The View From the Cheap Seats

The View from the Cheap Seats: Selected Nonfiction comes out on May 31st. Over 500 pages of essays and speeches and suchlike...

Here's a little sneak peek at the opening of the Introduction:

INTRODUCTION

I fled, or at least, backed awkwardly away from journalism because I wanted the freedom to make things up. I did not want to be nailed to the truth; or to be more accurate, I wanted to be able to tell the truth without ever needing to worry about the facts.

And now, as I type this, I am very aware of a huge pile of paper on the table beside me, with words written by me on every sheet of the paper, all written after my exit from journalism, in which I try very hard to get my facts as right as I can.

I fail sometimes. For example, I am assured by the internet that it is not actually true that the illiteracy rates of ten and eleven year olds are used as a measure by which future prison cells are built, but it is definitely true that I learned this at an event at which the then-head of education in New York assured us that this was the case. And this morning, on the BBC news, I learned that half of all prisoners in the UK have the reading age of an eleven year old, or below.

This book contains sketches, essays and introductions. Some of the introductions made it into this volume because I love the author or the book in question, and I hope my love will be contagious. Others are here because, somewhere in that introduction, I did my best to explain something that I believe to be true, something that might even be important.

The authors from whom I learned my craft, over the years, were often evangelists. Peter S. Beagle wrote an essay called Tolkien's Magic Ring, which I read as a small boy and which gave me Tolkien and The Lord of the Rings. A few years later H.P. Lovecraft, in a long essay, and after him Stephen King, in a short book, both told me about authors and stories that had shaped horror, and without whom my life would be incomplete. Ursula K Le Guin wrote essays, and I would track down the books she talked about to illustrate her ideas. Harlan Ellison was a generous writer, and in his essays and collections he pointed me at so many authors. The idea that authors could enjoy books, sometimes even be influenced by them, and point other people at the works that they had loved, seemed to me to make absolute sense. Literature does not occur in a vacuum. It cannot be a monologue. It has to be a conversation, and new people, new readers, need to be brought into the conversation too.

I hope that, somewhere in here, I will talk about a creator or their work – a book, perhaps, or even a film or a piece of music – that will intrigue you.
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Published on March 27, 2016 20:06 Tags: gaiman, the-view-from-the-cheap-seats
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message 1: by Caleb (new)

Caleb Liu Hi Neil! Can't wait for this collection of non-fiction prose pieces (introductions, essays, thoughts?) to come out. It was thanks to your recommendation that I chanced on Lud-in-the-Mist which is an absolutely magical book so I can't wait to see what other hidden gems I might find thanks to you.


message 2: by Behdad (new)

Behdad Ahmadi Just can't wait! You are by far my favourite author!


message 3: by Kelly (new)

Kelly Rainey It is through you that I found my way back to the magical world of fiction and I once again find my nose buried in a book more often than not. You are so right to point out that sometimes fiction has a way of getting to the real truth without facts getting in the way and obscuring the view. I cannot thank you enough for all this, and I cannot wait to see who and what you'll introduce me to next! So looking forward to the new book!!


message 4: by Kelly (new)

Kelly Please say that there will be an audiobook, and that you will narrate it. I promise to get both the print and the audio version if you do.


message 5: by Tammy (new)

Tammy I am a late arrival to your work, Mr. Gaiman, but am thoroughly enjoying it. I will definitely be picking up a copy of this work as well...as soon as I finish American Gods that is.


message 6: by T (new)

T Just reading the first paragraph made me think "Hey! That's how I feel about journalism!"

I cannot wait for your book to come out. I have enjoyed so much of your fiction and cannot wait to read some non-fiction.


message 7: by Adrien (new)

Adrien Meslier I think I've never been excited about an upcoming Nonfiction book before !


Enchantedsleeper H wrote: "Just reading the first paragraph made me think "Hey! That's how I feel about journalism!"

I felt a lot like that for a very long time.... I type this now, sitting at my desk in a journalism job xD

Back on topic, I can't wait to hear what else Neil has to say in his new book \o/ Soooooo exciting!


message 9: by Laura (new)

Laura "I fled, or at least, backed awkwardly away from journalism because I wanted the freedom to make things up. "

I smirked when I read this first line. I felt the same way about all of those advertising design classes I took in college (to satisfy my parents.) I wanted the freedom to paint and draw while learning to see, and making it up as I go along...and I also wanted to write, but that needed time to brew, I had a lot to learn, I still do. I really didn't get my freedom until much later, better late than never. There's something to be said about getting one's hands dirty with life experiences and having the patience to learn how to see and having the guts to make it happen. I could've easily gone fallow and got stuck on survive, going through the motions of expectations. This book sounds like 500 pages of wisdom about learning and inspiration, looking forward to adding it to my library.


message 10: by Tommy (new)

Tommy Carson I too have tracked down your influences after thoroughly enjoying all you've written. "If this guy's such a great writer then his influences must be great too." I feel you Neil, looking forward to this, but like most of your impatient fans I would really like another novel : )


message 11: by M. (last edited Apr 03, 2016 02:20PM) (new)

M. Thank you for posting this here. Makes me even more excited for the book. Many thanks!


InLoveWithMysteries Thank you. You are absolutely right. Or at least it feels to me, as if you are absolutely right. I'm excited.


message 13: by Dolf (new)

Dolf Wagenaar "Literature does not occur in a vacuum. It cannot be a monologue. It has to be a conversation, and new people, new readers, need to be brought into the conversation too."
Exactly! That's why I started my own world classics book club. I can't read one book without thinking of other writers and works around it. You brought me to Alan Moore, Lovecraft brought me to Arthur Machen (who wrote some very good, mostly forgotten essays!), et cetera. Literature is a feast for the mind.


message 14: by Ross (new)

Ross Marnie Sounds fantastic, Neil. I'm one of your newer fans, having only discovered Neverwhere a few months ago, and I just finished your preferred version of American Gods today. Wow! Shadow, Wednesday and Czernobog; three amazing characters that I'll miss being a regular part of my daily literary intake.

Ps. If you ever get time to read, and feel like something a bit random, written by a Scottish numpty who - being vegetarian - isn't into limp bacon and black pudding, and thankfully doesn't kill babies, but metaphorically has it in for squirrels and dragons and puffins, you could have a peek at my first self-published collection of random silliness: 'Creative Convulsions - A Collection of Short Fictional Comedies'. If you prefer to completely ignore it and instead concentrate on creating more of your own wonderful fiction --- Well, hey, I'm still a winner! :o)


message 15: by Ben (new)

Ben Tufts Awesome. I can't wait. I'm a huge fan. American Gods is my all-time favorite book.


message 16: by Rachael (new)

Rachael Can't wait to read the entire confection.


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