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Neil Gaiman bibliography

This is a list of works by Neil Gaiman.

Nonfiction

Comics

UK publishers

Titles published by various British publishers include:

DC Comics

Titles published by DC Comics include:

  • Black Orchid #1–3 (with Dave McKean, 1988–1989) collected as Black Orchid (tpb, 160 pages, 1991, ; hc, 176 pages, Vertigo, 2012, )
  • The Sandman:
  • The Sandman vol. 2 (with Sam Kieth (#1–5), Mike Dringenberg (#6–11, 14–16, 21, 28), Chris Bachalo (#12), Michael Zulli (#13, 53, 70–73, 75), Kelley Jones (#17–18, 22–24, 26–27), Charles Vess (#19, 62, 75), Colleen Doran (#20 and 34), Matt Wagner (#25), Stan Woch (#29), Bryan Talbot (#30, 36, 51–52, 54, 56, 75), Shawn McManus (#31–33, 35–37), Duncan Eagleson (#38), John Watkiss (#39 and 52), Jill Thompson (#40–49), P. Craig Russell (#50), Alec Stevens (#51), Mike Allred (#54), Shea Anton Pensa (#55), Gary Amaro (#56), Marc Hempel (#57–61, 63, 65–69), Glyn Dillon and Dean Ormston (#62), Teddy Kristiansen (#64) and Jon J. Muth (#74); published under the Vertigo imprint starting with issue #47, 1989–1996) collected as:
  • ' (collects #1–8, tpb, 240 pages, 1991, ; hc, 1995, )
  • ' (collects #9–16, tpb, 256 pages, 1990, ; hc, 1995, )
  • This was the first Sandman collection that led to the other volumes being printed in chronological order.
  • The first printing of this volume included issue #8, which was later moved to Preludes and Nocturnes.
  • ' (collects #17–20, tpb, 160 pages, 1991, ; hc, 1995, )
  • ' (collects #21–28, hc, 224 pages, 1992, ; tpb, 1992, )
  • ' (collects #32–37, hc, 192 pages, 1993, ; tpb, 1993, )
  • ' (collects #29–31, 38–40, 50, hc, 264 pages, 1993, ; tpb, 1994, )
  • Includes The Sandman Special (written by Gaiman, art by Bryan Talbot, 1991)
  • Includes the "Fear of Falling" short story (art by Kent Williams) from Vertigo Preview (one-shot, 1992)
  • ' (collects #41–49, hc, 256 pages, 1994, ; tpb, 1994, )
  • ' (collects #51–56, hc, 168 pages, 1995, ; tpb, 1995, )
  • ' (collects #57–69, hc, 352 pages, 1996, ; tpb, 1996, )
  • Includes "The Castle" short story (art by Kevin Nowlan) from Vertigo Jam (anthology one-shot, 1993)
  • ' (collects #70–75, hc, 192 pages, 1997, ; tpb, 1997, )
  • Includes the "Three Lost Pages from The Wake" segment (art by Michael Zulli) from The Dreaming #8 (1997)
  • Shade, the Changing Man vol. 2 #32 / Hellblazer #62 / The Sandman vol. 2 #46: "Death Talks About Life" (with Dave McKean, co-feature, 1993)
  • An 8-page AIDS awareness story published in three pre-Vertigo titles with a February 1993 cover date; released as a giveaway pamphlet in 1994.
