Middle grade


29
Apr 09

REVIEW: Matilda by Roald Dahl

matilda-by-roald-dahl I stumbled upon this book at the library and couldn’t wait to start reading it since I’d watched the movie starring Danny DeVito and when I was 18.

“Matilda” is the story of a little genius girl born into the wrong family – father is a crookish (and sexist) salesman who tries to think of ways to cheat his customers while her mother is a vain, silly woman who enjoys watching soap soap operas and playing Bingo.

Although she is a whiz at mental math, her father, who thinks that girls should only look pretty and take care of the family (like her mother), even accuses Matilda of cheating when she mentally calculates the dishonest profits he gets from selling his cars!

To get back at her mean father, Matilda plays hilarious tricks on him and lucky for her, he never finds out just WHO did them…I had such a good laugh reading about them!!!

At the age of 4, the brilliant little girl toddles her way to the public library and with the help of the nice librarian, Mrs. Phelps, she reads her way through the entire children’s books section and moves on to the classics of English literature…

Alienated by her family, Matilda finds a kindred spirit in her teacher, Miss Honey, who realizes that she has a child prodigy in her class.

However, the school headmistress, Miss Trunchbull, is NOT the usual headmistress who takes pride in seeking out the smart or intelligent students. Instead, she dreams of starting a school with NO children!!! Amazing, isn’t she?

I’m not going to spoil the book by revealing the storyline further but rest assured, “Matilda by Roald Dahl” is a great read for 8 – 10 year old girls and boys because Dahl conjures up such amazing, imaginative and hilarious situations between the children and the adults.

Pre-teens will enjoy reading this book from cover to cover!

Rating: ★★★★½

Now that I’ve read the book, I can say that the movie followed the storyline quite accurately although a thin woman, Rhea Perlman, is casted as Matilda’s mother instead of a plump woman.

Danny Devito’s FANTASTIC as Matilda’s father, of course :-)

Matilda by Roald Dahl
ISBN: 0-590-99683-5
Publisher: Scholastic (Penguin)


10
Apr 09

REVIEW: Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder

litlle-house-in-the-big-woods-laura-ingalls-wilderKids who grew up watching Laura, Mary, baby Carrie and their Ma, Caroline and Pa, Charles of the 1980s TV series “The Little House on the Prairie” starring Melissa Gilbert will definitely enjoy reading this book, written by Laura herself.

I bought this full-colour collector’s edition from Borders at RM32.90 – a treasure because almost every other page had beautiful illustrations by Garth Williams, praised by Laura because she “and her folks live again in those pictures”.

Laura introduces us to her life in a little log cabin in the Big Woods of Wisconsin late 1800s and early 1900s where her Pa and Ma are preparing for the cold, hard winter ahead.

Now, Americans (or any Westerner) who recoil in horror when they hear or see Asians (e.g. Chinese, Vietnamese eating pigs or dogs), Inuits (eating a whole seal/whale in Canada) and the indigenous peoples of Latin American (e.g. Peruvians eating guinea pigs) ought to read this book!

Early on in the book, Laura and Mary tail their Pa as he smokes deer meat (in a fascinating smokehouse made from a tree trunk) and slaughters a wild hog, from which these various parts were turned into food or play:

  • spare ribs for dinner;
  • hams and shoulders (pickled in brine), side meat and belly salted;
  • heart, liver and tongue – no mention of what happened to them;
  • head – boiled, scraped, seasoned with salt, pepper and spices and set into a pan to harden into ‘headcheese’!
  • bladder – blown up and tied with string into a little ballon to play with :-) and
  • the pig’s tail was sprinkled with salt and roasted – Laura and Mary ate EVERY bit of it, leaving the bones for the dog, Jack.

Now, I love the salty bits of meat near to the bone of a roasted pig and also the crunchy, roasted skin but never in my growing-up years in the Chinese community have I met anyone who loved the pig’s tail!

