s.penkevich's Reviews > Matilda
Matilda
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�There are perhaps no days of our childhood we lived so fully as those we spent with a favorite book.�
-Marcel Proust
I loved this book so much as a child that I quite literally named a child after it. Matilda by Roald Dahl is a beloved children’s classic for a reason and one that still warms the hearts of kids and adults today. Who doesn’t love a book that celebrates the empowerment of reading, that tells a story of overcoming tyrants and surviving abuse while retaining a love for the world? Wrap that all up in a story of a girl with magical powers and a will to freedom and love aided by librarians and a caring teacher and you’ve got yourself a winning story. While I noticed some problematic aspects returning to this again as an adult, I was reminded how much this story meant to me as a kid and how much it grew inside me through my whole life.
�The books transported her into new worlds and introduced her to amazing people who lived exciting lives.�
For the uninitiated, Matilda is the story of a young girl who �longed for a friend, someone like the kind, courageous people in her books.� Her parents neglect her and are involved in shady dealings, her principal is a nightmare who hates children and loves punishment, but she has discovered her magic powers and will right the wrongs in order to thrive. There is a fantastic film adaptation I used to watch constantly as a kid and this, coupled with movies like , was an early start to my love of libraries and books. We see how books can comfort the lonely, can inspire and empower, and there’s nothing I love more than the idea that money is not an obstacle to reading when you have a library card. Flash forward to today, I work in a library and in a bookstore and, likely thanks to Matilda, have devoted a large part of my life to getting good books to the people who need them.
The idea that books remind you �you are not alone� is something that has always struck me hardest. I used to leave favorite poems all over trees for that very reason, to say ‘I was here� but also ‘you are not alone� and picked passages that might comfort or inspire. Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish once wrote �A poem in a difficult time / is beautiful flowers in a cemetery,� and I believe this applies to books too. A good book can help in times of need, can comfort, uplift, can be a friend when you need one. And in good times too, a book can elevate your day and be a companion in your mind, something you can’t wait to return and read more. �There is no frigate like a book / to take us lands away,� wrote Emily Dickinson, and Franz Kafka reminds us that a �book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us,� so I have always believed in the power of books. Reading and opens us to new ideas, so read widely and often and definitely read to children if you have any available.
Dahl is a complicated figure, however, and there were some aspects that raised my eyebrow while reading. You can always find discourse on Dahl all over the internet, such as the extremely frustrating fact of his , or his use of , and claims of fatphobia and misogyny abound. A big debate is often about the way he , as The Witches is hotly argued, though many consider Matilda to be a feminist work. Sure, we have Ms Honey, a single woman who is able to rise about on her own, and Matilda, a young, determined girl who can overthrow tyrants. But the depiction of Agatha Trunchbull are a bit unpleasant as it seems an anti-lesbian structuring. Called simply by her last name, Trunchbull is vaguely based on Soviet Olympian and is described as big and bulky and, well, rather masculine. It would seem, as a contrast to Ms Honey, that Dahl finds women acceptable only if they perform femininity in the “right� way. Trunchbull is pretty blatantly queer and he depicts her in a way that is very similar to accusations thrown against queer women at the time, such as wanting to destroy the nuclear family (after the children spell ‘difficulty�: �Mrs D, Mrs I, Mrs FFI, Mrs C, Mrs U, Mrs LTY,� Trunchbull is outraged and snaps �why are all these women married?�) and for not being sexually desirable the way society thinks they should be. It all seemed a bit off, and a quick internet search showed , so, as a queer person myself, that's a bit of a bummer. The book does focus on breaking the cycle of child abuse and a lot of it is very good, but this was rather awkward as an adult. Also the reading list in the book is very much white, male cannon. So take that as you will, I still find the book worth reading and enjoyable, and I have to give a hand to Pam Ferris for a knockout performance as Agatha Trunchbull in the film. Separating art from an artist is something that people will do at their own comfort level and we should give space for everyone for that.
This book looks at the mentality of �I'm right and you're wrong, I'm big and you're small, and there's nothing you can do about it,� and tells it to sit down and shut up. This is an underdog story (well, an underdog with magic) and one that celebrates reading. I loved Matilda as a child and now look at me, I’m writing about books constantly of this website hoping people might see them and be inspired, and spending my working hours getting books into people’s hands. Books, they are the coolest.
3.5/5
-Marcel Proust