  • Collected in Death: The High Cost of Living (hc, 104 pages, Vertigo, 1993, ; tpb, 1994, )
  • 9-11 Volume 2: "The Wheel" (with Chris Bachalo, anthology graphic novel, 224 pages, 2002, )
  • The DC Universe by Neil Gaiman (hc, 224 pages, 2016, ; tpb, 2018, ) collects:
  • Batman:
  • Secret Origins (anthology):
  • Secret Origins vol. 2 #36: "Pavane" (with Mark Buckingham, 1989)
  • Secret Origins Special (1989):
  • "Original Sins" (framing sequence, with Mike Hoffman)
  • "When is a Door: The Secret Origin of the Riddler" (with Bernie Mireault)
  • ' #2: "A Black and White World" (with Simon Bisley, anthology, 1996)
  • Batman #686 and Detective Comics #853: "" (with Andy Kubert, 2009)
  • All of the Batman-related stories were collected separately as Batman: Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader? (hc, 128 pages, 2009, ; tpb, 2010, )
  • "Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?" was published in pencil form among other Kubert-drawn Batman stories as part of Batman Unwrapped: Andy Kubert (hc, 288 pages, 2014, )
  • ' (with Eddie Campbell, Mike Allred, Mark Buckingham, John Totleben, Matt Wagner, Eric Shanower, Jim Aparo, Kevin Nowlan and Jason Little, one-shot, 2000)
  • Solo #8: "On the Stairs" (with Teddy Kristiansen, anthology, 2005) also collected in Solo (hc, 608 pages, 2013, )
  • Wednesday Comics #1–12: "Metamorpho" (with Mike Allred, anthology, 2009) also collected in Wednesday Comics (hc, 200 pages, 2009, )
  • Neil Gaiman's Midnight Days (tpb, 160 pages, Vertigo, 1999, ; hc, 176 pages, 2012, ) collects:
  • "Jack in the Green" (with Stephen Bissette — a previously unpublished Swamp Thing story written c. 1987–1988)
  • Swamp Thing vol. 2 Annual #5: "Brothers" (with Mike Hoffman and Richard Piers Rayner) and "Shaggy God Stories" (with Mike Mignola, 1989)
  • Hellblazer #27: "Hold Me" (with Dave McKean, 1990) also collected in John Constantine, Hellblazer Volume 4 (tpb, 288 pages, 2012, )
  • Sandman Midnight Theatre (script by Gaiman from a plot by Gaiman and Matt Wagner, art by Teddy Kristiansen, one-shot, Vertigo, 1995)
  • Welcome Back to the House of Mystery (framing sequence for the one-shot of reprints, with Sergio Aragones, Vertigo, 1998)
  • The Books of Magic #1–4 (with John Bolton (#1), Scott Hampton (#2), Charles Vess (#3) and Paul Johnson (#4), 1990–1991)
  • Collected as The Books of Magic (tpb, 200 pages, 1993, ; hc, Vertigo, 2013, )
  • Collected in The Books of Magic Omnibus Volume 1 (hc, 1,512 pages, DC Black Label, 2020, )

