There are many famous Neil Gaiman quotes available all over the internet. So I have put together a collection of top quotes to save your time. I have also added a short bio of Neil Gaiman. Let’s start!
Neil Gaiman: English Author
For a comic lover, The Sandman and novels Stardust or American Gods is a favorite name. Neil Gaiman is the author of these comic books. Not only comics, but he has also written books on temporary fiction, novels, graphic novels, audio theatre, and films.
Early life: He was born on November 10, 1960. He loved reading books from his childhood. As he spent hours reading, it was the cornerstone of his writing career. He started reading from four. He’s spent his childhood in Croydon. He was an attentive student.
Career Challenges: He started his career as a freelance journalist. His writing career began with a biography in 1984. Then he did not have to look back. He established himself in the comic world with the graphic novel Violent Cases (1987). He mostly created stories for DC comics. The storyline of Black orchid, Watchman, Batman-The Dark knight are his best works. His creation ‘The Sandman’ created a new flagship title. It became a DC comics top-selling title. Endless Nights, one of his books, became a New York Times bestseller.
Achievements: He has several awards:
- World Fantasy Award—Short Fiction 1991 A Midsummer Night’s Dream (No Fear Shakespeare)
- Hugo Award for Best Novel (2009)
- The Graveyard Book, American Gods
- John Newbery Medal(2009)The Graveyard Book
- John Newbery Medal (2009) The Graveyard Book
- Carnegie Medal (2010) The Graveyard Book
- Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel (2006)
- Goodreads Choice Awards Best Picture Books (2009) Blueberry Girl
- Hugo Award for Best Short Story (2004) A Study in Emerald
- Ray Bradbury Award (2020) Hard Times
- Audie Audiobook of the Year (2009) The Graveyard Book CD
He got more than 100+ awards in his life. He has his footstep in versatile genres of writing.
Top Neil Gaiman Quotes
“It is a fool’s prerogative to utter truths that no one else will speak.”
“Write your story as it needs to be written. Write it honestly, and tell it as best you can. I’m not sure that there are any other rules. Not ones that matter.”
“Is the chemical aftertaste the reason why people eat hot dogs, or is it some kind of bonus?”
“Rock and roll stars have it much better than writers when they’re on a tour.”
“Continuity isn’t actually something that I ever worry about. You use it where you need to, and you don’t use it where you don’t need to.”
“Life is always going to be stranger than fiction, because fiction has to be convincing, and life doesn’t.”
“I hope that in this year to come, you make mistakes. Because if you are making mistakes, then you are making new things, trying new things, learning, living, pushing yourself, changing yourself, changing your world. You’re doing things you’ve never done before, and more importantly, you’re doing something.”
“The one thing that you have that nobody else has is you. Your voice, your mind, your story, your vision. So write and draw and build and play and dance and live as only you can.”
“A library is a place that is a repository of information and gives every citizen equal access to it. That includes health information. And mental health information. It’s a community space. It’s a place of safety, a haven from the world.”
“Empathy is a tool for building people into groups, for allowing us to function as more than self-obsessed individuals.”
“The imagination is a muscle. If it is not exercised, it atrophies.”
“Things need not have happened to be true. Tales and adventures are the shadow truths that will endure when mere facts are dust and ashes and forgotten.”
“The current total of countries in the world with First Amendments is one. You have guaranteed freedom of speech. Other countries don’t have that.”
“I’ll agonize over sentences. Mostly because you’re trying to create specific effects with sentences, and because there are a number of different voices in the book.”
“When I was a kid, we actually lived in a house that had been divided in two at one point, which meant that one room in our house opened up onto a brick wall. And I was convinced all I had to do was just open it the right way and it wouldn’t be a brick wall. So I’d sidle over to the door and I’d pull it open.”
“The biggest difference between England and America is that England has history, while America has geography.”
“I wish being a beekeeper, which I am, gave you a free pass on the carbon footprint, but it doesn’t.”
“Like some kind of particularly tenacious vampire the short story refuses to die, and seems at this point in time to be a wonderful length for our generation.”
“I believe that stories are incredibly important, possibly in ways we don’t understand, in allowing us to make sense of our lives, in allowing us to escape our lives, in giving us empathy and in creating the world that we live in.”
“Sometimes the best way to learn something is by doing it wrong and looking at what you did.”
“The moment that you feel that just possibly you are walking down the street naked… that’s the moment you may be starting to get it right.”
“You can take for granted that people know more or less what a street, a shop, a beach, a sky, an oak tree look like. Tell them what makes this one different.”
“The world always seems brighter when you’ve just made something that wasn’t there before.”
“Short stories are tiny windows into other worlds and other minds and dreams. They are journeys you can make to the far side of the universe and still be back in time for dinner.”
“I’ve never known anyone who was what he or she seemed; or at least, was only what he or she seemed. People carry worlds within them.”
“And there never was an apple, in Adam’s opinion, that wasn’t worth the trouble you got into for eating it.”
“I was the kind of kid whose parents would drop him off at the local town library on their way to work, and I’d go and work my way through the children’s area.”
“I was one those kids who had books on them. 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.”
