Neil Gaiman bibliography

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Neil Gaiman bibliography

This is a list of works by Neil Gaiman.

Quick Facts Active period, Publishers ...
Neil Gaiman bibliography
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Neil Gaiman autographing a copy of Coraline, National Book Fair, Washington, D.C., 2005
Active period1984–present
Publishers
DC Comics1988–present
Vertigo1993–2015
Marvel Comics1994–present
William Morrow1998–present
HarperCollins2002–present
Bloomsbury2008–present
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Nonfiction

  • Duran Duran: The First Four Years of the Fab Five (biography of the pop group Duran Duran; 126 pages, Proteus Publishing, 1984, ISBN 0-86276-259-6)
  • Ghastly Beyond Belief (bad quotes from sci-fi novels, movies, and advertisements edited by Gaiman and Kim Newman; 352 pages, Arrow, 1985, ISBN 0-09-936830-7)
  • Don't Panic (biography of Douglas Adams chronicling the history of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and related works; 182 pages, Titan, 1988, ISBN 0-671-66426-3)
  • Adventures in the Dream Trade (collection of Gaiman-written introductions and essays as well as the American Gods weblog; 288 pages, NESFA Press, 2002, ISBN 1-886778-37-X)
  • Kirby: King of Comics (introduction only; 244 pages, Abrams Books, 2002, ISBN 978-0-8109-9447-8)
  • Make Good Art (text version of the commencement speech given by Gaiman on 17 May 2012 at the UArts; 80 pages, William Morrow and Company, 2013, ISBN 0-06-226676-4)
  • The View from the Cheap Seats (collection of Gaiman-written introductions, essays and articles; 544 pages, William Morrow and Company, 2016, ISBN 0-06-226226-2)
  • The Neil Gaiman Coloring Book (2017)
  • Art Matters: Because Your Imagination Can Change the World (2018)

Comics

Summarize
Perspective

UK publishers

Titles published by various British publishers include:

DC Comics

Titles published by DC Comics include:

Vertigo

Titles published by DC Comics' Vertigo imprint include:

Spin-offs by other authors

The Books of Magic

Titles starring characters introduced or re-introduced by Gaiman in The Books of Magic (most notably Timothy Hunter) include:

  • Mister E #1–4 (written by K. W. Jeter, drawn by John K. Snyder III, 1991)
  • Vertigo Visions: Doctor Occult (written by Dave Louapre, drawn by Dan Sweetman, one-shot, 1994)
  • Arcana: The Books of Magic Annual (written by John Ney Rieber, drawn by Peter Gross, 1994)
  • The Books of Magic vol. 2 #1–75, Annual #1–3 (with Gaiman credited as "consultant" in the first 50 issues;[2] written by John Ney Rieber (#1–50 and Annual #1–2), Peter Gross (#60–62, 64–75 and Annual #3) and Peter Hogan (#63), drawn by Gary Amaro (#1–4, 9–14, 63), Peter Gross (#4, 6–8, 18–19, 21–30, 39–41, 43–62, 64–71, 73–75), Peter Snejbjerg (#5, 15–17, 30–38), John Ridgway (#20 and 72), Mark Buckingham (Annual #1), Jill Thompson (#42), Jamie Tolagson (Annual #2), Linda Medley (#55), Kelley Jones (Annual #3) and Michael Lark (#68), 1994–2000)
    • During the series' run, several short stories have appeared in various anthology titles published by Vertigo:
      • Vertigo Rave: "The Lot" (written by John Ney Rieber, drawn by Gary Amaro, one-shot, 1994)
      • Vertigo: Winter's Edge:
        • "Thanks for Nothing" (written by John Ney Rieber, drawn by Steve Parkhouse, in #1, 1998)
        • "We Three Things" (written by Peter Gross, drawn by Jason Lutes, in #2, 1999)
        • "Waiting for Good Dough" (written by Peter Gross, drawn by Michael Lark, in #3, 2000)
    • The success of the ongoing Books of Magic series led to a number of spin-off limited series:
      • The Books of Faerie:
        • The Books of Faerie #1–4 (written by Bronwyn Carlton, drawn by Peter Gross, 1997)
        • The Books of Faerie: Auberon's Tale #1–4 (written by Bronwyn Carlton, drawn by Peter Gross, 1998)
        • The Books of Magic vol. 2 #57–59, 62: "Tales form the Books of Faerie" (written by Bronwyn Carlton, drawn by Ryan Kelly (#57), Hermann Mejia (#58), Andrew Chu (#59) and Linda Medley (#62), co-feature, 1999)
        • The Books of Faerie: Molly's Story #1–4 (written by John Ney Rieber, drawn by Hermann Mejia and Ryan Kelly (#4), 1999)
      • Hellblazer/The Books of Magic #1–2 (co-written by John Ney Rieber and Paul Jenkins, art by Paul Lee, 1997–1998)
      • The Trenchcoat Brigade #1–4 (written by John Ney Rieber, drawn by John Ridgway, 1999)
  • Names of Magic #1–5 (written by Dylan Horrocks, drawn by Richard Case, 1999)
  • Hunter: The Age of Magic #1–25 (written by Dylan Horrocks, drawn by Richard Case and Chris McLoughlin (#7 and 13–14), 2001–2003)
  • Books of Magick: Life During Wartime #1–15 (written by Si Spencer from a story by Gaiman and Spencer, drawn by Dean Ormston and Duncan Fegredo (#6 and 10), 2004–2006)
The Sandman