Vertigo

Titles published by DC Comics' Vertigo imprint include:

  • The Sandman-related works:
  • Death (with Chris Bachalo):
  • ' #1–3 (1993) collected as Death: The High Cost of Living (hc, 104 pages, 1993, ; tpb, 1994, )
  • ' #1–3 (1996) collected as Death: The Time of Your Life (hc, 96 pages, 1996, ; tpb, 1997, )
  • Dust Covers: The Collected Sandman Covers, 1989–1997 (hc, 208 pages, 1997, ; sc, 1997, )
  • The collection of Dave McKean's covers for The Sandman and related art with commentary by both Gaiman and McKean.
  • Features the short semi-autobiographical story titled "The Last Sandman Story" (written by Gaiman, art by McKean)
  • ' (anthology):
  • "Desire: The Flowers of Romance" (with John Bolton, in #1, 1998)
  • "Death: A Winter's Tale" (with Jeffrey Catherine Jones, in #2, 1999)
  • "Desire: How They Met Themselves" (with Michael Zulli, in #3, 2000)
  • ' (prose novel with illustrations by Yoshitaka Amano, hc, 128 pages, 1999, ; sc, 2000, )
  • The novel was later published in the form of a comic book as The Sandman: The Dream Hunters #1–4 (adapted and drawn by P. Craig Russell, 2008–2009)
  • The comic adaptation was collected as The Sandman: The Dream Hunters (hc, 144 pages, 2009, ; tpb, 2010, )
  • ' (graphic novel, hc, 160 pages, 2003, ; sc, 2004, ) consisting of seven chapters:
  • "Death and Venice" (with P. Craig Russell)
  • "What I've Tasted of Desire" (with Milo Manara)
  • "Dream: The Heart of a Star" (with Miguelanxo Prado)
  • "Fifteen Portraits of Despair" (with Barron Storey)
  • "Delirium: Going Inside" (with Bill Sienkiewicz)
  • "Destruction: On the Peninsula" (with Glenn Fabry)
  • "Destiny: Endless Nights" (with Frank Quitely)
  • In 2006, DC Comics began reprinting The Sandman in a series of comprehensive Absolute Editions with recolored and partially remastered art (also used in subsequent collected editions):
  • The Sandman: Absolute Edition Volume 1 (collects #1–20, Gaiman's original pitch for the series and the full script and pencil art for issue #19, hc, 612 pages, 2006, )
  • The Sandman: Absolute Edition Volume 2 (collects #21–39, short story from Vertigo: Winter's Edge #1 and the full script and pencil art for issue #23, hc, 616 pages, 2007, )
  • Includes the Sandman: A Gallery of Dreams one-shot (1994) featuring pin-ups of Morpheus created by various artists and an afterword written by Gaiman.
  • The Sandman: Absolute Edition Volume 3 (collects #40–56, The Sandman Special and short stories from Vertigo Preview and Vertigo: Winter's Edge #3, hc, 616 pages, 2007, )
  • Includes the Endless Gallery one-shot (1995) featuring pin-ups of characters from the Endless created by various artists and an introduction written by Gaiman.
  • The Sandman: Absolute Edition Volume 4 (collects #57–75 with the "lost pages" segment from The Dreaming #8 and short story from Vertigo Jam, hc, 608 pages, 2008, )
  • Death: Absolute Edition (collects The High Cost of Living #1–3, The Time of Your Life #1–3 and short stories from Vertigo: Winter's Edge #2 and 9-11 Volume 2, hc, 360 pages, 2009, )
  • Includes the A Death Gallery one-shot (1994) featuring pin-ups of Death created by various artists and an introduction written by Gaiman.
  • The Sandman: Absolute Edition Volume 5 (collects The Sandman: Endless Nights, Sandman Midnight Theatre and both versions of The Sandman: The Dream Hunters, hc, 520 pages, 2011, )
  • ' #1–6 (with J. H. Williams III, 2013–2015) collected as The Sandman: Overture (hc, 224 pages, 2015, ; tpb, 2016, )
  • Dream States: The Collected Dreaming, Sandman Presents and Overture Covers, 1997–2014 (hc, 224 pages, 2014, )
  • The collection of Dave McKean's covers for various The Sandman spin-off titles with commentary by both Gaiman and McKean.
  • Features a short story titled "Fish Out of Water" (written by Gaiman, art by McKean)
  • The Children's Crusade #1–2 (with Chris Bachalo (#1) and Peter Snejbjerg (#2); issue #2 is co-written by Gaiman, Jamie Delano and Alisa Kwitney, 1993–1994)
  • These issues were initially created to serve as the bookends for the eponymous crossover among Vertigo's ongoing series published within five Annual specials.
  • In 2012, Vertigo commissioned Toby Litt to write a new middle chapter in place of the Annuals and rework the second issue to fit the new storyline.
  • The new version was published as Free Country: A Tale of the Children's Crusade (hc, 200 pages, 2013, ; tpb, 2017, )
  • The Tragical Comedy or Comical Tragedy of Mr. Punch (with Dave McKean, graphic novel, hc, 96 pages, 1994, ; sc, 1995, )
  • Stardust #1–4 (prose novel with illustrations by Charles Vess, 1997–1998) collected as Stardust (hc, 224 pages, 1998, ; tpb, 1999, )

