormanParaNormanComing August 17, 2012
The DebtThe DebtOwn it Today
The Broken TowerThe Broken TowerDigital Download Now Available
News & Views
Adepero Oduye and Sahra Mellesse
Inside Our Movies Poetry in Motion
Gary Oldman | Finding George Smiley
people in film Gary Oldman
More for the Movie Lover
Shop
DVD Gnarr

Digital Download Now Available

Soundtrack Resurrect Dead

Digital Download Now Available

iTunes Pariah Soundtrack

Own It Today