“When I was 7, my proudest possession would have been my bookshelf ’cause I had alphabetized all of the books on my bookshelf.”
“I’ve known ambitious people with no aptitude for the thing they did. Most of whom, rather terrifyingly, tended to succeed.”
“Anything that keeps you happy and writing is part of my writing ritual: I like music, so I tend to have it playing in the background. But if I’m interested, I can write in an airport waiting areas.”
“I don’t think I’m mainstream. I think what I am is lots and lots of different cults. And when you get lots and lots of small groups who like you a lot, they add up to a big group without ever actually becoming mainstream.”
“The simplest way to make sure that we raise literate children is to teach them to read, and to show them that reading is a pleasurable activity.”
“I think the short story is a very underrated art form. We know that novels deserve respect.”
“I’m a fairly undisciplined writer.”
“So the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund is out there preserving and fighting for, and sometimes winning and sometimes losing, the fight for First Amendment rights in comics and, more generally, for freedom of speech.”
“I’ve been blogging since February of 2001. When I started blogging, it was a dinosaur blog. It was me and a handful of tyrannosaurs. We’d be writing blog entries like, ‘The tyrannosaurus is getting grumpy.’”
“We all not only could know everything. We do. We just tell ourselves we don’t to make it all bearable.”
“Life – and I don’t suppose I’m the first to make this comparison – is a disease: sexually transmitted, and invariably fatal.”
“American Gods is about 200,000 words long, and I’m sure there are words that are simply in there ’cause I like them. I know I couldn’t justify each and every one of them.”
“As far as I’m concerned, the entire reason for becoming a writer is not having to get up in the morning.”
“Because, if one is writing novels today, concentrating on the beauty of the prose is right up there with concentrating on your semi-colons, for wasted effort.”
“Great, big, serious novels always get awards. If it’s a battle between a great, big, serious novel and a funny novel, the funny novel is doomed.”
“I don’t know if proud is the right word, but I am somebody who does not, on the whole, have the highest regard for my own stuff in that when I look all I get to see are the flaws.”
“I loved writing a book in which, in some ways, it’s very, very classical, and in some ways I’m breaking lots of rules about what you can do and what you can’t do.”
“I started writing when I was about 20, 21 maybe.”
“I think of myself as a very lazy author.”
“I wanted to write something that would be a comedy in the sense of making people feel happier when they finish it than they did when began it.”
“I was always so relieved that anyone wants to publish anything I’ve written.”
“You get ideas from daydreaming. You get ideas from being bored. You get ideas all the time. The only difference between writers and other people is we notice when we’re doing it.”
“I lost some time once. It’s always in the last place you look for it.”
“Have you ever been in love? Horrible isn’t it? It makes you so vulnerable. It opens your chest and it opens up your heart and it means that someone can get inside you and mess you up.”
“There’s a glorious sense of freedom in comedy, just allowing myself to tell jokes, allowing myself to interrupt myself and tell old African folk stories that I made up – or didn’t – and Jamaican stories.”
“With ‘Stardust’, I hope what I was doing is giving 30-year-olds and 40-year-olds and 25-year-olds and 60-year-olds a chance to get the same sense of wonder, the same feeling, the same magic, that they got in reading the classic fairy tales as children.”
“The first author I remember being obsessed by, actually realizing ‘I like the way he writes and I like the way he tells stories,’ was C.S. Lewis and the ‘Narnia’ books.”
“It’s not a bad thing for a writer not to feel at home. Writers – we’re much more comfortable at parties standing in the corner watching everybody else having a good time than we are mingling.”
“This is a work of fiction. All the characters in it, human and otherwise, are imaginary, excepting only certain of the fairy folk, whom it might be unwise to offend by casting doubts on their existence. Or lack thereof.”
“A nice, easy place for freedom of speech to be eroded is comics, because comics are a natural target whenever an election comes up.”
“Also, I’ve already won all the awards.”
“I’m one of those writers who tends to be really good at making outlines and sticking to them. I’m very good at doing that, but I don’t like it. It sort of takes a lot of the fun out.”
“In many ways, it was much, much harder to get the first book contract. The hardest thing probably overall has been learning not to trust people, publicists and so forth, implicitly.”
“Partly because I get such astonishingly nice fans.”
“So I went out and bought myself a copy of the Writer and Artist Yearbook, bought lots of magazines and got on the phone and talked to editors about ideas for stories. Pretty soon I found myself hired to do interviews and articles and went off and did them.”
“It has always been the prerogative of children and half-wits to point out that the emperor has no clothes. But the half-wit remains a half-wit, and the emperor remains an emperor.”
“I started out writing much more science fictiony stuff and writing about science fiction.”
“Make good art.”
“The short story is still like the novel’s wayward younger brother, we know that it’s not respectable – but I think that can also add to the glory of it.”
“I don’t think there is such a thing as a bad book for children.”
“A good writer should be able to write comedic work that made you laugh, and scary stuff that made you scared, and fantasy or science fiction that imbued you with a sense of wonder, and mainstream journalism that gave you clear and concise information in a way that you wanted it.”
