James and the Giant Peach

James and the Giant Peach

Hardback
3.830

By using these links, you support READO. We receive an affiliate commission without any additional costs to you.

Description

Roald Dahl's children's classic will be rediscovered with wonder and delight in this handsome gift edition with all-new black-and-white illustrations by Caldecott Honor Book artist Lane Smith (who also designed the characters for the Disney animated film). How James escapes from his miserable life with two nasty aunts and becomes a hero to his new insect family, including Miss Spider, the Old-Green-Grasshopper, the Centipede (with his 21 pairs of gorgeous boots), is Dahl-icious fantasy at its best"This newly-illustrated edition of an avowed children's favorite has all the makings of a classic match-up: Milne had Shepard, Carroll had Tenniel, and now Dahl has Smith...author and illustrator were made for each other, and it's of little consequence that it took almost 35 years for them to meet" --Kirkus.

From the Hardcover Library Binding edition.

Book Information

Main Genre
N/A
Sub Genre
N/A
Format
Hardback
Pages
160
Price
33.74 €

Posts

2
All
2.5

Starker Anfang, schwaches Ende

Dahl hat hier eine fantasiereiche und stellenweise auch düstere Geschichte über Verlust und Freundschaft geschrieben. Jedoch muss hat mir der Beginn des Buches wesentlich besser gefallen. Die Geschichte entwickelt sich spätestens mit dem Auftauchen der „Antagonisten“ in eine völlig wirre und zumindest für mich unbefriedigende Richtung. Die Lehre des Buches (und Kinderbücher haben m.E. meist eine solche) lautet für mich: Vollbringe etwas, wodurch du berühmt wirst, und dann bekommst du auch Freunde. Das greift mir zu kurz und vermittelt letzten Endes den falschen Eindruck.

4

I was surprised to find that James and the Giant Peach was the first Dahl children's book to be published. I'd always assumee it to be Danny the Champion of the World. What I'm guessing is that Danny was the first children's book he wrote, but wasn't punished until he'd become successful. My goal is to read them in publishers order you see. Memory is an interesting thing. I do remember reading this book as a child, but there is a whole section I didn't remember, which was about Cloud-men, which I found fascinating. You can tell this is an early Dahl, for though it has some whimsy, it wasn't fully formed here, it was only really at the end that you started to get the word play that Dahl is known for. But it's still a masterpiece all the same!

Create Post