Charlie and the chocolatefactory

English language

Published 1995 by Puffin.

View on OpenLibrary

(22 reviews)

Five childeren, five will be chosen to go the place where the best candy in the world was made, Willay's Wonka Factory

Augustus Gloop--A fat pig of a boy who would eat anything he could get his hands and teeth on.

Veruca Salt--A spoiled little rich girl who screamed until she was bought her heart's latest delight.

Violet Beauregarde--The world's champion gum chewer who was destined for a sticky end.

Mike Teavee--A smart aleck who was addicted to television.

AND...

Charlie Bucket--Our Hero, who was honest, obedient, loyal, trustworthy, brave, good, kind, and starving.

Also contained in:

116 editions

Review of 'Charlie y la fábrica de chocolate' on 'Goodreads'

Una obra sencilla pero llena de magia y sensibilidad. Nos habla de los celos y envidia en el sector comercial e industrial y la forma en que Willy Wonka, dueño de la fábrica de chocolate logra proteger todos sus ingeniosos inventos.

Por otro lado, nos presenta a 4 niños que, a su corta edad, ya se encuentran aquejados por una serie de costumbres que mal guiadas por sus familias han degenerado como niños desobedientes y egoístas, lo cual se ve reflejado en sus acciones al visitar la fábrica de chocolate y las consecuencias que reciben por sus actos.

Además, tenemos a Charlie Bucket, un niño de extrema pobreza que ha sido educado por su padres y abuelos, con anhelo de cosas mejores pero sentado en su realidad. Es él quien ganará junto a su familia el gran premio de la fábrica de chocolate.

Al final, quienes ingresaron a la fábrica …

Review of 'Charlie and the Chocolate Factory' on 'Goodreads'

I'm reading through Roald Dahl's catalogue with my son during storytime and this one really stood out. There is one thing I loved in this story, which is completely absent in the film. The relationship between Grandpa Joe and Charlie is tender and intimate and inflected with the sort of wisdom passed down from grandparents to children that is hard to articulate. It's a mix of world weariness and profound optimism the two generations overlap can with and Dahl captures it brilliantly.

My son liked the Oompa Loompa songs but wished Dahl would have gone into more detail about squeezing the blueberry juice from Violet Beauregard.

avatar for binyamin

rated it

avatar for davidlunadeleon

rated it

avatar for Ben2read

rated it

avatar for oreoteeth

rated it

avatar for Jmbmkn

rated it

avatar for Geraintroberts

rated it

avatar for Classic_Monolith

rated it

avatar for Enich

rated it

avatar for attacc

rated it

avatar for catwoman_il

rated it

avatar for potherca

rated it

avatar for badgerfaceman

rated it

avatar for emitanaka

rated it

avatar for pnutbutterprincess

rated it

avatar for Shepy

rated it

avatar for lencioni

rated it

avatar for StorydevGrace

rated it

avatar for madtyn

rated it