Everything about Charlie And The Great Glass Elevator totally explained
Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator is a
children's book by
Welsh author
Roald Dahl. It is the
sequel to
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, continuing the story of young
Charlie Bucket and eccentric candymaker
Willy Wonka as they travel through space in the Great Glass Elevator.
Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator was first published in the
United States by
Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. in
1972, and in the
UK by George Allen & Unwin in
1973.
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was written by Roald Dahl in
1964.
Unlike the preceding book, no film adaptation of this book has ever been made.
Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory angered Dahl so much that he refused to allow the producers to adapt the sequel, while
Tim Burton and
Johnny Depp have announced that they've no intention of making a sequel to
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory although part of
Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator appears at the end of the film.
Plot summary
The book continues directly from the events of
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: Willy Wonka has just given Charlie ownership of his factory, and in a flying contraption known as the Great Glass Elevator they crash through the roof of Charlie's house and inform his family of the good news.
Charlie's grandparents -- George and Georgina on his mother's side, and Josephine on his father's (Grandpa Joe is already with Charlie in the Great Glass Elevator) -- are nervous about going inside the travelling
elevator, and after twenty years in bed, refuse to get up. The bed is thus pushed into the elevator, which then takes off. At a critical moment during the return trip to the factory, a panicking Georgina grabs Wonka away from the controls and strands the elevator with its occupants in Earth's
orbit. The elevator circles the planet until Wonka sees the chance to link it with the newly-launched Space Hotel, a private enterprise of the
United States government.
In the
White House,
President of the United States Lancelot R. Gilligrass and his Cabinet see this mysterious object dock with the Space Hotel and think it contains hostile agents of a foreign or extraterrestrial government. The approaching
space shuttle containing the hotel staff and three
astronauts is being left behind by the mysterious object as they race for the Space Hotel, and the shuttle's crew prepares for the worst. On the Hotel, Wonka and the others hear the President address them across a radio link as
Martians, and Wonka proceeds to tease Gilligrass with nonsense words and grotesque poetry. But in the midst of this, the hotel's elevators open, revealing five gigantic, brown-green, boneless creatures shaped something like eggs with eyes. They change shape, each forming a letter of the word SCRAM, and Wonka motions everybody to get out of the Space Hotel quickly.
Those shape-changers, Wonka tells the others, are predatory
extraterrestrials called
Vermicious Knids that have infested the Space Hotel. Since they can't reach Earth's surface to prey on its natives because they burn up in the
atmosphere as
shooting stars, the Knids are waiting in the Space Hotel for the new arrivals in the shuttle, some of whom they instantly devour. Capable of flying in anaerobic space at improbable speeds, they pursue the survivors but are unable to board the space shuttle. Instead, they dive-bomb the shuttle's engines and hull, destroying the rockets as well as the cameras and radio antenna.
Seeing all this from the relative safety of the Great Glass Elevator, Charlie suggests that he and his companions use the Elevator to tow the shuttle in to land. Willy Wonka, in agreement, pilots the Elevator into range, wherapon Charlie's Grandpa Joe connects the two vessels by means of a steel cord. This move, however, holds new opportunities for the Knids. Within minutes, they change into living segments of a towing line, with which they intend to drag the spacecrafts away. One large Knid wraps his body around the Elevator, providing an anchor for this operation.
This plan proves again to be a double-edged sword. Willy Wonka activates the Elevator's retro-rockets and plunges to Earth, taking the shuttle and the Knids with it. The Knids burn to ashes as a result of the
friction. At the right moment, Wonka releases the shuttle, which floats safely home. The Elevator crashes into the chocolate factory, ending its flight in the garden-like central room.
Since Charlie was presented the factory as a gift by Wonka, he wants his family to help him run it. But George, Georgina, and Josephine still refuse to move out of their bed. Wonka proposes a pill he invented, Wonka-Vite, to make them young again. (He says that it's too valuable to waste on himself, which is why he needed an heir in the first place.) However, the three bedridden recipients get greedy and take much more than they need to. Instead of becoming a mere twenty years younger, the three grandparents lose eighty years, making George one year old, Josephine three months, and Georgina absent altogether, having become "minus two" (she was seventy-eight). Charlie and Wonka make the journey in the Great Glass Elevator to Minusland to get Georgina back with Vita-Wonk, a sprayable compound that makes people older. Minusland is a dark, gloomy region far beneath the surface of the Earth, filled up entirely with
fog, and inhabited only by the invisible and highly dangerous Gnoolies, creatures which, with a single bite, turn their victims into more Gnoolies (Wonka states that the process, a form of
long division, takes a long time and is very painful). After administering an even worse overdose of Vita-Wonk to Grandma Georgina, they return to the upper world.
There, Georgina has become centuries old. Her memory entails much of History, beginning with the Pilgrim voyage in the ship "Mayflower" and ending in the present moment, spanning over many wars and truces in between. Using a more cautious dose of Wonka-Vite, her companions subtract much of this age from her, leaving her at seventy-eight as she was before. Turning to George and Josephine, Charlie and Mr. Wonka administer Vita-Wonk enough to recall their original age.
The grandparents, finally restored to their proper ages, are still incensed with Wonka's adventurous nature. They refuse, as before, to come out of bed. The Oompa-Loompas then come in and give Wonka a letter from the President, congratulating the occupants of the Great Glass Elevator on saving the lives of the shuttle astronauts and hotel staff and inviting them as the guests of honour to a White House dinner. The grandparents don't want to be left out, so they leap out of bed and join Charlie, Grandpa Joe, Wonka, and Charlie's parents to enter the
helicopter sent to pick them up.
Awards and Nominations
Editions
ISBN 0-375-91525-7 (library binding, 2001)
ISBN 0-394-92472-X (library binding, 1972)
ISBN 0-375-81525-2 (hardcover, 2001)
ISBN 0-670-85249-X (hardcover, 1995)
ISBN 0-394-82472-5 (hardcover, 1972)
ISBN 0-14-240412-8 (paperback, 2005)
ISBN 0-14-131143-6 (paperback, 2001)
ISBN 0-14-038533-9 (paperback, 1997)
ISBN 0-14-037155-9 (paperback, 1995)
ISBN 0-14-032870-X (paperback, 1988)
ISBN 0-14-032043-1 (paperback, 1986, illustrated by Michael Foreman)
ISBN 0-14-030755-9 (paperback, 1975)
ISBN 0-04-823106-1 (board book, 1973)Further Information
Get more info on 'Charlie And The Great Glass Elevator'.
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