Titles starring characters and/or based on concepts introduced or re-introduced by Gaiman during his run on The Sandman include:

  • Sandman Mystery Theatre #1–70, Annual #1 (written by Matt Wagner (#1–12) and Steven T. Seagle (#61–70) with issues #13–60 and Annual #1 co-written by both Wagner and Seagle, drawn by Guy Davis (#1–4, Annual #1, 13–20, 24–32, 37–44, 49–56, 61–70), John Watkiss (#5–8), R. G. Taylor (#9–12), Vince Locke (#21–24), Warren Pleece (#33–36), Matthew Dow Smith (#45–48) and Michael Lark (#57–60), 1993–1999) accompanied by one crossover with The Sandman, two short stories in the Vertigo Christmas anthology title and a sequel limited series:
    • Sandman Midnight Theatre (script by Gaiman from a plot by Gaiman and Matt Wagner, art by Teddy Kristiansen, one-shot, 1995)
    • Vertigo: Winter's Edge (anthology):
      • "Spirit of the Season" (co-written by Matt Wagner and Steven T. Seagle, drawn by John K. Snyder III, in #1, 1998)
      • "In the City of Dreams" (written by Steven T. Seagle, drawn by Paul Rivoche, in #2, 1999)
    • Sandman Mystery Theatre: Sleep of Reason #1–5 (written by John Ney Rieber, drawn by Eric Nguyen, 2007)
  • Witchcraft (written by James Robinson):
    • Witchcraft #1–3 (drawn by Teddy Kristiansen, Peter Snejbjerg (#1), Michael Zulli (#2) and Steve Yeowell (#3), 1994)
    • Witchcraft: La Terreur #1–3 (drawn by Michael Zulli, 1998)
  • The Dreaming #1–60 and The Dreaming Special (with Gaiman credited as "consultant";[3] written by Terry LaBan (#1–3, 13–14), Peter Hogan (#4–7, 16, 25, 31–32), Alisa Kwitney (#8), Bryan Talbot (#9–12), Jeff Nicholson (#15), Caitlín R. Kiernan (#17–19, 22–24, 26–54, 56–60), Al Davison (#20–21), Len Wein (Special) and Bill Willingham (#55), drawn by Peter Snejbjerg (#1–3, 27, 29), Steve Parkhouse (#4–7, 32), Michael Zulli (#8), Dave Taylor (#9), Peter Doherty (#10–12, 17–19), Jill Thompson (#13–14), Jeff Nicholson (#15), Gary Amaro (#16 and 31), D'Israeli (#19), Al Davison (#20–21, 41), Paul Lee (#22–24, 31), Chris Weston (#25), Duncan Fegredo (#26 and 50), Brian Apthorp (Special), Jamie Tolagson (#28 and 30), Shawn McManus (#31, 39, 50), Scott Hampton (#31), John Totleben (#33 and 50), Marc Hempel (#34 and 50), Rebecca Guay (#35), Christian Højgaard (#36–40, 42, 44–49, 51–54, 57–60), Bo Hampton (#43), Charles Vess (#47), Steve Leialoha (#56), 1996–2001) accompanied by three short stories in the Vertigo Christmas anthology title:
    • Vertigo: Winter's Edge (anthology):
      • "Deck the Halls" (co-written by Caitlín R. Kiernan and Peter Hogan, drawn by Duncan Fegredo, in #1, 1998)
