Author:Roald Dahl,Quentin Blake
The Roald Dahl Treasury is a delightful collection by and about the World's Number One Storyteller.
Four exciting sections - ANIMALS; MAGIC; FAMILY, FRIENDS AND HEROES; and MATTERS OF IMPORTANCE - introduce some of Roald Dahl's most popular characters, from the Enormous Crocodile to the Twits, from the Witches to the BFG, from James to Matilda.
Throughout this book, you can delve into stories, poems, memoirs and letters galore all wonderfully illustrated by Quentin Blake as well as other well-known artists, including Raymond Briggs, Babette Cole, Posy Simmonds and Ralph Steadman.
This book is the perfect gift for Roald Dahl fans and for all those yet to discover his magic.
A classic in the great English nonsense tradition
—— ObserverE. Nesbit's book The Enchanted Castle included a terrifying scene in which the children put on a play and dress up some brooms and brushes in hats and coats as an audience. These creatures, which they call the Ugly-Wugglies, come to life clapping before chasing the children. I was chilled - I still find it chilling today
—— Antonia Fraser , Daily TelegraphDespite [Nesbit's] fantastic plots, which generally hinge on some highly imaginative form of magic - her books were among the earliest to portray kids from their own point of view. Nesbit's best-known characters, the independent-minded Bastable children, jockey fiercely for position among themselves, but they always unite in the face of adult intervention
—— Washington PostJane Fairfax can't fail to charm and intrigue with its deft array of anticipations and explanations of what really went on
—— ObserverThe great achievement of the book is not to let the lovers find each other, but to have Jane and Emma learn they should have been friends
—— New York TimesWhat is so terrific about this book is that you fall in love with Jane, she really is the second heroine of the novel
—— Austenesque ReviewsI felt like I was reading Emma for the first time, even though it is one of my most beloved books over the decades, frequently re-read
—— Garnette, Goodreads