“In the case of ‘Ocean at the End of the Lane,’ it’s a book about helplessness. It’s a book about family, it’s a book about being 7 in a world of people who are bigger than you, and more dangerous, and stepping into territory that you don’t entirely understand.”
“The joy of doing ‘Sandman’ was doing a comic and telling people, ‘No, it has an end,’ at a time when nobody thought you could actually get to the end and stop doing a comic that people were still buying just because you’d finished.”
“My stuff gets published in some countries as fiction and in some countries as fantasy. It’s just where they think it will do best in the bookshops.”
“Every now and then I’ll do little things, a short story or something, that doesn’t have any fantastical elements, but mostly I like the power of playing God and I like to imagine things.”
“My guiltiest pleasure is Harry Stephen Keeler. He may have been the greatest bad writer America has ever produced. Or perhaps the worst great writer. I do not know. There are few faults you can accuse him of that he is not guilty of. But I love him.”
“I don’t know if any single book made me want to write. C.S. Lewis was the first writer to make me aware that somebody was writing the book I was reading – these wonderful parenthetical asides to the reader.”
“I like reading. I prefer not reading on my computer, because that makes whatever I am reading feel like work. I do not mind reading on my iPad.”
“As a teenager I wrote to R.A. Lafferty. And he responded, too, with letters that were like R.A. Lafferty short stories, filled with elliptical answers to straight questions and simple answers to complicated ones.”
“I was a scholarship minor public school day boy at Ardingly College and later Whitgift School. Then, straight into work as a journalist – a wonderful thing for a writer.”
“One thing that I get from a lot of people with ‘American Gods’ is people saying that they would love some kind of glossary with a list of all the Gods and who they are, so that they can look them up.”
“I’m English, and ‘Doctor Who’ was this thing that I’ve been watching since I was three.”
“It’s a wonderful thing, as a writer, to be given parameters and walls and barriers.”
“’Doctor Who’ was the first mythology that I learned, before ever I ran into Greek or Roman or Egyptian mythologies.”
“When you’re starting off as a young writer, you look at all the stuff that’s gone before and the stuff that’s influenced you, and you reach the ladle of your imagination into this bubbling stew pot of all of this stuff, and you pour it out. And that’s where you start from.”
“You know, it’s weird being interviewed! Because the weird thing about being interviewed is you get asked these questions that you’ve never thought about, and you find out what you think as you answer.”
“What I’d love to do is every now and then go, ‘Oh my God, I’ve got this amazing idea for ‘Doctor Who.’”
“I had started to feel that somewhere in the second half of the 20th century, the idea of page-turning as a good thing had been lost. You were getting books that were the equivalent of absolutely beautifully prepared dishes of food that didn’t taste like anything much.”
“I’m never, I hope, stupid enough to believe that Twitter or blogging or any of this stuff is a substitute for actually doing the work or writing a book.”
“My theory on genre is that while there are people out there who believe that genre tells people what to read, actually I believe that genre exists as a marketing tool to tell you what to avoid.”
“When I started out, there were a lot of things I knew I couldn’t do, and a lot of things I only found out I couldn’t do by going and doing it. And no-one was watching, and nobody cared.”
“I kept starting ‘Anansi Boys’ as a movie and stopping, and eventually wrote the novel and was happy.”
“It’s a given that we exist in a world where we have to live in continuity every day; no one is immune to that, in life or romance novels. By the same token, it’s not something I find terribly important.”
“The great thing about Batman and Superman, in truth, is that they are literally transcendent. They are better than most of the stories they are in.”
“’American Gods’ was designed to be, if not open-ended, at least a trilogy kind of shape, so there’s definitely one more book, probably another couple of books there to get written.”
“For me, the glory of my first 25 years as a writer was I could put things off as long as I wanted.”
“Oh, tweeting prolifically is the most easy thing in the world. Tweeting prolifically is like somebody saying, ‘Boy, you’re a really good walker around,’ you know. It’s not really hard.”
“When I was young, I was reading anything and anything I could lay my hands on. I was a veracious-to-the-point-of-insane reader.”
“I started blogging a decade ago because I like blogging. Writing’s a kind of lonely thing to do, and I liked the idea of demystifying the process because I loved it as a kid and teenager and as somebody who wanted desperately to write.”
“As a kid, I would get my parents to drop me off at my local library on their way to work during the summer holidays, and I would walk home at night. For several years, I read the children’s library until I finished the children’s library. Then I moved into the adult library and slowly worked my way through them.”
“As an author, I’ve never forgotten how to daydream.”
“I suspect there are two kinds of novelists. Those who have a point of view and have something to say and then write a novel in order to say that thing, and those of us who write the book in order to find out what we think about that thing.”
“Going off the grid is always good for me. It’s the way that I’ve started books and finished books and gotten myself out of deadline dooms and things.”
“I want to write a play. I’d like to do an original musical. I should probably put together a poetry collection.”
“The only people I ever get irritated with are the ones who announce, using my Twitter handle, that they are no longer following me and why.”
I hope this list of Neil Gaiman quotes was helpful. Let us know if you have any quote requirements. Till then, happy reading!
Also Read: Top 103 Gertrude Stein Quotes
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