Four of Neil Gaiman’s short stories are getting a TV adaptation, in Neil Gaiman’s Likely Stories.

The Guardian reports that Sky Arts is developing a four-part TV series based on Neil Gaiman’s short stories.

Production company Sid Gentle Films teases that the series will be based on, “the fantastical shorts stories from the pen of Neil Gaiman. There will be an ensemble cast across all four of these tales.”

Related: With Benedict Cumberbatch unavailable, Neil Gaiman wants Tom Hiddleston for Sandman

We don’t yet know which four short stories have been selected for this series; Gaiman has released four short stories collections of the years: Angels and Visitations, Smoke and Mirrors, Fragile Things, and this year’s Trigger Warning.

Filming begins in November, which is way sooner than we want to think about, so we expect there’ll be more news about Neil Gaiman’s Likely Storiesshortly. Get it? No? Fine then.

Also in development from Neil Gaiman is Fortunately, the Milk, which is to be directed by Edgar Wright, with Johnny Depp in talks to star. And of course there’s Sandman, based on Gaiman’s graphic novel.

An adaptation of Gaiman’s popular short story How To Talk to Girls at Parties is also currently in production, set for release in 2016.. John Cameron Mitchell (Hedwig and the Angry Inch) directs, with Nicole Kidman and Elle Fanning in the lead roles.

And if you just can’t get enough of the prolific author, a beautifully illustrated, hardcover edition of The Sleeper and the Spindle actually came out last month, with artwork by Chris Riddell.

Here’s the synopsis:

“A thrillingly reimagined fairy tale from the truly magical combination of author Neil Gaiman and illustrator Chris Riddell — weaving together a sort-of Snow White and an almost Sleeping Beauty with a thread of dark magic, which will hold readers spellbound from start to finish.

On the eve of her wedding, a young queen sets out to rescue a princess from an enchantment. She casts aside her fine wedding clothes, takes her chain mail and her sword and follows her brave dwarf retainers into the tunnels under the mountain towards the sleeping kingdom. This queen will decide her own future — and the princess who needs rescuing is not quite what she seems. Twisting together the familiar and the new, this perfectly delicious, captivating and darkly funny tale shows its creators at the peak of their talents.”