Within reader-response theory, hermeneutics theory states that a literary work is finished by the reader, as the process of reading is carried out through the interaction between reader and literary work. It is also said that the hiatus of the work is filled in by the imagination of the reader. In the practical literary science school, meaning, sense is tied to the inner and outer status of the individual, thus it is a relative thing (Demeny, 2102). According to transactional literary theory (Rosenblatt) meaning is born within transaction; through reader-response, the reader brings his or her own experiences to the selection. There is no one true interpretation, as the reader is the active creator of the responses. Reading becomes a transaction between the reader and the text, a relationship evoking an experience or meaning for the particular individual reader. The five theoretical perspectives surrounding Reader-Response theory are also discussed.