      • "Marble Halls" (written by Caitlín R. Kiernan, drawn by Teddy Kristiansen, in #2, 1999)
      • "Borealis" (written by Caitlín R. Kiernan, drawn by Shawn McManus, in #3, 2000)
    • With issue #22, The Dreaming abandoned its initial anthology format in favor of a unified storyline by a single writer.[4]
    • As a result, Vertigo launched The Sandman Presents, a separate label for short-form spin-off works produced by various creators:
  • Destiny: A Chronicle of Deaths Foretold #1–3 (written by Alisa Kwitney, drawn by Kent Williams, Michael Zulli (#1), Scott Hampton (#2) and Rebecca Guay (#3), 1997)
  • The Girl Who Would Be Death #1–4 (with Gaiman credited as "consultant"; written by Caitlín R. Kiernan, drawn by Dean Ormston and Sean Phillips (#3), 1998–1999)
  • Lucifer #1–75 and the Lucifer: Nirvana one-shot (written by Mike Carey, drawn by Chris Weston (#1–3), Warren Pleece (#4), Peter Gross with Ryan Kelly (#5–8, 10–13, 15–19, 21–23, 25–27, 29–32, 34–40, 42–44, 46–49, 51–54, 56–57, 59–61, 63–65, 67–69, 71–72, 74–75), Dean Ormston (#9, 12, 14, 18, 20, 24, 28, 33, 36–40, 73), Jon J Muth (the Nirvana one-shot), David Hahn (#41), Ted Naifeh (#45), P. Craig Russell (#50), Marc Hempel (#55), Ronald Wimberly (#58), Colleen Doran (#62), Michael William Kaluta (#66) and Zander Cannon (#70), 2000–2006)
  • The Little Endless Storybook (series of picture books starring the Endless reimagined as toddlers, written and drawn by Jill Thompson):
    • The Little Endless Storybook (2001)
    • Delirium's Party: A Little Endless Storybook (2011)
  • Lady Constantine #1–4 (written by Andy Diggle, drawn by Goran Sudžuka, 2003)
  • Manga-style adaptations of Season of Mists (written and drawn by Jill Thompson):
  • God Save the Queen (written by Mike Carey, drawn by John Bolton, graphic novel, 2007)
  • Dead Boy Detectives #1–12 (written by Toby Litt, drawn by Mark Buckingham (#1–4, 7–10), Russ Braun (#5–6), Ryan Kelly (#11) and Victor Santos with Emma Vieceli (#12), 2014–2015)
    • The series was preceded by a short serial titled "Run Ragged" (written by Toby Litt, drawn by Victor Santos), published in Ghosts + Time Warp + The Witching Hour anthology one-shots (2012–2013)
    • Litt also wrote a story starring the Dead Boy Detectives (drawn by Peter Gross) for Free Country: A Tale of the Children's Crusade, the collected edition of The Children's Crusade 2-issue series (1993–1994)
  • Lucifer vol. 2 #1–19 (written by Holly Black (#1–13) and Richard Kadrey (#13–19), drawn by Lee Garbett (#1–5, 7–12, 14–19), Stephanie Hans (#6) and Marco Rudy with Ben Templesmith (#13), 2016–2017)

