A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens - review | Children's books
A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens - review
This article is more than 10 years old'The moral of this book is to be generous at Christmas and enjoy what you have'"Foggier yet, and colder! Piercing, searching, biting cold."
In A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens the weather is so cold and foggy that the water freezes in the pipes and the young boys slide down roads of snow and frozen ice.
A Christmas Carol is about a grumpy, selfish, melancholy old man called Scrooge who believes homeless people should go to prison or into workhouses. He hates Christmas and is not generous to anyone, even himself. One freezing cold night he is haunted by three Christmas ghosts. Will they change his life forever?
The book was written such a long time ago that Dickens' writing looks and sounds funny, and some words mum couldn't even read, but I could still understand most of it and I enjoyed it. The moral of this book is to be generous at Christmas and enjoy what you have – and also spend time with friends and family. I rate this book 8⅔ out of 10 and recommend it to people who like to read classics. Want to tell the world about a book you've read? Join the site and send us your review!
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