James and the Giant Peach by Roald Dahl — book cover

Book details

James and the Giant Peach

by Roald Dahl

1961

About the book

After the sudden death of his parents, young James Henry Trotter is forced to live with his cruel aunts, Spiker and Sponge, who treat him as a servant. His life changes when a mysterious stranger gives him a bag of glowing green crystals. When James accidentally spills them near an old peach tree, a piece of fruit grows to the size of a house. Inside the hollow core, James befriends several oversized, articulate invertebrates, including a Grasshopper, a Centipede, and a Ladybug. Together, they sever the peach from its stem and roll into the ocean, beginning a transoceanic flight pulled by seagulls.

This story is for young readers who enjoy surreal adventures and the subversion of adult authority. It appeals to children who look for narratives where small protagonists overcome isolation through cleverness and unlikely friendships. Readers walk away with a sense of how logical problem-solving can conquer physical danger, such as shark attacks or sky-dwelling monsters. The book provides a look at how found families form in the wake of hardship, offering a resolution where the characters find safety and autonomy in a new environment.

Details

Published
1961
Language
EN