J. K. Rowling is the author of the award-winning Harry Potter novel. Loved by fans all over the world, this collection sold over 450 million copies, translated into 78 languages, and gathered up in 8 big hits. She wrote three companion volumes for charity: Quidditch through age and magical beast, where to find them (to gain comic relief) and The Bles of Beedle the Bard (for Lumos) , And the magical inspired movie script Beast and the place to find them. 2012, J. K. Rolling's digital company Pottermore is started where fans can enjoy her new work and be able to immerse deep inside the wizards world. Rowling wrote a novel "Leisure Vacancy" for adult readers and wrote a criminal novel with anonymous Robert Galbraith. In addition to the OBE for literature services for children, she has won numerous awards and honors including French honor awards and Hans Christian Andersen awards.
Brian Selznick's book has received numerous praise around the world and has been translated into more than 35 languages. He is the Caldecott Medal winner of the New York Times bestseller, "The Invention of Hugo Cabrera", based on Martin Scorsese's Oscar winning Hugo and the famous filmmaker Todd Haynes' Wonderstruck. And Selznick's script and Private Eye of The Marvels and Baby Monkey (co-authored with Dr. David Serlin). Selznick is distributing time between Brooklyn in New York and San Diego in California.
N2-Sanders (2006) and Hutcheon (2006) are one of many theorists who challenge the "loyalty" standard, but the frequent reaction to Martin Scorsese's Oscar winning film "Hugo" is that it is Brian It is faithful to you. Selznik's Caldercott Award "Invention of Hugo Carbre" This paper insists that in each case the media determines important differences in subjectivity building. The fact that this book focuses on theft indicates the focus of Lacan on the subjective origin and the potential guilt that implicit authors rely on the work of other artists. However, the focus of the movie shifts to relationships and family needs as well as Christi's hypothesis that intertextuality is inevitable. As Geraghty (2009) pointed out, adaptation depends on different text by definition.
Brian Sersnick's "Invent of Hugo Cabret", Martin Scorsese's "Hugo", and subjective theft