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; 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)
  • ':
  • "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)
  • ' #1–25 (written by Dylan Horrocks, drawn by Richard Case and Chris McLoughlin (#7 and 13–14), 2001–2003)
  • ' #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)
  • ' (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)
  • ' #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"; 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:
  • ' (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.
  • As a result, Vertigo launched The Sandman Presents, a separate label for short-form spin-off works produced by various creators:
  • The Sandman Presents: Lucifer #1–3 (with Gaiman credited as "consultant"; written by Mike Carey, drawn by Scott Hampton, 1999)
  • The success of this limited series led to the launch of the Lucifer ongoing series which ran for 75 issues between 2000 and 2006.
  • The ongoing series, also written by Mike Carey, was not a part of The Sandman Presents line and is listed below.
  • The Sandman Presents: Love Street #1–3 (with Gaiman credited as "consultant"; written by Peter Hogan, drawn by Michael Zulli, 1999)
  • A sequel one-shot titled Marquee Moon, to be written by Peter Hogan and drawn by Peter Doherty, was announced but never released.
  • In 2007, the script as well as the fully drawn and lettered art for the entire one-shot were posted online but have been taken down since.
  • ' #1–4 (with Gaiman credited as "consultant"; written by Mike Carey, drawn by Steve Leialoha, 2000)
  • The Sandman Presents: Merv Pumpkinhead, Agent of D.R.E.A.M. (with Gaiman credited as "consultant"; written by Bill Willingham, drawn by Mark Buckingham, one-shot, 2000)
  • The Sandman Presents: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Dreams... But Were Afraid to Ask (with Gaiman credited as "consultant"; written by Bill Willingham, drawn by various artists, one-shot, 2001)
  • The Sandman Presents: The Dead Boy Detectives #1–4 (written by Ed Brubaker, drawn by Bryan Talbot, 2001)
  • The Sandman Presents: The Corinthian #1–3 (written by Darko Macan, drawn by Danijel Žeželj, 2001–2002)
  • The Sandman Presents: The Thessaliad #1–4 (written by Bill Willingham, drawn by Shawn McManus, 2002)
  • The success of this limited series led to a sequel limited series produced by the same creative team:
  • The Sandman Presents: Thessaly, Witch for Hire #1–4 (written by Bill Willingham, drawn by Shawn McManus, 2004)
  • The Sandman Presents: The Furies (with Gaiman credited as "consultant"; written by Mike Carey, drawn by John Bolton, graphic novel, 2002)
  • The Sandman Presents: Bast #1–3 (written by Caitlín R. Kiernan, drawn by Joe Bennett, 2003)
  • ' #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 ' (written and drawn by Jill Thompson):
  • ' (digest-sized paperback, 2004)
  • Dead Boy Detectives (digest-sized paperback, 2005)
  • 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.
  • Issues #21–22 were published in print as part of the House of Whispers: Watching the Watchers collection.
  • 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 but these remaining issues ended up being cancelled, in part due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • 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.
  • 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:

  • Clive Barker's Hellraiser #20: "Wordsworth" (with Dave McKean, co-feature, Epic, 1993)
  • Collected in Clive Barker's Hellraiser: Collected Best Volume 1 (tpb, 232 pages, Checker, 2002, )
  • Collected in Clive Barker's Hellraiser Masterpieces Volume 1 (tpb, 160 pages, Boom! Studios, 2012, )
  • The Last Temptation #1–3 (with Michael Zulli, Marvel Music, 1994) collected as The Compleat Alice Cooper (tpb, 112 pages, 1995, )
  • Published in duoshade sepia tones as The Last Temptation (tpb, 104 pages, Dark Horse, 2005, ; hc, 2005, )
  • Published with new "remastered" coloring as The Last Temptation 20th Anniversary Edition (hc, 104 pages, Dynamite, 2015, )
  • Heroes: "The Song of the Lost" (short poem with an illustration by Jae Lee, anthology one-shot, 2001)
  • Marvel 1602 #1–8 (with Andy Kubert, 2003–2004) collected as Marvel 1602 (hc, 248 pages, 2004, ; tpb, 2005, )
  • Eternals vol. 3 #1–7 (with John Romita, Jr., 2006–2007) collected as Eternals (hc, 256 pages, 2007, ; tpb, 2008, )
  • John Romita, Jr. 30th Anniversary Special: "Romita—Space Knight!" (with Hilary Barta, co-feature, 2007)
  • Guardians of the Galaxy vol. 3 #5–8 (as "consultant" — due to the Marvel debut of the character Angela; written by Brian Michael Bendis, drawn by Sara Pichelli and other artists, 2013)
  • Miracleman (with Mark Buckingham):
  • Miracleman by Gaiman and Buckingham #1–6 (2015–2016) collected as Miracleman by Gaiman and Buckingham: The Golden Age (hc, 192 pages, 2016, ; tpb, 2022, )
  • Marvel Comics #1000: "Miracleman: Prelude" (one-page story in the anniversary anthology book, 2019) collected in Marvel Comics 1000 (hc, 144 pages, 2020, )
  • Miracleman #0: "Apocrypha" (framing sequence for the anthology issue, 2022)
  • Miracleman by Gaiman and Buckingham: The Silver Age #1–7 (2022–2024)
  • Amazing Fantasy #1000: "With Great Power..." (with Steve McNiven, co-feature, 2022)

