^Yeah, like I wrote Gaiman was being really gracious, but if the quotes and story were accurate, it came across that he really respected her work. The books are very well written, and she created a world that could be nearly as fertile as Star Wars if she chose to allow others to play with her creations. Gaiman and Warners probably figured it wasn't worth the fight. I'm not sure if Gaiman has any ownership rights to the character. Likely not. He hadn't become noted novelist Neil Gaiman at the point of Hunter's creation so it may be DC's character outright.
I wonder if the New 52 DC does this anymore?
Chris
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