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Hello gang and welcome to the Montserlit Book Club. This is the place where we
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celebrate books and readings and libraries. In today's episode I'm joined
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by Jane. So Jane, what books are you going to talk about today?
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Well today I'm going to talk about Matilda by Roald Dahl. Realism with a
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touch of magic. Roald Dahl's really famous because he's written so many other
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novels like Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Big Friendly Giant, The
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Witches. Everybody knows these. A total of 17 and not to mention his poetry. He's
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really really well known. Yeah I've definitely heard about him. So how did
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you come by this novel? Well I saw Charlie and the Chocolate Factory on TV
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and I was told that it was by Roald Dahl. So when I had to read a book and I
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browsed the books on the bookshelf in our library, I saw Matilda and I thought
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well this is going to be a safe choice. Hmm interesting. So where does it take
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place? Is there some kind of time reference? Well it's set in a nameless
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small village in England. It could be any small village really and it could be
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timeless as well because it could have been written nowadays to be honest with
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you. There are a few cultural references though to suggest it was the 1980s. Yeah I
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see. And what's this novel about? Well it's told chronologically and it's
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through the eyes of a third-person omniscient narrator so we can imagine
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that it's Dahl telling us this story. It's about Matilda and her relationship
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with her parents and her relationships with other people outside of her home
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life which aren't very positive to begin with. All stories have a problem and
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Matilda's a bright girl whose parents don't really love her. They don't pay her
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much attention so she has to learn to read and discover something new about
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herself outside of her family life, outside of her home life. Yeah I see
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that's very catching. So you must have a favourite moment definitely. Oh I do
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actually. I've come prepared with a quote. This is one of my favourite quotes. So
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Matilda's strong young mind continued to grow nurtured by the voices of all those
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authors who had who had sent their books out into the world like ships on the sea.
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These books gave Matilda a hopeful and comforting message. You're not alone. I
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love this quote because I think it's what reading is all about. I think it's
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why most of us read. Just to escape reality for a few moments and our
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troubles and be entertained or go into another world. Yeah I definitely agree
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with that and I see why you like it. So what's the main character like? How would
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you describe her? Matilda? Oh she's definitely self-confident although you
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don't realize that at the beginning. You see as I said before she doesn't come
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from a loving relationship and her parents really love her brother. So
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normally when that kind of thing happens you'd expect Matilda to be someone
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who's really jealous but she's not like this at all. She kind of just handles
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it in a really positive way by being confident about herself or just being in
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her own world. Yeah I see. So is there a particular age group you will recommend
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this novel to? Well it's definitely still for people in one Esso and I think they
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should give it a go. Dahl uses some really interesting verbs and adjectives
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that I'd like to see students use in their in their own creative writing and
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the plot has lots of tension and a twist you don't really expect. Yeah I
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understand. So this book how would you rank it out of ten? Oh ten out of ten
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definitely because it's a book I've gone back to even as an adult. It's realistic
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about how people who are different have to cope with being in a society where
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where people don't just don't accept that difference easily. Yeah I see your
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point. So we both agree that books change us. What did you learn from reading this
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novel? Well I guess what I learned was basically that being shy doesn't make
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you boring. Matilda's shy but she's definitely not boring and that it's
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important really to try to get to know people who are shy and who you'd never
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really spend time with. I definitely recommend this book. Yeah interesting.
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Hello gang and welcome to the Montserlit Book Club. This is the place where
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- Idioma/s:
- Autor/es:
- Raquel Rodríguez Vidal
- Subido por:
- M. Raquel R.
- Licencia:
- Reconocimiento - No comercial - Compartir igual
- Visualizaciones:
- 25
- Fecha:
- 8 de mayo de 2023 - 1:13
- Visibilidad:
- Público
- Centro:
- IES MONTSERRAT CABALLÉ
- Duración:
- 04′ 28″
- Relación de aspecto:
- 1.00:1
- Resolución:
- 2880x2880 píxeles
- Tamaño:
- 161.08 MBytes