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The "Witches": Plays for Children

The "Witches": Plays for Children
MSRP: $9.53
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Manufacturer: Puffin Books
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Dare you take on the role of the Grand High Witch? David Wood has created seven short plays to read and perform. With notes on simple staging, props and costumes, the plays can be produced with the minimum of experience and resources. Children will have a phizzwizardly good time - and their friends won't believe their gogglers!

 

What Customers Say About The "Witches": Plays for Children:

Impeccable and fast service. The book was a gift to my son for Christmas. Thanks

Dahl is instilling irrational superstitious fears into some of his readers/listeners. Nonetheless I find Dahl's book to be offensive on multiple levels. Compensating for something. Thirdly, some impressionable children will actually believe this crap or get nightmares, or it might get wedged into the subconscious as a lifelong fear. The book states "Only women can be witches" and all witches are actively engaged in harming/killing children. Fourthly, there are many wonderful stories of fiction in which witches can be a force for good. Is he a misogynist.

What motivated Dahl to write this book. Does he hate his mother. I don't believe that there is magic, but it is a person's right to believe in magic and express that if they choose. I'm a very free thinker and have a keen sense of humor. Firstly, this book disparages women. It is spiteful to vilify them.

Do not let Dahl pollute your child's imaginations against such other stories.Perhaps Dahl would say "Take it easy. Is he jealous of women. Myself I'm atheist and don't believe in anything supernatural. Secondly, as stated by others here, there are many people who [think they] practice magic, some even to the degree of a religion, lifestyle or profession. It's all supposed to be fun." Yeah, minstrels in blackface said that, too.

This book is, beyond a doubt, fiction. People need to stop being so uptight - and this is coming from an eclectic pagan. He clearly stays within the confines of centuries old stereotypes regarding Halloween witches - which, in my opinion, falls into the same realm as vampires and lycanthropes. This book is slammed a lot by quite a few Wiccans who are upset over this book's portrayal of witches and witchcraft, claiming that it is derogatory to "real witches." Dahl never, at any time, eludes to any neopagan religion. I enjoyed the book, though I did feel that the movie was better developed - that may be personal bias, as I have never seen any of Dahl's books as vividly as directors do. I was first introduced to this book via the movie, which I adored as a kid (and still do). Still, Halloween has always been my favorite holiday -and I always dressed as the stereotypical witch with a wart on her nose and green skin- and this book, as well as the movie, has a special spot in my heart. These witches turn two boys into mice - clearly not a real life scenario.

During Christmas, he travels to Norway to live with his grandma. The boy and his grandma have an adventure ahead of them to try and stop these witches from turning all the children into mice.Dahl sets the stage very well in this book because he puts the reader right in the middle of the action. Even though this story is fictional, it provides a different aspect for children to read. When the boy and his grandma decide to take a trip, they encounter these witches at a convention in the same hotel they are staying. Before he could sneak out, the witches catch him and they try out their poison on him. One day the boy and his parents get into a car crash and his parents do not survive. These witches also hate children. This story could never happen but it is a good book for children to use their imagination and expand their creativity.

"But, if real witches disguise themselves rather than flying around on broomsticks in pointed hats, how can you tell when you meet one.Roald Dahl's book The Witches was a wild tale about a boy and his grandma and witches that send them on an adventure. The boy sure enough turns into a mouse. This book is set in 20th century England so Dahl uses dialogue between the boy and his grandma that pertains to this era. This book might be a bit scary for some younger children, but for the most part it is a fun book that can further children's thinking.I thoroughly enjoyed this book because Dahl gives us a fun story about very interesting characters. Dahl provides an opportunity for children to learn a little about the past through a young boy's adventure because Dahl brings his readers into the action. He is very descriptive with his language and paints a vived picture in the minds of his readers.

It's here where the boy encounters his first witch. Personally, i love to read about witches and other fictional characters because it provides insight and learning in another aspect than our own. The boy hides out in one of their meetings and soon learns that they are all here turn the children of England into mice. The story starts with the boy living with his parents in England. Based on their wishes, the boy goes to live with his grandma.

The boy hears the plan and the recipe of the poison. Dahl also wrote most all of his books in a small hut that was behind his house. This makes children able to predict and think critically about what might happen and what actually does happen; It provides a chance for creativity.*Mentioned on his official website, Dahl bases the grandmother character in his own mother. "A real witch is wasily the most dangerous of all living creatures. These witches were not "normal" as we know them; they wore wigs, have no toes, and their eyes are different than a normal woman.

This books falls into the fantasy genre because it contains magic from the poison and the witches that create it.

This FICTION book is a fun and fanciful read for children. For all of you real 'witches' who are complaining- get a grip- this is not an expository text explaining the history of your religion- or defaming it- it is a fictional childrens book.

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