Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

For the 1971 film, see Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory.
For the 2005 film, see Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (movie).

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is a book for children by British author Roald Dahl. The book is noted for its casual, easy language, its detailed descriptions. Some describe it as science fiction for children. The same style is maintained for most of Dahl's children's books.

It concerns a boy, Charlie Bucket, whose background is based on one of poverty, living in a small, single-roomed house, where he lives with his parents and his four bedridden grandparents. Charlie is the kind, sweet, caring boy most children's book heroes are. However, Charlie's greatest love in life is chocolate. He receives a bar once a year, on his birthday.

Near to Charlie's house is the largest chocolate factory in the world, owned by Mr. Willy Wonka. Wonka is the largest and most inventive and innovative producer of chocolate, producing all kinds of wonderful and delicious sweets. Due to corporate espionage that came close to ruining the Wonka factory, Wonka closed his factory to the public and the factory is now only seen to house mysterious workers within.

Wonka, in a surprise move, decides to open his factory to the public, by initiating a lottery. Inside five Wonka Bar wrappers lies concealed a Golden Ticket which will admit the finder and one or two members of his family into the factory.

Charlie manages to find a Golden Ticket and he and his Grandpa Joe enter Willy Wonka's factory, where they encounter Wonka's many wondrous confectionery creations - including some prototypes which cause rather hair-raising side effects. The other Golden Ticket winners misbehave one by one and end up in bizarre, near-fatal predicaments which require removing them from the premises.

Augustus Gloop, an enormously fat glutton, was drinking from a lake of chocolate when he was sucked up by one of the pipes leading to the Fudge Room. Violet Beauregarde, who has chewed the same piece of gum for months, tried an experimental piece of three-course-dinner gum and turned into a giant blueberry. Veruca Salt, a spoiled brat whose rich father gives her anything she wants, was thrown down a garbage chute by squirrels trained to find and dispose of the "bad nuts". Mike Teevee, who spends all day watching Westerns on television, was miniaturized by a television camera designed to deliver candy bars by television. Each of the children pose as an allegory for the various vices found within the personalities of children in those days. Charlie is clearly outlined as the ideal child, humble, kind, and "unspoiled."

It turns out that the factory workers are the "Oompa Loompas" - a group of people from Loompaland who agreed to become Wonka's workforce because of his ability to supply unlimited quantities of their greatest delicacy, the cocoa bean, the raw ingredient in chocolate. Through the book, they occasionally break into verse en masse to comment on the misbehaviour of the other children and its deleterious effects.

At the end of the story, it is revealed that the lottery was a ploy for Willy Wonka to choose his successor. As the last Golden Ticket winner left standing, Charlie inherits the factory and goes on a trip in a glass elevator with Willy Wonka, the story continuing in the sequel Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator.

The book was filmed in 1971 as Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, starring Gene Wilder as Wonka. It has also been produced by Swedish Television as an animated series with still animations narrated by Ernst-Hugo Järegård. Another film version entitled Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, directed by Tim Burton and starring Johnny Depp, is due to be released in 2005.

There is also a line of candies in the United States that uses the book's characters and imagery for its marketing.

ISBN numbers

he:צ'ארלי והשוקולדה sv:Kalle och chokladfabriken

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