I loved this book so much as a child that I quite literally named a child after it. Matilda by Roald Dahl is a beloved children’s classic for a reason and one that still warms the hearts of kids and adults today. Who doesn’t love a book that celebrates the empowerment of reading, that tells a story of overcoming tyrants and surviving abuse while retaining a love for the world? Wrap that all up in a story of a girl with magical powers and a will to freedom and love aided by librarians and a caring teacher and you’ve got yourself a winning story. While I noticed some problematic aspects returning to this again as an adult, I was reminded how much this story meant to me as a kid and how much it grew inside me through my whole life.
�The books transported her into new worlds and introduced her to amazing people who lived exciting lives.�
For the uninitiated, Matilda is the story of a young girl who �longed for a friend, someone like the kind, courageous people in her books.� Her parents neglect her and are involved in shady dealings, her principal is a nightmare who hates children and loves punishment, but she has discovered her magic powers and will right the wrongs in order to thrive. There is a fantastic film adaptation I used to watch constantly as a kid and this, coupled with movies like , was an early start to my love of libraries and books. We see how books can comfort the lonely, can inspire and empower, and there’s nothing I love more than the idea that money is not an obstacle to reading when you have a library card. Flash forward to today, I work in a library and in a bookstore and, likely thanks to Matilda, have devoted a large part of my life to getting good books to the people who need them.
�So Matilda’s strong young mind continued to grow, nurtured by the voices of all those authors who had sent their books out into the world like ships on the sea. These books gave Matilda a hopeful and comforting message: You are not alone.�
The idea that books remind you �you are not alone� is something that has always struck me hardest. I used to leave favorite poems all over trees for that very reason, to say ‘I was here� but also ‘you are not alone� and picked passages that might comfort or inspire. Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish once wrote �A poem in a difficult time / is beautiful flowers in a cemetery,� and I believe this applies to books too. A good book can help in times of need, can comfort, uplift, can be a friend when you need one. And in good times too, a book can elevate your day and be a companion in your mind, something you can’t wait to return and read more. �There is no frigate like a book / to take us lands away,� wrote Emily Dickinson, and Franz Kafka reminds us that a �book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us,� so I have always believed in the power of books. Reading and opens us to new ideas, so read widely and often and definitely read to children if you have any available.
Dahl is a complicated figure, however, and there were some aspects that raised my eyebrow while reading. You can always find discourse on Dahl all over the internet, such as the extremely frustrating fact of his , or his use of , and claims of fatphobia and misogyny abound. A big debate is often about the way he , as The Witches is hotly argued, though many consider Matilda to be a feminist work. Sure, we have Ms Honey, a single woman who is able to rise about on her own, and Matilda, a young, determined girl who can overthrow tyrants. But the depiction of Agatha Trunchbull are a bit unpleasant as it seems an anti-lesbian structuring. Called simply by her last name, Trunchbull is vaguely based on Soviet Olympian and is described as big and bulky and, well, rather masculine. It would seem, as a contrast to Ms Honey, that Dahl finds women acceptable only if they perform femininity in the “right� way. Trunchbull is pretty blatantly queer and he depicts her in a way that is very similar to accusations thrown against queer women at the time, such as wanting to destroy the nuclear family (after the children spell ‘difficulty�: �Mrs D, Mrs I, Mrs FFI, Mrs C, Mrs U, Mrs LTY,� Trunchbull is outraged and snaps �why are all these women married?�) and for not being sexually desirable the way society thinks they should be. It all seemed a bit off, and a quick internet search showed , so, as a queer person myself, that's a bit of a bummer. The book does focus on breaking the cycle of child abuse and a lot of it is very good, but this was rather awkward as an adult. Also the reading list in the book is very much white, male cannon. So take that as you will, I still find the book worth reading and enjoyable, and I have to give a hand to Pam Ferris for a knockout performance as Agatha Trunchbull in the film. Separating art from an artist is something that people will do at their own comfort level and we should give space for everyone for that.
This book looks at the mentality of �I'm right and you're wrong, I'm big and you're small, and there's nothing you can do about it,� and tells it to sit down and shut up. This is an underdog story (well, an underdog with magic) and one that celebrates reading. I loved Matilda as a child and now look at me, I’m writing about books constantly of this website hoping people might see them and be inspired, and spending my working hours getting books into people’s hands. Books, they are the coolest.
3.5/5
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Seemita
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Jan 09, 2023 09:10PM

