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Go to My LibraryThe BFG
- Language
- English
- Published in
- Publisher
- HarperCollins Publishers
- ISBN
- 9780001006881
Sophie soon learns that she is in great danger, not from the BFG, but from his nine neighbors - fearsome, human-eating giants with names like the Fleshlumpeater and the Bonecruncher. Together, the small girl and the kind giant must cook up a plan to stop the other giants from their gruesome nightly feasts. Their adventure is a journey into the magical world of dreams and a testament to the power of an unlikely friendship to overcome even the most terrifying of foes.
Subjects
Original edition details
Other editions (100)
Other editions

Sophiechen und der Riese. ( Ab 8 J.).
1997 • Rowohlt Tb.
German

Le bon gros géant le BGG
2007 • Gallimard Jeunesse
French

Le bon gros géant le BGG
2001 • Gallimard
French

Le BGG le bon gros géant
2016 • Gallimard jeunesse
French

Le bon gros géant le BGG
2016 • Gallimard Jeunesse
French

Le bon gros géant le BGG
1994 • Gallimard
French

The BFG (Colour Edition & CD)
2016 • Puffin
English

BFG (Colour Edition)
2016 • Penguin Books, Limited
English

The BFG (Colour Edition)
2015 • Puffin
English

Koca Sevimli Dev
2014 • Can Yayinlari
Turkish

Die GRS Die Groot Sagmoedige Reus
1993 • Tafelberg
Afrikaans

De GVR (Dutch Edition)
2016 • De Fontein Jeugd
Dutch

The BFG
2016 • Penguin Random House LLC
English

BFG, Big Friendly Giant das Buch zum Kinofilm
2016 • Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag
German

The Bfg: A Fully Dramatized Recording
2007 • Puffin Audiobooks
English

내 친구 꼬마 거인(시공주니어 문고 독서 레벨 3 36)
2001 • 시공주니어
Korean

The BFG Movie Tie-In
2016 • Puffin
English

The BFG Movie Tie-In
2016 • Puffin Books
English

O BGA
2016 • Editora 34
Portuguese

Bfg (pmc)
1999 • Puffin
English

Yr CMM (yr Ēc Ēm Ēm)
2012 • Rily Publications Limited
Welsh

The BFG
2016 • Scholastic
English

The Bfg (Everyman's Library CHILDREN'S CLASSICS)
1993 • Everymans Childrens Classics
English

BFG, The
2013 • PUFFIN BOOKS
Spanish

Mi amigo el gigante
2016 • Alfaguara
Spanish

The BFG (audio)
1999 • Puffin
English

Il GGG
1987 • Salani
Italian

The BFG
2007 • Puffin
English

Gran Gigante Bonachon (the B.F.G)
1996 • Turtleback Books
English

El Gran Gigante Bonachon (Spanish Edition)
1999 • Bt Bound
Spanish

The Bfg
1982 • Scholastic
English

The BFG
2010 • Puffin
English

The BFG
2016 • Puffin
English

El Gran Gigante Bonachsn (Alfaguara Juvenil) (Spanish Edition)
1992 • San Val
Spanish

El Gran Gigante Bonachon (Alfaguara Juvenil) (Spanish Edition)
2004 • editorial planeta
Spanish

The Bfg
1989 • Abc-Clio Inc
English

The Bfg
2008 • Paw Prints 2008-09-18
English

The Bfg Slipcase Gift Edition
2012 • Puffin
English

The BFG
1984 • Heinemann Educational
English

El gran gigante bonachón
1984 • Noguer Y Caralt Editores
Spanish

The BFG
2013 • Puffin
English

The Bfg
1985 • Demco Media
English

The BFG
2004 • Puffin Books
English

De GVR: Roald Dahl
2022 • de Fontein Jeugd
Dutch

The BFG
2016 • Puffin
English

The BFG
1982 • Puffin
English

The BFG
1982 • Scholastic
English

El gran gigante bonachón
1999 • Santillana USA Pub Co Inc
English

The BFG
1982 • Puffin
English

The BFG
2001 • Gardners Books
English

The BFG Englische Lektüre Für Das 3. und 4. Lernjahr
2016 • Klett
English

The BFG
2016 • Puffin
English

The Bfg
2002 • HarperFestival
English

The Bfg
1999 • Bt Bound
English

The BFG
2013 • Puffin
English

The Bfg
1999 • Galaxy
English

吹夢巨人
2022 • Tian xia yuan jian chu ban gu fen you xian gong si
Chinese

El Gran Gigante Bonachón
2016 • Santillana Educación, S.L.
Spanish

The Bfg
2007 • Perfection Learning
English

The BFG
2010 • Jonathan Cape
English

The BFG
2014 • Gyldendal
Norwegian

The BFG
2007 • Turtleback Books
English

Gran Gigante Bonachon (Bfg)
1984 • Sagebrush Education Resources
Spanish

The BFG
2006 • Harper Children's Audio / HarperCollins
English

The BFG
2008 • Puffin
English

The BFG
2009 • Penguin Group UK
English

The BFG
2019 • Puffin Books
English

The BFG
2002 • CAPE JONATHAN CHILDR
English

El Gran Gigante Bonachon / The BFG (Spanish Edition)
2003 • Bt Bound
English

SVJ
1997 • Tiden
Swedish

Sophiechen und der Riese (German Edition)
2016 • Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag GmbH
German

