To Mr. Neil Gaiman, who spoke at the Billings Library yesterday,
I wanted to thank you in three parts. Thank you for your creativity, for your positivity, and for your dedication.
I'm sure you've received enough awards by now to realize that your creativity is a force to be reckoned with. Even more than that, however, it is a gift. You mentioned in your talk yesterday that stories give us the means to look at the world through a different perspective, to allow us to live other lives. Stories also serve as a sort of cryogenic preservation, allowing us to store our perspectives in a medium that is significantly more durable than our s