Charlie and the Chocolate Factory | Roald Dahl | wonderful
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Charlie and the Ch...
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Roald Dahl
Knopf Books for Young Readers
, 2004 - 160 pages
average customer review:
based on 459 reviews
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highly recommended
This full-color 40th anniversary edition of Roald Dahl?s most popular novel features vibrant spot art by Quentin Blake on candy-colored pages enhanced by candy-filled borders. A scrumptious read-aloud edition of a classic!
Young
Charlie
Bucket can?t believe his luck when he finds the very last of Mr. Willy Wonka?s Golden Tickets inside his
chocolate
bar. He wins the trip of a lifetime, a magical tour around Mr. Wonka?s mysterious chocolate
factory
. Once inside, Charlie and the other four winners?Augustus Gloop, Veruca Salt, Violet Beauregarde, and Mike Teavee?witness amazing wonders: rainbow drops, lickable wallpaper, and even a chocolate waterfall. But what happens when the children, one by one, disobey Mr. Wonka?
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just right
it was just as advertised, in good shape and I was interested to read
the original. There are some interesting differences from the original
story and the original movie...
wonderful
it was my favorate book and i love it so much im reading the secquel i cant say much more because it was so good please read it. it will definitly satisfy your craving for
chocolate
.
Simply scrumdiddlyumptious!
This is my first Roald Dahl book and I must say I love it! Highly imaginative and full of lessons, this book is a gem. I like the little boy
Charlie
very much and like most children, he is full of curiosity. He is also obedient for he listens to his parents, Mr and Mrs Bucket, and his very old grandparents. His family is poor and the seven of them live in a tiny, worn-down house. It is heartbreaking reading his family situation.
One day, Mr Willy Wonka, a well-known
chocolate
maker who was missing in action for a long, long time comes back into business. As we know, Mr Wonka makes all sorts of wonderful, out-of-this-world, magical sweets. His chocolate-making secrets, having been copied before by other manufacturers (that's the reason he closed down and went `missing') he now protects them by hiring a mysterious workforce when he reopens. The workers are never seen to enter or exit from his
factory
--very strange. The action starts when Mr Wonka launches a competition with an irresistible prize: a visit IN the factory for five children! These children will be able to see how his secret chocolates are made and their adult guardians can come with them. To win, each of them must possess the golden ticket only found in Wonka chocolates! The world, of course, launches into a chocolate-buying frenzy. But Charlie, a chocolate lover, is so poor and could not even afford a decent meal, how could he afford to buy enough chocolates to get a chance to win one of the five golden tickets?
The story gets even better when the five winners--all from different backgrounds and attitudes--get their tour in the factory. Four of them are spoilt brats in their unique ways, and the fifth one is Charlie (of course he got in)! What an experience each of these children and their parents (except Charlie for he brought his grandfather) go through! From the way Mr Wonka talks (as evident in the writing), he is an enthusiastic person. There are lots of exclamation marks punctuating his sentences and italics to emphasis his points. Besides all the intriguing stuff, the children also discover who the workers are. It is interesting to see how the children's mischief gets them into trouble in the factory.
I love how Roald Dahl weaves the magical story so wonderfully and it was funny reading about the four obnoxious children. More interesting is how each `weird' incidence that happens during the tour is in direct relation to their naughtiness. Watch out for the twist towards the ending, too, because there is more to things than just the factory tour. This is an amazing tale.
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Charming, funny, happy
Illustrated by Quentin Blake
OK, so reading this after seeing the new movie, where Johnny Depp appears to channel Michael Jackson in one of the oddest performances ever on film, I must say that Johnny Depp actually captured the essence of Dahl's Wonka very closely.
Some of the things that I thought were added to the movie for special effects impacts (like the glass elevator crashing into
Charlie
's house) were actually direct from the book.
Dahl's story is much like the movie in sometimes reaching for oddity and coming up short, but it is charming, funning, and happy.
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