
Julia M. (
Rarejule) reviewed on 4/8/2007...
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
One of the best kid's books ever written. The magic, the wit, the plot! I have seen this enjoyed by a 4 yr. old (read aloud) a 10 yr. old, a 15 yr. old, and adults. Read it and then watch the great movie that almost did it justice.

Sandy A. (
SandyA) reviewed on 2/19/2007...
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
A good kids' book by one of our favorite authors.

Vivien K. (
vivycakes) reviewed on 1/24/2007...
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Well-written and so imaginative. It would be an incredibly fun read for kids. As an adult (reading it for the first time too!), I enjoyed it but not as much as I was expecting--I was hoping to love it as much as I did Matilda. James's aunts were kind of one-dimensional and negligible, and I thought the story could've flowed better and had more depth. But I'm still glad that I read it.

Gabriele R. (
StoryPower) reviewed on 11/19/2009...
A classic

Karla B. (
gaslight) reviewed on 10/15/2009...
My 2nd favorite childhood book (#1 is The Witches). I must have read it over 150 times and it never got dull. Dahl's anthropomorphic bugs and the fantastical device of a peach balloon captivated my imagination. I also love Dahl's adeptness at addressing the awkward stages of adolescence, the feelings of alienation and confusion, and wrapping them up in a great story.

Donna C. (
MrsJimbo) reviewed on 4/9/2007...
When poor James Henry Trotter loses his parents in a horrible rhinoceros accident, he is forced to live with his two wicked aunts, Aunt Sponge and Aunt Spiker. After three years he becomes "the saddest and loneliest boy you could find." Then one day, a wizened old man in a dark-green suit gives James a bag of magic crystals that promise to reverse his misery forever. When James accidentally spills the crystals on his aunts' withered peach tree, he sets the adventure in motion. From the old tree a single peach grows, and grows, and grows some more, until finally James climbs inside the giant fruit and rolls away from his despicable aunts to a whole new life. James befriends an assortment of hilarious characters, including Grasshopper, Earthworm, Miss Spider, and Centipede--each with his or her own song to sing.

BRITTNEY E. (
BrittE) reviewed on 8/31/2006...
A young boy escapes from two wicked aunts and embarks on a series of adventures with six giant insects he meets inside a giant peach
A book for younger audience that ignites their thinking to higher levels.