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Roald Dahl is one crazy cat, brilliant.



Matilda was a big hit in our house too - with both our daughters when they were younger."
Thank you so much! Its so good, glad your daughters enjoyed it too, as have mine. Bummer to learn about his personal opinions but this book still holds up.

Thank you! It is certainly worth revisiting. All the magic and fun totally holds up.

Roald Dahl is one crazy cat, brilliant."
Ahhh thats amazing! So glad to hear it is good, I REALLY want to go see it (and take my 12 year old named after the book haha)

Thank you so much :) YES, the Pagemaster rules right?! I dare not watch it now as I suspect it will seem really corny but that blew my mind as a kid haha. But yeaaaaaaaa...lots of Dahl stuff is really unfortunate to learn as an adult. I try to hold space for still enjoying the book though (on a reread of the Narnia series with child Matilda a few years ago I realized that The Horse and His Boy, a favorite from youth, had some..glaring racism that was a bummer to confront). But the magic is still there. Thanks again.

The movie adaptation of this book is my childhood, literally, and I love rewatching it at least one time a year. As for the book, it was also a great experience, very heartwarming and beautifully written. So glad to see you also enjoyed it. :)


It is worth it! Oooo that sounds great, I want to revisit Fantastic Mr Fox at some point as well. Another that had a great film adaptation.

The movie adaptation of this book is my childhood, literally, and I love rewatching it at least one time a year. As for the book, it was also a great experience, very hear..."
It’s such a good film! I love Danny DeVito in that. And thank you, glad to see you love it as well! Really glad to have revisited it

Aside from a few things it really did hold up pretty well. Definitely still fun and magical, would recommend! And thank you!


Ah yea, that makes sense and I feel like this is one that you sort of...have to have that built up nostalgia for to read as an adult otherwise its probablt kind of bland perhaps? The move was cute though, I love Danny DeVito in it as a shitty dad and skeezy used car salesman haha, played alongside his actual wife Rhea Perlman
as the wife.
Lighthousekeeping always makes me laugh because its like the reverse of the benevolent librarian, I love the scene where the librarian takes the book home she knows Silver is reading to read it but...also spite her? But then Winterson talking about reading the library in alphabetical order in real life is delightful.
SPEAKING OF DELIGHTFUL I really need to read that haha. Yes, all librarians should be witches.


Oooo yes, I’d be curious how this reads to someone without built up nostalgia. Now I’m super curious what you think!


Ooooo I will have to get that, I do enjoy Winslet and she sounds like a perfect choice. Thank you!

I have a thing for actors who narrate books. Another favorite is Anne Hathaway reading The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Actors are perfect narrators because they don’t just read; they ACT. Tom Hanks led me through The Dutch House when I probably would have quit early on if I read it in print.


I’ve done a few now (mostly through reading to my own kids) and it’s always a pretty interesting experience. When I reread Narnia with my oldest I picked up on a LOT that I’d not thought of as a kid (unfortunately Horse and His Boy comes across uncomfortably as an adult with the Calormen civilization in the desert being described as dark skin savages with a false god sort of thing…not awesome) and found a new appreciation for them.
I really want to revisit Phantom Tollbooth! I loved that one. And The Witches. I don’t remember much of that one but there is a recent graphic novel adaptation id love to check out at least. A lot of the Dahl criticisms seems to focus on that book so now I’m interested. Well his depictions at least, a lot of the other criticisms surround aspects like and him bluntly admitting “I’ve become antisemetic� which is a bummer to learn.

Thanks! Gotta admit I had to look up Walliams but those seem really cool—I like the cover art, reminds me a lot of Dahl in a good way.

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message 36:
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There's probably no limit to this name so I'll just keep on writing and saying that Drake is horrible and why The last kids on earth is really cool.
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rated it 4 stars

Yeaaaaaa pretty not great. I remember when his estate tried to apologize on his behalf by....printing his statements and it was like OH NO why would you share those haha.

Thank you so much! Ha I have to admit that was something I only learned from writing the review, but interesting to have learned for sure!

Thank you so much! Haha yeaaa I should probably write them in ways that make people want to read the book but I kind of learned everything from writing papers for classes that assume the reader has also read the book so I sort of stick to that. But thank you, I do really love the idea of goodreads being like a giant bookclub that you can attend on your own time haha
