Neil Gaiman

Neil Gaiman was born on November 10, 1960, in Portchester, U.K. Neil Gaiman is acknowledged as one of the inventors of contemporary comics and a novelist whose work reaches audiences of all ages and genres. A prolific author of prose, poetry, cinema, journalism, comics, song lyrics, and theatre. According to the Dictionary of Literary Biography, he is among the top 10 living post-modern authors in the world today. Gaiman’s novels are genre works that defy genre conventions. When Gaiman began writing “Coraline” in the early 1990s, gothic horror had fallen out of favor (2002). “Coraline,” which was once deemed too terrifying for children, went on to win the British Science Fiction Prize, the Hugo, the Nebula, the Bram Stoker, and the American Elizabeth Burr/Worzalla awards. “Odd and the Frost Giants,” initially written for World Book Day in 2009, has now received widespread critical praise. Two of his films, “A Short Film About John Bolton” (2002) and Sky Television’s “Statuesque” (2009), starring Bill Nighy and Amanda Palmer, were written and directed by him. The Coraline-inspired animated feature film, directed by Henry Selick and released in early 2009, won the BAFTA for Best Animated Film and received an Academy Award nomination in the same category. He also won the Author Blog Awards in the Twitter category.

Fast Facts

Full Name:

Neil Richard Gaiman

Birth date:

November 10, 1960

Age:

63

Zodiac Sign:

Scorpio

Height:

5' 10.87"

Relationship Status:

Married

Net Worth:

$18 million

Neil's Social Media:

Background

There is little doubt that Neil Gaiman is an Englishman, yet he currently resides near Minneapolis in the U.S. As a youngster, he acquired his passion for literature and read the works of C. S. Lewis, J. R. R. Tolkien, James Branch Cabell, Edgar Allan Poe, Ursula K. Le Guin, Gene Wolfe, and G. K. Chesterton, among others. While working as a journalist in England, Neil Gaiman began writing. His second book is a biography of Douglas Adams. His first book, a history of Duran Duran, took him three months to complete. As Gaiman explains, “I was very, very good at taking a voice that already existed and parodying or pastiching it.” “Violent Cases” was the first of Dave McKean’s numerous partnerships. A D.C. Comics miniseries, “Black Orchid,” was based on this early graphic book. The breakthrough series “Sandman” followed, winning nine Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards and three Harvey Awards in its 75-issue run. For the first time, “Sandman” won a literary award: the World Fantasy Award for Best Short Story in 1991.

For younger readers, Gaiman has written: “M Is for Magic” (2007), “Interworld” (2007), “Crazy Hair” (2009), which was nominated for a Greenaway Award and was illustrated by Dave McKean, and “The Dangerous Alphabet” (2008) with Gris Grimly as the illustrator, “Blueberry Girl” (2009), and “Instructions to a Young Wizard of Oz” (2008). During the early 1990s, when Gaiman began working on “Coraline,” when gothic horror was out of favor. Coraline was originally deemed too scary for children. Yet, it went on to win the British Science Fiction Prize, was initially published for World Book Day in 2009, and has now received widespread critical acclaim. “The Wolves in the Walls” was produced into an opera by the Scottish National Theatre in 2006, while “Coraline” was converted into a musical by Stephin Merritt in 2009.

He was awarded the Newbery Medal in 2009 for “The Graveyard Book” (2008), a gruesome yet charming novel about an orphan raised by ghosts in a graveyard. “The Ocean at the End of the Lane,” a purportedly adult novel published in 2013, is a man’s recollections of his childhood experiences with otherworldly horrors and was voted the Specsavers Book of the Year by U.K. readers. With “The Sandman: Overture” (2013 to 2015), Gaiman returns to the Sandman mythos for the first time in a decade. In this story, the circumstances leading up to the first Sandman tale were investigated by Williams III. This anthology of short stories, titled “Trigger Warning: Short Fictions and Disturbances” (2015), contains several references to and riffs on the work of various writers and artists. In 2017, Gaiman provided a fresh take on Norse mythology by writing “American Gods,” while Bryan Fuller and Michael Green’s lavish version premiered on Starz and was met with great praise. On Amazon in 2019, Gaiman reworked the novel “Good Omens” into a miniseries.

Career timeline

1984
Duran Duran Biography

Neil Gaiman writes his first book “Duran Duran,” which takes him three months to finish writing.

1996
B.B.C. T.V. Series

Gaiman pens the screenplay for the B.B.C's “Neverwhere” television series.

2003
Gaiman Writes for Marvel

Gaiman writes eight issues of Marvel 1602, a limited series published by Marvel Comics.

2008
Booktrust Prize

Gaiman's “The Graveyard Book” wins the Booktrust Prize in the U.K. at the end of 2008.

2019
Amazon Miniseries

“Good Omens” is made into a miniseries and premieres on Amazon in 2019.

2020
Gaiman Receives Honorary Degrees

Gaiman receives honorary degrees of Doctor of Letters from the Pratt Institute and Doctor of the University from the University of South Australia.

Why We Love Neil Gaiman

  1. Neil Gaiman is a Patron of several organizations

    Gaiman supports several good causes and is a patron of several organizations. One of the reasons we admire Gaiman is his generosity and awareness.

  2. Gaiman's work has been honored in the U.K.

    Neil Gaiman has won the Newbery and Carnegie medals for his writing. His books and tales have won Hugos, Nebulas, the World Fantasy Award, Bram Stoker Awards, Locus Awards, British S.F. Awards, British Fantasy Awards, Geffens, and Mythopoeic Awards.

  3. He won the Twitter category

    Gaiman won the Author Blog Awards' Twitter category. He engages with his fans and admirers online. This is yet another indication of how much this author is adored.

5 Surprising Facts

  1. Neil Gaiman won the Newbery Medal

    Gaiman's novel “The Graveyard Book” garnered him the 2009 Newbery Medal (2008), a dark yet lovely tale of an orphan nurtured by spirits.

  2. Freelance reporter

    He was a freelance journalist before writing the 1984 Duran Duran biography.

  3. Learned to read at an early age

    At the tender age of four, Gaiman could decipher the written word.

  4. Gaiman prefers comics

    Gaiman prefers comics to other forms of storytelling.

  5. Gaiman gave a 100-minute talk

    Gaiman gave a 100-minute talk for the Long Now Foundation in 2015 titled "How Stories Last" on storytelling and human culture.

Neil Gaiman FAQs

Which Neil Gaiman book should you read?

Anyone looking to start with Neil Gaiman’s most well-known work will want to start with “American Gods” by Neil Gaiman, which is his finest work. Winning three prizes in one year is rare, yet it happened with this novel.

What was “Coraline” inspired by?

Gaiman was inspired to write “Coraline” by the stories his daughter Holly came up with when she was a kid.

What is Gaiman's writing style?

He prefers to write it by hand in a notebook before moving on to the draft version for the first time. Every day, even if he feels unmotivated, he writes.

Neil Gaiman’s birthday dates

YearDateDay
2024November 10Sunday
2025November 10Monday
2026November 10Tuesday
2027November 10Wednesday
2028November 10Friday

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