The GFG: The Guid Freendly Giant (the BFG in Scots) (Scots Edition)
2016 • B&W PUBLISHING
Scots

El Gran Gigante Bonachón (Colección Alfaguara Clásicos)
2004 • ALFAGUARA
Spanish

Gran gigante bonachón, El
2016 • Alfaguara Infantil
Spanish

The BFG
2012 • Puffin
English

The BFG
1988 • The Trumpet Club
English

The BFG
1998 • Puffin
English

BFG
2010 • PUFFIN
English

Sophiechen und der Riese. ( Ab 9 J.). Theaterstücke für Kinder.
1996 • Rowohlt Tb.
German

The BFG
2022 • Penguin Books, Limited
English

好心眼儿巨人
2009 • 明天出版社
Chinese

The BFG
2013 • Listening Library (Audio)
English

Sophiechen und der Riese
2017 • Rowohlt Taschenbuch
German

The BFG
2016 • Puffin
English

The BFG
2007 • Penguin Publishing Group
English

The BFG
2007 • Penguin Books Limited
English

The BFG
2013 • Penguin UK
English

The BFG Roald Dahl ; Illustrated by Quentin Blake
1985 • London
English

The BFG Plays for Children
2009 • Penguin Random House Children's UK
English

The Bfg
1986 • Perfection Learning Prebound
English

BFG
2019 • Znak
Polish

Cmm, Yr
2020 • Rily Publications Limited

Bfg
1998 • Demco Media
English

吹夢巨人
2016 • 遠見天下文化出版
Chinese

El Gran Gigante Bonachon
1996 • Bt Bound
Spanish

El Gran Gigante Bonachón / The BFG (The Spanish Edition) (Serie Azul)
2016 • Santillana USA
Spanish

El gran gigante bonachon / The BFG (Spanish Edition)
2011 • Alfaguara Juvenil
Spanish

The BFG - El gran gigante bonachón / The BFG (Roald Dalh Collection) (Spanish Edition)
2016 • Alfaguara Infantil
Spanish

The BFG - El gran gigante bonachón / The BFG (Colección Roald Dahl) (Spanish Edition)
2016 • Alfaguara Infantil
Spanish