In 2018, Vertigo launched The Sandman Universe sub-imprint with an eponymous one-shot consisting of several segments produced by various creators from a story by Gaiman:

The one-shot was followed by four ongoing series produced mostly by the creative teams behind the short stories:

  • The Dreaming vol. 2 #1–20 (written by Simon Spurrier, drawn by Bilquis Evely, Abigail Larson (#7–8), Dani (#13) and Matías Bergara (#14) and Marguerite Sauvage (#16 and 18), 2018–2020)
  • House of Whispers #1–22 (written by Nalo Hopkinson with issues #5–20 co-written by Hopkinson and Dan Watters, drawn by Dominike Stanton and Matthew Dow Smith (#13–14), 2018–2020)
    • The series was canceled, and the last two issues ended up being released only in digital format.[7]
    • Issues #21–22 were published in print as part of the House of Whispers: Watching the Watchers collection.[8]
  • Lucifer vol. 3 #1–18 (written by Dan Watters, drawn by Max Fiumara (#1–8, 10, 12, 16, 18), Sebastián Fiumara (#1–8, 11, 13, 17), Kelley Jones (#9), Leomacs (#10–11) and Fernando Blanco (#14–15), 2018–2020)
    • The series has been solicited through issue #21[9][10][11] but these remaining issues ended up being cancelled, in part due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[12]
    • Stories intended for publication in later issues were eventually released in the Lucifer: The Wild Hunt (#13–19) and Lucifer: The Devil at Heart (#20–24) collected editions.[13]
  • Books of Magic #1–23 (written by Kat Howard (#1–18) and David Barnett (#19–23), drawn by Tom Fowler, Brian Churilla (#7–12) and Craig Taillefer (#12–16, 18–23), 2018–2020)

After the dissolution of Vertigo, new and existing The Sandman Universe titles continued publication under DC Black Label:

Marvel Comics

Titles published by Marvel and its various imprints include:

Other US publishers

Titles published by various American publishers include:

Novels and children's books

Summarize
Perspective

Novels

The following table can be sorted to show Gaiman's novels in chronological order, or arranged alphabetically by title, or by co-author, or by series:

More information Year, Title ...
YearTitleCo-author(s)SeriesPublisherISBNNotes and awards
1990 Good Omens Terry Pratchett Workman Publishing 0-89480-853-2
(Hardcover, 354 pages)
  • Locus and World Fantasy nominees for Best Novel, 1991[16]
1996 Neverwhere BBC Books 0-7472-6668-9
(Hardcover, 287 pages)
  • Based on Gaiman's script for the BBC miniseries.
1999 Stardust William Morrow and Company 0-380-97728-1
(Hardcover, 256 pages)
  • Locus Fantasy Award nominee, 1999[17]
2001 American Gods William Morrow and Company 0-380-97365-0
(Hardcover, 480 pages)
  • Hugo, Nebula, Bram Stoker and Locus Awards winner, 2002;[18]
  • British Science Fiction Award nominee, 2001;[19]
  • British and World Fantasy Award nominee, 2002.[18]
2005 Anansi Boys HarperCollins 0-06-051518-X
(Hardcover, 352 pages)
  • British and Locus Fantasy Awards winner, 2006[20]
2007 InterWorld Michael Reaves InterWorld HarperCollins 0-06-123896-1
(Hardcover, 256 pages)
2008 The Graveyard Book HarperCollins 0-06-053092-8
(Hardcover, 320 pages)
  • 2009 Hugo Awards winner, Newbery Medal
  • British Fantasy and World Fantasy Awards nominee, 2009[21]
  • 2010 Carnegie medal[22]
2013 The Silver Dream Michael Reaves, Mallory Reaves InterWorld HarperCollins 0-06-206796-6
(Hardcover, 288 pages)
2013 The Ocean at the End of the Lane William Morrow and Company 0-06-225565-7
(Hardcover, 192 pages)
2015 Eternity's Wheel Michael Reaves, Mallory Reaves InterWorld HarperCollins 0-06-206799-0
(Hardcover, 288 pages)
2017 Norse Mythology Bloomsbury Publishing 0-393-60909-X
(Hardcover, 304 pages)
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Illustrated books

