

Neil Gaiman’s books and I don’t always get along, so my reading them is often a struggle between what I dislike about his writing and my desire to enjoy his talent and creativity. I sincerely hope it brings joy to people.”

I wear my art on my sleeve throughout, bringing Golden Age illustration styles and Illuminated Manuscript studies to the work. “It is one of Neil’s loveliest, most charming stories, and I cried with happiness when I learned I would get to do the adaptation. “I’ve wanted to do an adaptation of Neil Gaiman’s ‘Chivalry’ ever since he sent a draft of the story to me at about 1 AM via fax machine decades ago,” Colleen Doran said in a statement. One object she turns down, surprisingly (to me) as it offers her the chance to try to change her life, but I liked the choice for the surprise, and I also liked the punchline in the end, when she finds another magical object in the shop. No dice she likes it, so he hangs around, helps her around the house, gives rides on the horse to neighborhood kids, and offers her other mythical/mystical objects in exchange. The idea is that a woman finds the Holy Grail in a shop, and soon after, a dreamy knight on a white horse asks her for it. Whitaker found the Holy Grail it was under a fur coat.”Ī charming adaptation of a Neil Gaiman story by the team that brought us "Snow, Glass, Apples," which is to say the iconic comics legend Colleen Doran gets credit for this version, trying a very different, and classical style.