The BFG - el Gran Gigante Bonachon (the BFG)
2016 • Alfaguara S.A. de Ediciones
Spanish
She was carried at an impossible speed over fields and rivers, the wind whipping past her face. The Giant ran until the world was a blur, until they arrived in a desolate yellow land scattered with blue rocks and dead trees. He rolled away a stone as big as a house, revealing a dark cave, and stepped inside. There, in the sudden blaze of light, Sophie saw an enormous cavern lined with thousands of glass jars. The Giant set her down on a table twelve feet high. “I is hungry!” he boomed, his voice like thunder, and Sophie trembled, certain her end had come.
But this was no ordinary man-gobbling giant. He was, he explained, the Big Friendly Giant - the BFG. While the other nine giants in this land galloped off each night to gobble up “human beans” from every corner of the world, he did not. The Bonecruncher preferred Turks for their “scrumdiddlyumptious” flavour, while others sought the hatty taste of Panamanians or the booty flavour of Wellington. The BFG, however, survived on a single, disgusting vegetable: the foul-tasting, knobbly snozzcumber. He was a freak, a runt among his kind, and for his refusal to eat people, he was mercilessly bullied by the others.
The BFG revealed his true purpose. The jars lining his cave were not for food, but for dreams. Using his marvelous, truck-wheel-sized ears, which could hear the footsteps of a ladybird and the secret whisperings of the world, he traveled to a misty, vaporous land to catch dreams with a net. He caught good dreams, golden phizzwizards, and bad ones, terrible trogglehumpers. These he bottled and, on his nightly visits, blew the good ones into the bedrooms of sleeping children. Sophie's terror slowly transformed into a deep and abiding affection for this lonely, kind-hearted giant with his wonderfully mixed-up words.
Her new life was not without peril. One day, the fifty-foot Bloodbottler giant barged into the cave, convinced the BFG was hiding a human bean. Sophie dove for cover inside the half-eaten snozzcumber. The Bloodbottler, mocking the BFG's diet, grabbed the vegetable and took a massive bite. For a terrifying moment, Sophie was inside the monster's mouth before he spat everything out in disgust. “Eeeeeowitch!” he roared, smashing the snozzcumber over the BFG's head. Later, Sophie witnessed the other giants galloping off to England to eat schoolchildren, and she knew something had to be done.
A great plan began to form in Sophie's mind, a wild, “frothbungling” idea. She convinced the BFG to mix a special dream from his collection - a terrible trogglehumper. It would be a dream for the Queen of England herself, a nightmare showing her nine gruesome giants snatching children from their beds. The dream would name the giants - Fleshlumpeater, Childchewer, Gizzardgulper - and it would tell of a Big Friendly Giant who knew where to find them. And finally, it would tell her that a little girl named Sophie was sitting on her window-sill, ready to confirm it all.
Under the cloak of the witching hour, they journeyed to London. The BFG glided like a black shadow through the silent streets, leaping over Hyde Park Corner in a single bound and landing softly in the Queen's garden. He found her window, his great ears listening for her breathing, and gently placed Sophie on the sill. Then he raised his long trumpet and blew the nightmare into the room. Sophie waited, a tiny figure in a nightie, perched high above the royal lawn.
At dawn, the Queen awoke with a cry. “Oh Mary!” she said to her maid. “I've had the most frightful dream!” Just then, the maid brought in the morning papers, her face as white as a sheet. The headlines were stark: eighteen girls had vanished from Roedean School, fourteen boys from Eton. Bones had been found under the windows. The Queen stared, horrified, realizing her dream was echoing reality. “Shall I draw the curtains, ma'am?” the maid asked. With a swish, the curtains were pulled aside, revealing Sophie, sitting right there on the window-sill, just as the dream had foretold.
The Queen, though shaken, listened to Sophie's story and summoned the BFG from the garden. He bowed low, his head level with her window. “Your Majester,” he said, “I is your humbug servant.” An extraordinary breakfast was arranged in the Ballroom, with a grand piano for the BFG's chair and grandfather clocks for his table. Convinced by the BFG's account - and a few quick telephone calls to the King of Sweden and the Sultan of Baghdad, who confirmed their own recent, mysterious losses - the Queen summoned the heads of her Army and Air Force.
The BFG led a squadron of nine helicopters back to the desolate wasteland. They arrived as the giants were sleeping off their meal. The soldiers tied them up with ropes and chains, and with Sophie's quick thinking and the sharp pin of a sapphire brooch, even the formidable Fleshlumpeater was subdued. The nine captive giants were slung beneath the helicopters and flown to England, where they were lowered into a five-hundred-foot pit. Their only food for the rest of their lives would be the disgusting snozzcumbers, grown especially for them in the royal garden. The BFG and Sophie became heroes of the world, and in a fine house built next to the Queen's palace, the BFG, having learned to write, picked up a pencil and began to write down the story of their grand adventure.
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Rating Sources
Reviewers widely praise the book for its inventive story and extraordinary imagination, describing it as captivating and a delightful journey into fantasy. Many found the Big Friendly Giant (BFG) to be a unique and lovable character, with his distinctive "gobblefunk" language often cited as a source of great humor and charm, making readers laugh out loud. The narrative is celebrated for its warmth, heart, and the excitement it generates, offering a glimpse into a more exciting world. Aspects such as Sophie's heroic yet grounded character and the underlying themes of friendship and love are also highlighted as positive elements that contribute to the book's enduring appeal. For those who experienced it in childhood, it remains a fondly remembered classic.
Despite its positive reception, several reviewers express reservations. The BFG's unique dialect, while charming to some, is found confusing, repetitive, or even insulting by others, hindering comprehension and enjoyment, especially for adult readers. Sophie, the protagonist, is occasionally described as annoying, bossy, or lacking imagination. Critics also note that large portions of the book consist mainly of dialogue, leading to a perception that "nothing happens" for long stretches, particularly during scenes set in the giant's cave. Concerns are raised about outdated attitudes, including racial stereotyping and potentially misogynistic undertones, as well as the depiction of human-eating giants in a way that some find unsettling for very young children. The resolution with the giants is also critiqued for being a conventional "good guys win" ending, which some felt lost the moral ambiguity briefly explored earlier in the story.
Ultimately, "The BFG" is viewed as a creative and imaginative adventure that continues to evoke strong reactions, from fervent love to significant critique. Its unique blend of humor, fantastical elements, and distinct language makes it a memorable read. While it serves as a nostalgic revisit for many adults, new readers, particularly children, may find themselves enchanted by its whimsy or, conversely, challenged by its linguistic style and some of its dated cultural references. It is recommended for readers with an open mind and a vivid imagination who appreciate unconventional storytelling. Parents or educators might find it a valuable book for discussion with slightly older children, allowing them to engage with and critically examine its content rather than simply consuming it.
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