The following table can be sorted to show Gaiman's illustrated books in chronological order, or arranged alphabetically by title, or by illustrator, or by series:

More information Year, Title ...
YearTitleIllustratorSeriesPublisherISBNNotes
1997 The Day I Swapped My Dad for Two Goldfish Dave McKean White Wolf Publishing 1-56504-199-2
(Hardcover, 64 pages)
2002 Coraline Dave McKean HarperCollins 0-380-97778-8
(Hardcover, 176 pages)
  • 2003 Hugo, Stoker, Locus and British SF Award winner
  • 2004 Nebula Award winner
2002 A Walking Tour of the Shambles Randy Broecker American Fantasy Press 0-9610352-6-9
(Softcover, 56 pages)
Fictional tour guide co-written by Gaiman and Gene Wolfe
2003 The Wolves in the Walls Dave McKean HarperCollins 0-380-97827-X
(Hardcover, 56 pages)
2005 Melinda Dagmara Matuszak Hill House 0-931771-04-8
(Softcover, 64 pages)
2005 MirrorMask Dave McKean HarperCollins 0-06-082109-4
(Hardcover, 80 pages)
Based on the eponymous film written by Gaiman and directed by McKean
2008 Odd and the Frost Giants Brett Helquist Bloomsbury Publishing 0-7475-9538-0
(Softcover, 112 pages)
2008 The Dangerous Alphabet Gris Grimly HarperCollins 0-06-078333-8
(Softcover, 32 pages)
2009 Blueberry Girl Charles Vess HarperCollins 0-06-083808-6
(Hardcover, 32 pages)
2009 Crazy Hair Dave McKean HarperCollins 0-06-057908-0
(Hardcover, 40 pages)
2010 Instructions Charles Vess HarperCollins 0-06-196030-6
(Hardcover, 40 pages)
2013 Chu's Day Adam Rex Chu HarperCollins 0-06-201781-0
(Hardcover, 32 pages)
2013 Fortunately, the Milk Skottie Young (US)
Chris Riddell (UK)
Boulet (France)
HarperCollins (US)
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
Au diable vauvert (France)
0-06-222407-7
(US, hardcover, 128 pages)
1-4088-4176-2
(UK, hardcover, 160 pages)
2-84626-968-8
(France, softcover, 130 pages)
2014 Chu's First Day of School Adam Rex Chu HarperCollins 0-06-222397-6
(Hardcover, 32 pages)
2014 Hansel and Gretel Lorenzo Mattotti Bloomsbury Publishing 1-4088-6198-4
(Hardcover, 56 pages)
2014 The Sleeper and the Spindle Chris Riddell Bloomsbury Publishing 1-4088-5964-5
(Hardcover, 72 pages)
2016 Chu's Day at the Beach Adam Rex Chu HarperFestival 0-06-238124-5
(Hardcover, 36 pages)
2017 Cinnamon Divya Srinivasan HarperCollins 0-06-239961-6
(Hardcover, 40 pages)
2020 Pirate Stew Chris Riddell Bloomsbury Publishing 1-5266-1472-3
(Hardcover, 48 pages)
2021 The Case of Death and Honey Gary Gianni Arete Editions {No ISBN}
(Hardcover, 84 pages)
* 2012 Locus Award Winner [26]
2023 What You Need To Be Warm Cover Illustration by Oliver Jeffers.
Interior illustrations by Chris Riddell, Benji Davies, Yuliya Gwilym, Nadine Kaadan, Daniel Egnéus, Pam Smy, Petr Horácek, Beth Suzanna, Bagram Ibatoulline, Marie-Alice Harel, Majid Adin and Richard Jones.
Bloomsbury Publishing 978-1-5266-6061-9
(Hardcover, 32 pages)
Fundraising book written as an illustrated poem, in Gaiman's role as a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador.
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Adapted to comics

