This book is the first in a series of books written by the famous British writer Roald Dahl. Dahl (Roald. Dahl) wrote for children and adults.
The storyline is bizarre and fascinating. The book creates a magical chocolate factory, recounts a series of bizarre stories, and contains a profound educational philosophy behind the seemingly absurd stories.
The author, Roald Dahl, is an imaginative child. Roald Dahl is an imaginative children's author who has been a spy, an ace pilot, a chocolate historian, and an inventor of magic potions.
He is also the author of several wonderful storybooks, including Matilda, The Great Father Fox, The Good Hearted Giant, and many, many more, and has been hailed as the world's best storyteller. Thousands of children around the world (some of whom have grown to adulthood) are his admirers.
Roald? Dahl died in 1990, and the stories he created are still popular around the world.
This is another book full of surprises for the main character.
The main character, Charlie's family, is very poor. Charlie lives with his parents, grandparents, and grandparents, in a simple wooden house.
Three generations of Charlie's family live in this cabin, but it is so crowded that it is unbearable. The whole house a *** only two rooms, inside only one bed.
This bed by the four old people to sleep, because they are too old, it is really labor life, overworked, so they really can not get up.
Grandpa Joseph and Grandma Josephine slept at one end of the bed, and Grandpa George and Grandma Georgina slept at the other end.
The other room had mattresses on the floor on which Mr. and Mrs. Bucket and little Charlie Bucket slept.
Because the family relied on Beckett alone to feed the family, the family often didn't have enough to eat, but the family still got along harmoniously, had fun, and lived happily ever after.
Little Charlie's favorite food is chocolate candy, his biggest wish and dream is, into the Willy? Wonka chocolate factory to visit, to see the production scene in this yearning factory.
Finally, one day, the owner of the chocolate factory, Mr. Willy Wonka, announced to the public that he was going to make the chocolate factory. Mr. Wonka announced to the public that he was going to offer people the chance to visit the factory, but only to the five lucky children who won the golden ticket. And these lucky children will also have the chance to taste the chocolate candies and other sweets for free.
As soon as the news got out, people rushed to buy the chocolates and candies sold at the factory. That's because the winning ticket, the golden ticket, was hidden inside the wrappers of the chocolate candies sold to the public.
Soon, the first four tickets are announced: the obese Augustus boy, the entrepreneurial Veruca girl, the gum-chewing Violet girl, and the toy machine-gun and dagger-loving Mike boy, who relies on his family's wealth and help to get a tour of the factory.
Only Little Charlie gets the last ticket to visit the chocolate factory, thanks to his own good fortune - a found £50 to buy chocolate candies from the nearest store.
Soon it's time for the factory tour, led by Mr. Willy Wonka. Led by Mr. Wonka, the five lucky children and their parents entered the factory, which was full of magic, including a chocolate waterfall, a river made of syrup, a chewing gum lawn, lots of chocolate candies with special flavors, and a lot of equipment.
Next, the first obese child named Augustus was eliminated from the competition when he got sucked into a glass tube because he craved the chocolate solution. Then, the second, third, and fourth children are all eliminated one by one as well, each falling deeper into the factory's machinery due to their own bad habits and greed.
In the end, the only one left is the good little Charlie, who tours the factory without being tempted.
Finally, Mr. Willy Wonka is happy to announce that the entire factory is going to be built. In the end, Mr. Willy Wonka is happy to announce that he is giving away the entire chocolate factory, and Charlie becomes the owner of the whole factory.
The story contains many detailed descriptions of the plot, as well as profound philosophies about children's education, which are worth studying and reading for both adults and children.