The book I’ve read is Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. It is a fantasy book and it’s author is Roald Dahl. It tells the story of a young boy, Charlie Bucket and his poor family. Charlie, his parents and his four grandparents lived in the same tiny cottage on the outskirts of the city and they didn’t have enough food for all of them.
In the city they lived there was the biggest chocolate factory in the world and no one had ever got into it.
For several years, the factory had been closed to the public, but suddenly, one day, the headline on the papers said: WONKA FACTORY TO BE OPENED AT LAST TO LUCKY FEW. The idea consisted of five golden tickets hidden into the Wonka chocolate bars all over the world, and those lucky who could find them, would be able to visit the factory with their parents, guided by Willy Wonka himself.
Charlie dreamed about finding one of them, but he wasn’t able to afford buying a lot of chocolate bars. For his birthday he used to have one of them as a present, but when the day arrived, the bar didn’t have any golden ticket. But some days later, he was walking along the street when he saw a coin on the road. He picked it up and after thinking about what to do with it, he decided to buy a chocolate bar, and then another one, and this one did have a golden ticket!
When he arrived home, he told his family what had happened and no one could believe it! Finally, they decided that Grandpa Joe would go with Charlie to the factory.
The day after, they arrived at the factory, and the rest of the people were Veruca Salt, Mike Teavee, Augustus Gloop and Violet Beauregarde, all spoiled nasty children and their stupid parents. And Mr Wonka knew it. Then the visit started.
The factory was the most incredible place in the world. The workers were very little people called Oompaloompas and they loved cacao. The first room they visited was the Chocolate Room: it was a lovely valley with green meadows, a great brown river, a tremendous waterfall all made of sweet and chocolate, and there was a whole mass of enormous glass pipes sucking the melted chocolate from the river. One of the children, Augustus Gloop, the fat one leaned towards the river trying to eat the chocolate, when the bigger pipe sucked him up.
The next room was the Inventing Room where Mr Wonka was inventing his chewing-gum meal. When Violet, a chewing-gum addict, saw the new invention she had no doubt and chewed it. But the gum hadn’t been tested yet and Violet started to get as blue as a blueberry and become as round as a big balloon.
They kept walking till they found the Nut Room, which was full of squirrels testing the nuts for the chocolates. Veruca, the most spoiled girl in the party told her dad that she wanted one of those trained squirrels, and that she would take one of them by herself. But when she got into the room, the small animals took and tested her and found that she was a bad nut, so they threw her down the rubbish chute.
Mike Teavee was tired, so they took the lift and went to the Television Room. There they found a big TV set where the Oompaloompas were trying to send chocolate bars by TV. But Mike wanted to be the first person to be sent by television, got himself just in front of the set and was sent to the other screen but smaller.
So, the only child who was safe was Charlie. Mr Wonka explained that he wanted him to become the new owner of the factory, and him and his family could move there. This way they’ll never starve anymore, and Charlie’s dream could come true.
I’ve chosen this book because some years ago I saw the film, but I wanted to know the real story, because films usually rule out most of the things that appear in the original book. And I really like it because although we are not young children, it’s important to make our imagination work, and this book is full of fantasies. Of course it shows a moral, that parents have the responsibility of what we become when we grow up. I definitely recommend it to all those who have a children inside them.
By Maite Martínez Crespo