Short fiction and poetry

Collected

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Uncollected

More information Year, Title ...
YearTitleSourcePublisherNotes
1985 "Manuscript Found in a Milkbottle" Knave vol. 17 #8 Knave Publishing Published with illustrations by Nigel Hills
1987 "I Cthulhu: or What's a Tentacle-Faced Thing Like Me
Doing in a Sunken City Like This (Latitude 47°9'S, Longitude 126°43'W)?"
Dagon #16 Dagon Press
1990 "Culprits, or Where are They Now?" Interzone #40 Humorous article co-written by Gaiman with Kim Newman and Eugene Byrne
1991 "Now we are Sick" Now we are Sick DreamHaven ISBN 0-9630944-1-6
1992 "The Lady and/or the Tiger: I (prologue)"
"The Lady and/or the Tiger: II (epilogue)"
The Weerde, Book One Roc ISBN 0-14-014562-1
Bookend stories co-written by Gaiman and Roz Kaveney
1995 "Cinnamon" Overstreet's Fan #4 Gemstone Publishing Published with a picture of a sculpture by Lisa Snelling
1999 "Wall: A Prologue"
"Septimus' Triolet"
"Song of the Little Hairy Man"
Wall: A Prologue (chapbook) Green Man Press Published as part of the A Fall of Stardust project:
two chapbooks and a portfolio of art plates by various artists
2000 "Boys and Girls Together" Black Heart, Ivory Bones Avon ISBN 0-380-78623-0
2003 "The Scorpio Boys in the City of Lux Sing Their Strange Songs" Alan Moore: Portrait of an Extraordinary Gentleman Abiogenisis Press ISBN 0-946790-06-X
2006 "Poem (I am continually disappointed by nudity)" spiderwords.com Rain Graves
2009 "The Shadow" Half-Minute Horrors HarperCollins ISBN 0-06-183379-7
2010 "The [Backspace] Merchants" Gateways Tor Books ISBN 0-7653-2662-0
2011 "Bloody Sunrise" Teeth HarperCollins ISBN 0-06-193515-8
2011 "The Song of the Song" Welcome to Bordertown Random House ISBN 0-375-86705-8
2013 "House" Tor.com Tor Books Published with a portrait of Gaiman by Allen Williams
Reprinted in the poetry collection, Words of Fire (2022)
2014 "How the Marquis Got His Coat Back" Rogues Bantam ISBN 0-345-53726-2
Published as a standalone volume:
How the Marquis Got His Coat Back (Headline, 2015, ISBN 1-4722-3532-0)
2014 "Kissing Song" Uncanny Magazine #1
2016 "The Long Run" Uncanny Magazine #13 Reprinted in The Best of Uncanny (2019) ISBN 978-1-59606-918-3
and the poetry collection, Words of Fire (2022)
2017 "Monkey and the Lady"
"The Train of Death"
The Weight of Words Subterranean Press ISBN 1-59606-825-6
Published with illustrations by Dave McKean
2018 "Hate for Sale" It Occurs to Me That I am America Touchstone ISBN 1-5011-7960-8
2019 "Liverpool Street" The Moth Presents: Occasional Magic Serpent's Tail ISBN 1-78125-666-7
2020 "One Virtue, and a Thousand Crimes" Doctor Who: Adventures in Lockdown BBC Books ISBN 1-78594-706-0
Published with illustrations by Chris Riddell
2021 "Fish Out of Water" Uncanny Magazine #38
2021 The Movers of the Stones Poem
2023 The Hole Thing Uncanny Magazine Jan./Feb. 2023 Poem
2023 Ryland's Story Short Story
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Adapted to comics

