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Compare Roald Dahl’s writings—and Billy and the Minpins in particular—to the work of other English writers whose works embrace the absurd. In what ways does Dahl both conform to and transcend the conventions of humorous writing?
Analyze the descriptions that Billy’s mother provides of the Forest of Sin. Why does she give the forest this name, and what broader ideas might the forest represent?
Billy is never punished for going into the Forest of Sin, and his disobedience is never discovered. What larger message might Dahl intend to convey through this positive outcome to a forbidden adventure?
By Roald Dahl
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Boy: Tales of Childhood
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Charlie And The Chocolate Factory
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Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator
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Danny, the Champion of the World
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Esio Trot
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Fantastic Mr Fox
Fantastic Mr Fox
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George's Marvelous Medicine
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Going Solo
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James And The Giant Peach
James And The Giant Peach
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Lamb To The Slaughter
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Matilda
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Skin
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The BFG
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The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me
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The Landlady
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The Magic Finger
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The Way Up To Heaven
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The Witches
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