Other US publishers

Titles published by various American publishers include:

  • Miracleman (with Mark Buckingham, Eclipse):
  • Total Eclipse #4: "Screaming" (co-feature, 1989)
  • Miracleman #17–24 (1990–1991)
  • Issues #17–22, along with the short story from Total Eclipse #4, are collected as Miracleman: The Golden Age (hc, 160 pages, 1992, ; tpb, 1992, )
  • Gaiman and Buckingham have completed issue #25 which ended up being unpublished due to Eclipse's collapse; some of the completed pages were published in Kimota! The Miracleman Companion.
  • In 2015, Marvel began publishing the "remastered" versions of the Gaiman/Buckingham issues with the intention of continuing the run to its initially planned length of 18 issues over three 6-issue limited series.
  • Miracleman: Apocrypha #1–3 (framing stories for each issue of the anthology, 1991–1992) collected in Miracleman: Apocrypha (hc, 96 pages, 1992, ; tpb, 1992, )
  • Breakthrough: "Vier Mauern" (with Dave McKean, anthology graphic novel, 80 pages, Catalan Communications, 1990, )
  • Cerebus #147: "Being an Account of the Life and Death of the Emperor Heliogabolus" (script and art, Aardvark-Vanaheim, 1992)
  • Image:
  • Spawn (Todd McFarlane Productions):
  • "Angela" (with Todd McFarlane, in #9, 1993)
  • Collected in Spawn: Origins Collection Volume 2 (tpb, 184 pages, 2009, )
  • Collected in Spawn: Origins Collection Book One (hc, 300 pages, 2010, )
  • "The Dark" (uncredited — a three-page sequence with Greg Capullo or Todd McFarlane, in #26, 1994)
  • Collected in Spawn: Origins Collection Volume 4 (tpb, 160 pages, 2010, )
  • Collected in Spawn: Origins Collection Book Three (hc, 216 pages, 2011, )
  • Angela #1–3 (with Greg Capullo, Todd McFarlane Productions, 1994–1995) collected as Spawn: Angela (tpb, 112 pages, 1995, )
  • Liberty Comics #2: "100 Words" (poem illustrated by Jim Lee, anthology, 2009) collected in CBLDF Presents: Liberty (hc, 216 pages, 2014, ; tpb, 2016, )
  • Where We Live: A Benefit for the Survivors in Las Vegas: "Words" (poem illustrated by J. H. Williams III, anthology graphic novel, 336 pages, 2018, )
  • Negative Burn (anthology, Caliber):
  • "The Murders on the Rue Morgue" (art for the song lyrics written by Alan Moore, in #13, 1994) collected in Alan Moore's Songbook (tpb, 64 pages, 1998, )
  • "Neil Gaiman Sketchbook" (in #25, 1995)
  • "The Old Warlock's Reverie: A Pantoum" (poem illustrated by Guy Davis, in #50, 1998)
  • Roarin' Rick's Rare Bit Fiends #2–3: "Celebrity Rare Bit Fiends" (with Rick Veitch, co-feature, King Hell, 1994)
  • Bloodchilde #4: "Sweat and Tears" (plot assist; written by Faye Perozich, art by Yanick Paquette, Millennium, 1995)
  • Neil Gaiman's Wheel of Worlds #0 (anthology, Tekno Comix, 1995)
  • The entire issue is plotted by Gaiman and John Ney Rieber, with various writers scripting each individual story:
  • The framing sequence, "Adam Cain", is written by John Ney Rieber and drawn by Shea Anton Pensa.
  • "Lady Justice" is written by C. J. Henderson and drawn by Michael Netzer.
  • "Mr. Hero" is written by James Vance and drawn by Ted Slampyak.
  • "Teknophage" is written by Rick Veitch and drawn by Bryan Talbot.
  • The issue served as a launchpad for a number of series based on concepts created by Gaiman that exist within a shared universe; the series were produced mostly by the creative teams behind the short stories:
  • Neil Gaiman's Mr. Hero the Newmatic Man #1–17 (written by James Vance, C. J. Henderson (#12) and Martin Powell (#13–14), drawn by Ted Slampyak, Seppo Makinen (#12) and José Delbo (#13–14), 1995–1996)