If Laura and her family are alive today, they’d probably be regarded with respect by the traditional Chinese community LOL

I think I enjoyed the book just for the types of food alone eaten throughout the four seasons:

  • salt-rising bread, rye’n'Injun bread, Swedish crackers, vinegar pies, dried-apple pies and molasses candy for Christmas;
  • homemade butter and cheese;
  • pumpkin pies, dried-berry pies, cookies, cakes, cold boiled pork, pickles, soft and hard maple candy and pancakes with maple syrup at a dance at Grandpa’s…

YUM!!! I told Hubby that if he could ever take us for a trip to the US, I’m going there just to EAT :-)

I also love reading about the simple life those days when

  • Christmas presents were made,
  • fresh produce or skins etc were traded for supplies a family needs;
  • the conservationist practice of only killing what one needed to feed one’s family;
  • the “waste not, want not” approach of using every part of a plant or animal e.g. Laura’s Ma braided straw hats out of the dried stalks of oats;
  • firm yet gentle approach to disciplining children e.g. Laura was a brown haired 5 year old who appeared less attractive than her golden-haired elder sister, Mary. Although her Pa loved her a lot, he didn’t hesitate to whip her with a belt when Laura slapped Mary because she was jealous of her golden curls.

Although the book cover targets little girls, little boys will also enjoy reading about the children, their cousins and their friends’ lives in the wild about

  • hunting for deer with encounters with bears and a panther,
  • an attack by a swarm of bees;
  • Pa’s making his own bullets for his rifle;
  • the process of making maple syrup and
  • the harvest season

I almost felt sad when the book ended especially as I only have “On the Banks of Plum Creek (Little House)“. I hope that I can find the other books at the library or hint to my family that I’d LOVE the The Little House Collection Box Set (Full Color) for Christmas :-)

Here are books by or about Laura Ingalls Wilder and her family:


31
Mar 09

REVIEW: Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl

charlie-and-the-chocolate-factory

Mix “chocolate” and “adventure” and you get a fantastic book for boys!

I read “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” one evening when I sat with Lucas as he watched his favourite cartoon or DVD. Boy, I couldn’t stop and also, I can’t wait till he’s old enough to read the book too :-)

The book is about a very, very poor boy named Charlie Bucket who lives with his parents, his maternal and his paternal grandparents.

Poor skinny Charlie lives next to Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory and smells the wonderful scents of fantastic chocolates and sweets like:

  • rich caramels that change colour every ten seconds you suck them;
  • chewing gum that never loses its taste!
  • an entire palace made of CHOCOLATE for an eccentric prince from India :-)

One day, Charlie’s father, a labourer at the toothpaste factory, brings everyone the exciting news about 5 GOLDEN TICKETS hidden in Wonka’s chocolate bars sold around the world:

FIVE lucky children bearing the golden ticket will visit the Chocolate Factory and also have a lifetime supply of Wonka’s chocolates and sweets!!!

Charlie’s paternal grandfather, Grandpa Joe, is very excited about this because NOBODY has ever been into Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory.

Lucky for Charlie, his birthday is coming soon – he gets a chocolate bar each year as a special present. I was just as excited as all the Buckets when Charlie ripped open his chocolate bar LOL

Sadly, the birthday chocolate didn’t hold the golden ticket but another chocolate bar did.

Then again, how could Charlie afford another chocolate bar? Hehehe…you have to read the book to find out :-)

A fabulously written book which was so entertaining, funny and fascinating, I’d definitely buy this book for any pre-teen boy’s birthday or special present.

Boys who are very close to their grandparents (e.g. Lucas) will have fond memories of time spent with Grandpa because Grandpa Joe accompanies Charlie during his visit to the chocolate factory.

I also loved the adventures that helped the ‘naughty’ children (and their parents!) turn over a new leaf e.g.

  • Augustus Gloop, a fat and greedy boy;
  • Veruca Salt, a girl who is spoiled by her parents;
  • Violet Beauregarde, a girl who chews gum all day long;
  • Mike Teavee, a boy who does nothing but watch television.

Willy Wonka’s ’special workers’, the Oompa-Loompas also had insightful poems for each of the children when they met their surprise endings…

I think young Chinese children will be able to identify with Charlie Bucket because he lives with 4 of his grandparents. Other than that, they will also LOVE the AMAZING sweets and confectionery he comes up with in his factory!

All in all, I felt so happy for Charlie Bucket and his entire family at the end of the story :-) A real feel-good read, this one.

Gonna read “Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator” next!

Rating: ★★★★★

Grab a copy of “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory”:


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