Biographie de Neil Gaiman
Neil Gaiman is a storyteller. He is the No.1 Sunday Times and New york Times bestselling writer of books, graphic novels, short stories, film and television for all ages, and is known for creating extraordinary worlds beyond imagination. He has been awarded numerous literary honours, including the National Book Award, the Writers for Writers Award, the Hugo, Locus and Bram Stoker awards, and is the first author to have won both the Carnegie and Newbery Medals for the same work.
The Sandman sequence of graphic novels is, according to the BBC, one of the '100 Novels That Shaped Our World'. Many of Neil's books, including Stardust and Coraline, have been made into films ; Neverwhere has been adapted for TV and radio ; American Gods is a major, Emmy-nominated television series and the celebrated National Theatre production of The Ocean at the End of the Lane transferred to the West End in 2020.
In recent years, Neil wrote and was the showrunner for a critically acclaimed television adaptation of Good Omens, the seminal novel he co-authored with the late Sir Terry Pratchett. He has also written two episodes of Doctor Who and appeared in The Simpson as himself In 2017, Neil became a Goodwill Ambassador for UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency. He received a Doctor of Letters from the University of St Andrews, is a Professor in the Arts at Bard College and is a Royal Society of Literature fellow.
Born in the UK, Neil now mostly lives in America, and travels all around the world every year appearing at festivals, events and conventions. He wrote this book especially for you.