Ideas need time to sit and rot in your brain before they become fertile ground for stories.
Neil Gaiman’s MasterClass, “The Art of Storytelling,” packages decades of a singular storyteller’s habits, techniques, and creative philosophy into a structured curriculum aimed at writers and serious story-lovers. The course is not a rapid-fire how-to, but a careful distillation of Gaiman’s practice: how he finds ideas, shapes them into narrative, respects readers’ intelligence, and sustains a lifelong writing life. Below is a deep look at what the class teaches, how it’s organized, the distinctive craft lessons, and how to apply them.
Ideas need time to sit and rot in your brain before they become fertile ground for stories.
Neil Gaiman’s MasterClass, “The Art of Storytelling,” packages decades of a singular storyteller’s habits, techniques, and creative philosophy into a structured curriculum aimed at writers and serious story-lovers. The course is not a rapid-fire how-to, but a careful distillation of Gaiman’s practice: how he finds ideas, shapes them into narrative, respects readers’ intelligence, and sustains a lifelong writing life. Below is a deep look at what the class teaches, how it’s organized, the distinctive craft lessons, and how to apply them.