


I believe the below essay by Neil
Gaiman explains exactly what it is like to be a writer or someone who finds
their true selves within the creative process of writing. I hope you find it as
inspirational as I have. The essay can be found in the book
The Faces of Fantasy which I highly recommend to all writers and fantasy
lovers alike.

THESE ARE NOT OUR FACES
This is not what we look like.
You think Gene Wolfe looks like his photograph in this book? Or Jane Yolen? Or
Peter Straub? Or Diana Wynne Jones? Not so. They are wearing play-faces to fool
you. But the play-faces come off when the writing begins.
Frozen in black and silver for you now, these are simply masks. We who lie for a
living are wearing our liar-faces, false-faces made to deceive the unwary. We
must be- for, if you believe these photographs, we look just like everyone else.
Protective coloration, that's all it is.
Read the books: sometimes you can catch sight of us in there. We look like gods
and fools and bards and queens, singing worlds into existence, conjuring
something from nothing, juggling words into all the patterns of night.
Read the books. That's when you see us properly: naked priestesses and priests
of forgotten religions, our skins glistening with scented oils, scarlet blood
dripping down from our hands, bright birds flying out from our open mouths.
Perfect, we are, and beautiful in the fire's golden light...
There was a story I was told as a child, about a little girl who peeked in
through a writer's window one night, and saw him writing. He had taken his
false-face off to write and had hung it behind the door, for he wrote with his
real face on. And she saw him; and he saw her. And, from that day to this,
nobody has ever seen the little girl again.
Since then, writers have looked like other people even when they write (though
sometimes their lips move, and sometimes they stare into space longer, and more
intently, than anything that isn't a cat); but their words describe their real
faces: the ones they wear underneath. This is why people who encounter writers
of fantasy are rarely satisfied by the wholly inferior person that they meet.
"I thought you'd be taller, or older, or younger, or prettier, or wiser," they
tell us, in words or wordlessly.
"This is not what I look like," I tell them. "This is not my face."

-- essay by Neil Gaiman;
The Faces of Fantasy

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