CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY by Roald Dahl (1964)

Illustrated by Joseph Schindelman. Troll/Bantam; 160 pages; fantasy/comedy; ages 8 and up; ISBN: 0-553-12143-X.

"Concerning the adventures of four nasty children and our hero, with Mr. Willy Wonka and his famous candy plant," reads the cover of the 1979 paperback in my possession, which sums up the cast of characters nicely, though it omits Charlie Bucket's four loving grandparents and his equally loving mother and father, all of whom live with Charlie "in a small wooden house on the edge of a great town." In other words, the Buckets live in poverty. When Charlie wins one of five highly coveted golden tickets that grants him access into Willy Wonka's long-dormant chocolate factory, he and the other four winners—Augustus Gloop, Veruca Salt, Violet Beauregarde, and Mike Teavee—arrive at the factory and begin their tour. Slowly but surely, each one reveals his true nature.

Tweens who've grown up in the age of competition-based reality shows like The Amazing Race and Survivor will likely get a kick out of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and I'd advise that they skip Tim Burton's 2005 film adaptation starring Johnny Depp as a creepy, not charismatic Willy Wonka. The movie was a big hit, but I didn't think it captured any of the magic of the book. (I still haven't seen the 1971 Gene Wilder version, which is shameful, I realize.) Dahl's story works splendidly as fantasy, but because he grounds it in the reality of the Buckets' extreme poverty—and their basic human kindness in the face of such a financial indignity—the climactic payoff is even sweeter.

For further reading, check out Dahl's sequel, Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator (1972).

2 comments:

  1. I know, I know ... I've seen parts of it, but alas, not the whole thing.

    ReplyDelete