Who created Roger Rabbit?

It all started in Earlville

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In 1984, Disney hired Michael Eisner, who brought along Jeffrey Katzenburg, who had previously worked with director Steven Spielberg. The men asked Spielberg if he would produce the Roger Rabbit movie.

It was an inspired choice.

"Without Steve Spielberg's name behind it, it would not have gotten going," Wolf said. "Steve had read the book when it came out and had always loved it and always thought it would make a great movie."

"Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" is a very different story than "Who Censored Roger Rabbit?" But despite the many changes, Wolf was pleased with the final movie.

"The things that they retained were the overall vision, a world where cartoon characters are real," he said. "They maintained all the characters and the central conceit. Everything after that is just gravy."

While Roger Rabbit cemented Wolf's reputation, he has continued to work on a number of other projects.

In 2007, he and his best friend from Earlville, John Myers, who is now the archbishop of Newark, released a book called "Space Vulture." "Space Vulture" is an homage to the science fiction books the two boys loved in grade school.

"John came to me one day with this book he'd gotten out of the library, and he said, 'You've got to read this book.' He said, 'It's science, but it's fiction. It's science fiction,'" Wolf said.

Recently Wolf bought two copies of that book, "Space Hawk" by Anthony Gilmore, so the men could relive their youth, but the book wasn't as good as they had remembered.

"One of us said, 'It's a shame we can't rewrite it the way we remember it instead of the way it actually was," Wolf said.

So they wrote "Space Vulture."

A movie and a sequel are also in the works for "Killerball," which Wolf describes as an "ultra-violent book about football being played as a blood sport with weapons on city streets."

"'Killerball' is still one of my favorites," Wolf said. "In non-Roger Rabbit circles — in science fiction circles — I am known as the guy who wrote 'Killerball.'"

In October, Wolf released "The Late Great Show," a story about Greek gods who have relocated to a mountain in Southern California. "Typical Day," a straight science fiction story with a fantasy twist, is scheduled for release in December.

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