R J Carter
R J Carter grew up in a household without television, forcing him into books for entertainment. By age 8 he had read the works of Louisa May Alcott, A A Milne and H G Wells. In 1996, he began taking notes on an idea gleaned from a drawing of a book in a stack of books that didn't exist in an issue of Neil Gaiman's Sandman comic. The notes lay dormant. They fermented. They germinated. And finally, much to Carter's befuddlement, they had evolved into a story.
R J Carter grew up in a household without television, forcing him into books for entertainment. By age 8 he had read the works of Louisa May Alcott, A A Milne and H G Wells. In 1996, he began taking notes on an idea gleaned from a drawing of a book in a stack of books that didn't exist in an issue of Neil Gaiman's Sandman comic. The notes lay dormant. They fermented. They germinated. And finally, much to Carter's befuddlement, they had evolved into a story. See less