English, asked by iduduzrudj, 1 year ago

story review of charlie and the chocolate factory in 100 words....

Answers

Answered by Đïķšhä
3
Rarely, if ever, has a morality tale been dressed up in such an entertaining story. Roald Dahl clearly has a point to make here, but never does the reader feel he is preaching; he's just reveling in giving spoiled kids their most perfectly just comeuppance. Dahl has peopled these pages with some highly memorable bad children, and readers everywhere love to laugh with glee at their crazy behavior -- and its consequences.

In the best fairy tale tradition, Dahl doesn't hide the fact that the world can be a grim and unfair place. Charlie's depressing life of poverty at the beginning of the novel reflects this bleak view. But, also in the best fairy tale tradition, Dahl appeals to the strong sense of natural justice in children, and invites them to revel in a marvelously imagined world where people, both good and bad, get exactly what they deserve. It's also a place where they make "eatable marshmallow pillows," "hot ice cream for cold days," "fizzy lifting drinks" that make you float, and "rainbow drops" that let you "spit in six different colours." And, in the end, it's just the place for Charlie.

iduduzrudj: too long answer....
Answered by narshimareddy
4
The fact is that all wanted to enter by getting the ticketthat factory and want to eat lots of chocolate but only Charlie gets the chance to enter into that factory but soo many people try to buy the ticket in various ways but finally an old man says Charlie not give ticket and tells him to enjoy in the factory
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