  • Neil Gaiman's Teknophage #1–10 (written by Rick Veitch and Paul Jenkins (#7–10), drawn by Bryan Talbot and Al Davison (#7–10), 1995–1996)
  • Neil Gaiman's Lady Justice #1–11 (written by C. J. Henderson and Wendi Lee (#4–6), drawn by Michael Netzer (#1–2), Georges Jeanty (#3), Greg Boone (#4–6), Mike Harris (#7) and Steve Lieber (#8–11), 1995–1996)
  • After the Tekno Comix brand was discontinued in 1996, the series were relaunched under its parent company, Big Entertainment:
  • Neil Gaiman's Mr. Hero the Newmatic Man (written by James Vance, drawn by Ted Slampyak, one-shot, 1996)
  • Neil Gaiman's Phage: Shadow Death #1–6 (written by Bryan Talbot, drawn by David Pugh, 1996)
  • Neil Gaiman's Lady Justice vol. 2 #1–9 (written by C. J. Henderson, drawn by Fred Harper (#1 and 6–8), Chris Marrinan (#2–5) and Mike Harris (#9), 1996–1997)
  • In addition to these ongoing titles, two crossovers — one within the "Gaimanverse", the other with the Leonard Nimoy's Primortals series — were also published:
  • Neil Gaiman's Wheel of Worlds #1 (written by Bruce Jones, drawn by Jose Delbo, 1996)
  • Teknophage vs. Zeerus (written by Paul Jenkins, drawn by Fred Harper, one-shot, 1996)
  • The Book of Ballads and Sagas #1: "The False Knight on the Road" (with Charles Vess, anthology, Green Man Press, 1996)
  • Collected in The Book of Ballads (hc, 192 pages, Sirius, 2004, ; tpb, 2006, )
  • Collected in The Book of Ballads and Sagas (hc, 240 pages, Titan, 2018, )
  • Cherry Deluxe: "The Innkeeper's Soul" (with Larry Welz, anthology one-shot, Cherry Comics, 1998)
  • The Spirit: The New Adventures #2: "The Return of the Mink Stole" (with Eddie Campbell, anthology, Kitchen Sink, 1998)
  • Collected in Will Eisner's The Spirit Archives Volume 27 (hc, 200 pages, Dark Horse, 2009, )
  • Collected in Will Eisner's The Spirit: The New Adventures (hc, 240 pages, Dark Horse, 2016, )
  • Dark Horse:
  • Harlequin Valentine (Gaiman-written adaptation of his short prose story of the same name, art by John Bolton, graphic novel, 40 pages, 2001, )
  • Dream Logic: "Words of Fire" (poem illustrated by David Mack, co-feature in Mack's art showcase book, hc, 240 pages, 2015, ; sc, 2018, )
  • The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore: "True Things" (with Mark Buckingham, co-feature in the book of stories and articles, 224 pages, TwoMorrows, 2003, )
  • Little Lit Volume 3 (untitled four-page story, with Gahan Wilson, anthology graphic novel, 48 pages, Raw Books, 2003, ) collected in Big Fat Little Lit (tpb, 144 pages, Puffin, 2006, )
  • Deady the Evil Teddy Volume 3: "Deady and I" (with Aurelio Voltaire, anthology graphic novel, 48 pages, Sirius, 2005, ) collected in The Book of Deady (tpb, 144 pages, 2006, )
  • Hero Comics 2011: "My Last Landlady" (poem illustrated by Sam Kieth and Mike Dringenberg, anthology one-shot, IDW Publishing, 2011) collected in Hero Comics: A Hero Initiative Benefit Book (tpb, 120 pages, 2016, )
  • Zombie Apocalypse! Fightback: "Down Among the Dead Men" (with Les Edwards, multiformat horror anthology, 2012 — US edition: 480 pages, Running Press, ; UK edition: 528 pages, Robinson Press, )
  • Mine! (A Celebration of Liberty and Freedom for All Benefiting Planned Parenthood): "And There Was Joy" (poem illustrated by Mark Wheatley, anthology graphic novel, hc, 304 pages, ComicMix, 2018, ; sc, 2018, )
  • Tori Amos: Little Earthquakes: "Tear in Your Hand" (with Bilquis Evely) and "Afterword" (with Montos, anthology graphic novel, 120 pages, Z2 Comics, 2022, )

