Dark Horse Comics has cut ties with fantasy author Neil Gaiman.

The Oregon-based publisher wrote on the social platform X, “Dark Horse takes seriously the allegations against Neil Gaiman and we are no longer publishing his works. Confirming that the Anansi Boys comic series and collected volume have been cancelled.”

Gaiman, the author known for books including Coraline and American Gods, made headlines earlier this month after Vulture ran a report about several women who have accused him of sexual assault, describing alleged encounters that involved violence and degradation. The report came after a podcast, Master, interviewed women who had also accused Gaiman of sexual assault.

Gaiman has denied the charges, saying, “I’m far from a perfect person, but I have never engaged in non-consensual sexual activity with anyone. Ever.”

Dark Horse had published seven comic books based on Gaiman’s Anansi Boys; an eighth and final one was in the works, as was a volume that would have collected all eight comics.

The New York Times reports that the president of W.W. Norton told staff members that it would not accept future projects from Gaiman; it had previously published the author’s Norse Mythology. HarperCollins, which published Coraline, American Gods, and several other of Gaiman’s books, told the newspaper it does not have any future books from the author in the works.

Michael Schaub is a contributing writer.