Esio Trot
by Roald Dahl
A gentle, ingenious Dahl love story where a shy retiree wins his widow neighbour with tortoises and backwards-magic.
The story
Mr Hoppy lives alone on his balcony garden, secretly in love with Mrs Silver on the flat below. When she shares a small wish about her beloved pet tortoise Alfie, shy Mr Hoppy invents an elaborate kindness — complete with a backwards-language incantation — to make her happy. Roald Dahl's warmest, quietest novella, illustrated by Quentin Blake.
Age verdict
Best fit ages 7-9 (Grades 2-4). Strong 6-year-olds handle it as a read-aloud; confident 8-10s read independently in 1-2 sittings.
Our take
Balanced
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- Ending satisfaction Strong
Ending delivers on every promise — Mrs Silver accepts, they marry, Alfie stays beloved, the epilogue gently reveals the original Alfie's real (small) growth. Double-layered satisfaction: the romance AND the backwards-word payoff. Comparable to Charlotte's Web (9, earned closure) and stronger than Magic Tree House (7); just short of Wonder (9).
- Middle momentum Strong
The eight-week tortoise-swap scheme sustains propulsion through a clever visual growth chart compressing time, escalating pet-shop trips, and constant dramatic irony — will Mrs Silver notice? Solid middle momentum stronger than Magic Tree House (6, functional adventure) and comparable to Charlotte's Web (7, pastoral but engaging), though short of Holes (9, converging plotlines).
Parents love
- Writing quality Strong
Dahl's prose is economical and precise — short declarative sentences for emotional beats alternate with flowing description, the narrator confides in the reader — but this is minor Dahl, not his strongest craft. Above Captain Underpants (4, purely functional) and Magic Tree House (5); below Charlotte's Web (10) or Tuck Everlasting (9).
- Reading gateway Strong
Short length (64 pages, ~6500 words), Quentin Blake illustrations on most spreads, 13 short chapters, and a gently propulsive plot make this a solid bridge from picture books to chapter books. Comparable to Magic Tree House (7, classic gateway) and stronger than The BFG (6) for true early-chapter readers.
Teachers love
- Reluctant reader rescue Strong
Short length, Quentin Blake illustrations on most spreads, cliffhanger-free warmth, and Dahl's author-brand pull make this a strong reluctant-reader rescue for newly independent readers. Comparable to Magic Tree House (7, classic gateway) and The BFG (7), and approaching Captain Underpants (9) for the older-reluctant segment.
- Read-aloud power Strong
Short chapters, Dahl's conspiratorial narrator, and Mrs Silver's exclamations ('Alfie is growing!') make this a natural read-aloud — the backwards-word incantations become magical when voiced. Comparable to Junie B Jones (7, voice-performance strength); below Charlotte's Web (10) and The One and Only Ivan (9) in sustained read-aloud power.
✓ Perfect for
- • newly-independent readers ages 7-9
- • kids transitioning from picture books to chapter books
- • fans of word-play and palindromes
- • readers who loved Fantastic Mr Fox or The BFG at read-aloud
- • kids who prefer warm humour over scary Dahl
Not ideal for
readers seeking high-action, fast-paced, or laugh-out-loud Dahl — this is his quietest novella. Also not ideal for readers expecting a child protagonist; the leads are an elderly man and a middle-aged widow.
At a glance
- Pages
- 64
- Chapters
- 13
- Words
- 7k
- Lexile
- 840L
- Difficulty
- Easy
- POV
- Third Person Omniscient
- Illustration
- Heavy
- Published
- 1990
- Illustrator
- Quentin Blake
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Most readers finish in 1-2 sittings given the 64-page length and gentle propulsion.
If your kid loved "Esio Trot"
Matched across 30 dimensions — interest hooks, character appeal, tone, pacing, emotional core. Not by what other people bought. By what fits the same reader profile.
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