Neil Gaiman is the author of many bestsellers for readers of all ages including
Stardust (the basis for the blockbuster movie),
Fragile Things, Anansi Boys, Interworld, and
Coraline. He lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Stephen King is a prolific and perennially bestselling author and an recognized master of the horror genre. He was the 2003 recipient of The National Book Foundation's Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters.
John Skipp is a
New York Times bestselling author and editor, whose eighteen books have sold millions of copies in a dozen languages worldwide. His first anthology,
Book of the Dead, laid the foundation in 1989 for modern zombie literature, bringing George Romero's vision of the dead next door to new levels of scope and intensity. He later edited three more zombie anthologies, including
Mondo Zombie, which won the Bram Stoker Award for best anthology, and
Zombies: Encounters with the Hungry Dead and
Werewolves & Shapeshifters: Encounters with the Beast Within, both published by Black Dog & Leventhal. Skipp is recognized as splatterpunk's founding father and the elder statesman of the genre. His own legendary horror works include
The Light at the End, The Scream, Jake's Wake, and
The Long Last Call. He lives in Los Angeles.