73 pages • 2 hours read
Roald DahlA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
The unnamed boy narrator explains the difference between witches in fairy tales and witches in real life. In the former, witches regularly wear black capes and hats and travel on a broomstick. In the latter, witches dress normally and look like normal women. They also have normal jobs and homes. They blend into society, so they’re difficult to spot.
What defines real witches is their hatred for kids. They hate them feverishly and think about harming them 24/7. A witch doesn’t hurt children conspicuously—that’s how inept criminals operate. A witch carefully hunts their selected child and surreptitiously crushes them.
There aren’t a lot of real witches in the world, but every country has its share. Witches have a specific gender: They’re women. Men can’t be witches. Men are evil spirits or monstrous dogs. These things are threatening, but they’re nowhere near as menacing as real witches. Nothing is more dangerous than a real witch, and their talent for looking harmless—they could be anybody, even a kind teacher—makes them all the more dangerous.
By Roald Dahl
Beware of the Dog
Roald Dahl
Billy and the Minpins
Roald Dahl
Boy: Tales of Childhood
Roald Dahl
Charlie And The Chocolate Factory
Roald Dahl
Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator
Roald Dahl
Danny, the Champion of the World
Roald Dahl
Esio Trot
Roald Dahl
Fantastic Mr Fox
Roald Dahl
George's Marvelous Medicine
Roald Dahl
Going Solo
Roald Dahl
James And The Giant Peach
Roald Dahl
Lamb To The Slaughter
Roald Dahl
Matilda
Roald Dahl
Skin
Roald Dahl
The BFG
Roald Dahl
The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me
Roald Dahl, Illustr. Quentin Blake
The Landlady
Roald Dahl
The Magic Finger
Roald Dahl, Illustr. Quentin Blake
The Twits
Roald Dahl
The Way Up To Heaven
Roald Dahl