Anthologies edited

More information Year, Title ...
YearTitleCo-editor(s)SeriesPublisherISBN
1991 Now we are Sick Stephen Jones DreamHaven 0-9630944-1-6
(Hardcover, 93 pages)
1991 Temps Alex Stewart Temps Roc 0-14-014560-5
(Softcover, 368 pages)
1992 Eurotemps Alex Stewart Temps Roc 0-14-016713-7
(Softcover, 368 pages)
1992 Villains! Mary Gentle, Roz Kaveney Temps Roc 0-14-014561-3
(Softcover, 320 pages)
1992 The Weerde, Book One Mary Gentle, Roz Kaveney The Weerde Roc 0-14-014562-1
(Softcover, 352 pages)
1993 The Weerde, Book Two Mary Gentle, Roz Kaveney The Weerde Roc 0-14-016714-5
(Softcover, 400 pages)
1996 The Sandman: Book of Dreams Ed Kramer Harper Prism 0-06-100833-8
(Hardcover, 293 pages)
2010 The Best American Comics 2010 Jessica Abel, Matt Madden Houghton Mifflin 0-547-24177-1
(Hardcover, 352 pages)
2010 Stories: All-New Tales Al Sarrantonio Headline 0-7553-3660-7
(Hardcover, 384 pages)
2013 Unnatural Creatures Maria Dahvana Headley HarperCollins 0-06-223629-6
(Hardcover, 480 pages)
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Audio and video recordings

Screen work

Television

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Credited as Notes Ref.
Writer Director Executive producer Role
1996 Neverwhere Yes No No No Creator; writer (6 episodes)
1998 Babylon 5 Yes No No No Writer: "Day of the Dead"
2009 10 Minute Tales Yes Yes No No Writer and director: "Statuesque"
2010 Arthur No No No Yes As himself. Episode: "Falafelosophy"
2011–2013 Doctor Who Yes No No No Writer:
"The Doctor's Wife"
"Nightmare in Silver"
"Rain Gods" (DVD-exclusive mini-episode)
[35][36]
2011 The Simpsons No No No Yes As himself. Episode: "The Book Job" [37]
2016 Neil Gaiman's Likely Stories No No Yes Yes Based on four of Gaiman's short stories.
As himself
[38]
2017 American Gods Yes No Yes No Based on Gaiman's novel American Gods [39]
2018 The Big Bang Theory No No No Yes As himself. Episode: "The Comet Polarization" [40]
2018 Lucifer No No No Yes Loosely based on Gaiman's characters.
Voiceover as God in episode "Once Upon a Time"
[41]
2019–2023 Good Omens Yes No Yes Yes Based on the novel Good Omens co-written by Gaiman and Terry Pratchett.
As himself in the cinema scene in episode "Saturday Morning Funtime"
[42]
2022–present The Sandman Yes No Yes Yes Based on the Gaiman-written DC Comics series The Sandman.
Voiceover as Skull Crow in "A Dream of a Thousand Cats".
Co-writer: "Sleep of the Just"
[43]
2024 Dead Boy Detectives No No Yes No Based on Dead Boy Detectives [44]
TBA Anansi Boys Yes No Yes Yes Based on Anansi Boys
Wrote 2 episodes
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Film

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Credited as Notes Ref.
Writer Director Producer Role
1997 Princess Mononoke Adaptation No No No Script adaptation for the Miramax English dub of the Japanese anime.
2003 A Short Film About John Bolton Yes Yes No No Directorial debut
2005 MirrorMask Yes No No No Story by Gaiman and Dave McKean, screenplay by Gaiman
2007 Stardust No No Yes No Based on Gaiman's novel Stardust
Beowulf Yes No Executive No Co-written by Gaiman and Roger Avary. Based on Beowulf [45]
2009 Coraline No No No No Based on Gaiman's novel Coraline
2013 Jay & Silent Bob's Super Groovy Cartoon Movie No No No Yes Animated film. Role: Albert the Manservant (voice) [46]
2015 The Making of a Superhero Musical No No No Yes Short film. Role: Melvin Morel
2017 How to Talk to Girls at Parties No No Executive No Based on Gaiman's short story "How to Talk to Girls at Parties" [47]
2023 Nandor Fodor and the Talking Mongoose No No No Yes Voice of Gef
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Publications

Video games

  • Wayward Manor (written by Gaiman, developed by The Odd Gentlemen, published by Moonshark, 2013)

References

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