Novels and children's books

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:

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:

Adapted to comics

  • Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere #1–9 (adapted by Mike Carey, drawn by Glenn Fabry, Vertigo, 2005–2006) collected as Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere (tpb, 224 pages, 2007, )
  • Coraline: The Graphic Novel (adapted and drawn by P. Craig Russell, hc, 192 pages, HarperCollins, 2008, ; sc, 2009, )
  • The Graveyard Book (adapted by P. Craig Russell, hc, 368 pages, HarperCollins, 2016, ; sc, 2017, ) initially released in two volumes:
  • Volume 1 (hc, 192 pages, 2014, ; sc, 2015, )
  • "1: How Nobody Came to the Graveyard" (drawn by Kevin Nowlan)
  • "2: The New Friend" (drawn by P. Craig Russell)
  • "3: The Hounds of God" (drawn by Tony Harris and Scott Hampton)
  • "4: The Witch's Headstone" (drawn by Galen Showman)
  • "5: Danse Macabre" (drawn by Jill Thompson)
  • "Interlude" (drawn by Steve Scott)
  • Volume 2 (hc, 176 pages, 2014, ; sc, 2015, )
  • "6: Nobody Owens' School Days" (drawn by David Lafuente)
  • "7: Every Man Jack" (drawn by Scott Hampton)
  • "8: Leavings and Partings" (drawn by Kevin Nowlan)
  • Neil Gaiman's American Gods (adapted by P. Craig Russell, drawn by Scott Hampton, Dark Horse):
  • American Gods #1–9 (with additional art by Walt Simonson (#3), Colleen Doran (#4) and Glenn Fabry (#8), 2017) collected as American Gods: Shadows (hc, 208 pages, 2018, ; tpb, 2023, )
  • American Gods: My Ainsel #1–9 (with additional art by Mark Buckingham (#5) and Galen Showman (#9), 2018) collected as American Gods: My Ainsel (hc, 208 pages, 2019, ; tpb, 2023, )
  • American Gods: The Moment of the Storm #1–9 (2019–2020) collected as American Gods: The Moment of the Storm (hc, 208 pages, 2020, ; tpb, 2023, )
  • Neil Gaiman's Norse Mythology (adapted by P. Craig Russell, Dark Horse):
  • Norse Mythology #1–6 (drawn by P. Craig Russell (#1), Mike Mignola (#1), Jerry Ordway (#1–2), Piotr Kowalski (#3–4), David Rubín (#4–5) and Jill Thompson (#5–6), 2020–2021) collected as Norse Mythology Volume 1 (hc, 144 pages, 2021, )
  • Norse Mythology II #1–6 (drawn by Matt Horak (#1–2), Mark Buckingham (#3–4), Gabriel Hernández Walta (#5–6) and Sandy Jarrell (#6), 2021) collected as Norse Mythology Volume 2 (hc, 144 pages, 2022, )
  • Norse Mythology III #1–6 (drawn by David Rubín (#1–2), Colleen Doran (#2–3), Galen Showman (#4) and P. Craig Russell (#5–6), 2022) collected as Norse Mythology Volume 3 (hc, 144 pages, 2023, )

Short fiction and poetry

Collected

Uncollected

Adapted to comics

Anthologies edited

Audio and video recordings

Screen work

Television

Film

Publications

Video games

References

External links