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Brian W. Aldiss, John Wyndham: Chocky (2010, Penguin Books, Limited)

154 pages

English language

Published Jan. 3, 2010 by Penguin Books, Limited.

ISBN:
978-0-14-119149-2
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4 stars (1 review)

Matthew's parents are worried. At eleven, he's much too old to have an imaginary friend, yet they find him talking to and arguing with a presence that even he admits is not physically there. This presence - Chocky - causes Matthew to ask difficult questions and say startling things: he speaks of complex mathematics and mocks human progress. Then, when Matthew does something incredible, it seems there is more than the imaginary about Chocky. Which is when others become interested and ask questions of their own: who is Chocky? And what could it want with an eleven-year-old boy?

16 editions

A boy and his alien friend

4 stars

Growing up with a steady diet of British TV-programs, one particular TV-series I remember vividly was "Chocky" with its eerie intro. But apart from that, everything else has faded into obscurity. It was, however, a strong enough impetus to pick up this novel the series was based on.

Despite being written in the late British 60s, this is less groovy Britain and more proper English society, with the associated proper mannerisms of middle class upbringing, which appears nowadays to the foreign reader as quaint. Despite the story revolving around a singular boy and his intangible friend, the occasional use of whisky and tobacco in the story reminds us the narrative is that of the adult father's. This underlines the premise of the story, which focuses on the adult anxieties of not just parenting, but of the world we build for our children.

Some might have made a parallel to that …

Subjects

  • Fiction, science fiction, general