It may be. But absolutely EVERYTHING about the Disney name is so completely and zealously guarded against use and mis-use, it hardly seems worth one's while to attempt to do so.
No
It depends on what sort of book you want to write. If you mean a fan-fiction book, yes you can write it but you cannot sell it or make money off it because the copyright belongs to the original author and you will be sued if you try. If you mean a nonfiction book about digimon, you'd have to contact the original creators and see if they will let you write a book about their digimon.
It's a Historical Fiction book
Walt Disney's first book was Whinnie The Pooh.
The Red Pyramid is a science fiction book.
No, Rudyard Kipling wrote The Jungle Book. Walt Disney made the movie though.
No
If the book is a work of fiction, no, it is perfectly legal.
You don't really need one if you write a fiction book. If you have a nonfiction book, you can write a little bit talking about your background and experience, or what led you to write the book, or even tell a bit about what the book is going to tell the reader. You can write an introduction to a fiction book if you really want to, and include the same sort of thing - but most fiction readers will just skip right over that sort of thing and get right into the story.
No, a fan fiction would be if you were to write about the characters themselves.
You can write a book about anything you want! There are lots of books about cats - both nonfiction books and fiction books.
You can write a book at any age. Your education will require, however, that you have a command of the language you intend to use in your book, and that you can craft an engaging story. This is true whether you decide to write fiction or non-fiction. There are people with advanced degrees -- lots of schooling -- that can't write a book; and people with no degree who can write a book.
Ellen Titlebaum has written: 'Joseph and the Coat of Many Colors (Greatest Heroes and Legends of the Bible' 'Disney's Beauty and the beast' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Fairy tales, Folklore 'Disney's I love you' -- subject(s): Fiction, Teddy bears, Friendship, Toys 'Disney's I love you' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Teddy bears, Juvenile fiction, Friendship, Winnie-the-Pooh (Fictitious character), Toys 'Grandpa and me' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Dinosaurs, Juvenile fiction, Fiction 'Sabrina down under' -- subject(s): Sabrina the Teenage Witch (Fictitious character), Occult fiction, Witches, Fiction
Orson Scott Card has a wonderful book called How To Write Science Fiction and Fantasy. Ben Bova has a book called The Craft of Writing Science Fiction That Sells. These books may be at your public library or you can buy them on Amazon. They would be very valuable to explain how to write science fiction. You may also want to attend writer's panels at science fiction conventions and meet other authors, publishers and editors.
The titleThe authorThe genre (Fiction, historical fiction, non-fiction)The number of pages7-10 sentence book summary7-10 sentence character summaryWhy or why not you recommend itYour name
It is not legal to copy a book by someone else. If you are working with that person and helping them to write it, then you would be called a ghost writer -- make sure that you are very clear online that you are not writing the story, and it will be legal.
First write a really great book, get recognized, and you get nominated.