Gary Wolf: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[File:wolfjessica.jpg|frame|Gary K. Wolf (right)]]
[[File:wolfjessica.jpg|frame|Gary K. Wolf (right)]]


[[Gary Wolf|Gary K. Wolf]] is an American author and humorist most famous for having written ''[[Who Censored Roger Rabbit? (Literature)]]'', the 1981 [[Urban Fantasy|urban fantasy]] / [[Mystery]] novel that would be adapted into the highly successful feature film ''[[Who Framed Roger Rabbit]]'' in 1988. His novel is cited on this website as the [[Ur Example]] for the [[Deconstruction Crossover]] as well as the [[Trope Codifier]] for the [[Roger Rabbit Effect]] (though ''that'' goes back at least as far as Gertie the Dinosaur and [[Winsor McCay]] in the early days of animated cinema).
[[Gary Wolf|Gary K. Wolf]] is an American author and humorist most famous for having written ''[[Who Censored Roger Rabbit? (Literature)]]'', the 1981 [[Urban Fantasy]] / [[Mystery]] novel that would be adapted into the highly successful feature film ''[[Who Framed Roger Rabbit?]]'' in 1988. His novel is cited on this website as the [[Ur Example]] for the [[Deconstruction Crossover]] as well as the [[Trope Codifier]] for the [[Roger Rabbit Effect]] (though ''that'' goes back at least as far as Gertie the Dinosaur and [[Winsor McCay]] in the early days of animated cinema).


Largely responsible, along with Eric Garcia and a handful of others, for the launch of the [[Fantastic Noir]] genre.
Largely responsible, along with Eric Garcia and a handful of others, for the launch of the [[Fantastic Noir]] genre.

Revision as of 11:43, 16 April 2014

/wiki/Gary Wolfcreator
Gary K. Wolf (right)

Gary K. Wolf is an American author and humorist most famous for having written Who Censored Roger Rabbit? (Literature), the 1981 Urban Fantasy / Mystery novel that would be adapted into the highly successful feature film Who Framed Roger Rabbit? in 1988. His novel is cited on this website as the Ur Example for the Deconstruction Crossover as well as the Trope Codifier for the Roger Rabbit Effect (though that goes back at least as far as Gertie the Dinosaur and Winsor McCay in the early days of animated cinema).

Largely responsible, along with Eric Garcia and a handful of others, for the launch of the Fantastic Noir genre.


You can read his Wikipedia profile here or visit his website here.

His writing includes: