Book description
With almost 5 million copies sold 60 years after its original publication, generations of readers have now journeyed with Milo to the Lands Beyond in this beloved classic. Enriched by Jules Feiffer’s splendid illustrations, the wit, wisdom, and wordplay of Norton Juster’s offbeat fantasy are as beguiling as ever.
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Why read it?
16 authors picked The Phantom Tollbooth as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
This is utterly unique in the way Norton Juster is able to build a fantasy world out of words, logic, and math.
As a young adult, I loved the idea of receiving a magic tollbooth and driving into a magic world. But, immediately, I found the book challenging because Milo ends up in the doldrums (a word I had never heard before). This is not just a fantasy adventure, but a cautionary tale, a character study, and a world full of puns and puzzles.
Returning to the book as an adult, I was amazed at how seamlessly Juster puts it…
From Shawn's list on portal stories that take fantasy worlds to new heights.
This might be my favorite book ever, and while it is not about business, career, or personal development, it speaks to me about the power of opening our eyes and seeing a world filled with possibilities.
I believe in our ability to explore, wonder, and imagine what could be possible.
From Alan's list on unlocking your curiosity and awesomeness.
I love this book because it is a charming story with a likable lead character that you read without effort. It is clever and funny, makes you think, and leads you to look at things in different ways.
I love the wordplay, the philosophy, and the overriding theme that wisdom and knowledge are available to all of us and are necessary if we are to restore rhyme and reason to the world. (Rhyme and Reason are two princesses who have been banished to the Castle in the Air). All great stories are voyages of self-discovery, and this is a beautiful…
From Richard's list on think without you thinking that you’re thinking.
If you love The Phantom Tollbooth...
There are countless ‘classics’ of children’s literature that, for one reason or another, over time lose their lustre and fall short of one’s own childhood memories. The Phantom Tollbooth is as wonderful today as when it was written, more than 60 years ago. Join Milo on a fantabulous journey through place and a gallimaufry of crazy characters, word play, and puns.
The imagination of a child should be nourished and fed–growing up, this book did just that for me. I could relate to the protagonist in the sense that I loved to learn–and to this day, I am a sponge for knowledge–but I was easily bored with the mundane, often creating worlds that led to my becoming an author.
This was probably one of the earliest works to cultivate that. The characters are rooted in real-life comparisons and still live in the back of my mind. It continues to resonate with me today because despite some tropes being beaten into the…
From Brandon's list on characters with a life of their own.
As much a book about language as anything else, its central message may be the need for a love of education, but don’t let that put you off. It’s full of wordplay, puns, and wonderful whimsy.
Take, for instance the ‘watchdog’ called ‘Tock’ who’s large, can speak, and has alarm clocks on each side of his body. You might call it ‘picaresque,’ you might call it ‘bonkers,’ but never ‘predictable’!
I don’t remember that it contains a sword.
From Tom's list on classic kids’ adventure stories that may or may not feature a sword.
If you love Norton Juster...
This children’s classic has been on my bookshelf for as long as I can remember. Back then, I had no idea what a tollbooth was but I was sucked into Milo’s adventure nonetheless.
This book resonates so deeply with me, that one year I gave it as a Christmas present to everyone on my list. I still return to this book every once in a while to get a refresher on what a true friend is [Tock], how to get out of the Doldrums or conquer the Terrible Trivium.
Rhyme and Reason rule on land, but Douglas Adam’s “Don’t Panic”…
From Heather's list on developing your sense of adventure.
I was ten when my parents gave me The Phantom Tollbooth. I loved it instantly, and read it again and again and again.
It has a magical balance of wit and adventure. The world through which it takes its young hero on his quest for Rhyme and Reason is filled with strange places and stranger inhabitants, all of whom are delightful—even the preposterous Humbug, one of literature’s greatest comic nincompoops.
Honorable mention also to another favorite of my childhood, equally loved: Norman Lindsay’s brilliant The Magic Pudding. If you ever get the chance to read either of these classics to…
From Richard's list on fantasy that aren’t afraid to be funny.
Milo is bored. He receives a mysterious box with the address "For Milo, who has plenty of time" that contains a tollbooth. Milo drives through it to the Lands Beyond and stops at strange places. Dictionoplis and Digitopolis are the lands of words and numbers. Doldrums is where you end up if you don’t think, or act, or laugh.
After Expectations, and Conclusions (where you get by jumping), and rescuing the two princesses, Rhyme and Reason, Milo is no longer the boy he was…
The Phantom Tollbooth shaped my love for words. The puns and riddles, and the rather silly…
From Gita's list on exploring the fantasy genre for middle graders.
If you love The Phantom Tollbooth...
Young Milo, who doesn’t know what to do with himself, is teleported into a crazy world indeed: The Lands Beyond, where the Forrest of Sight contains an invisible city, where the Valley of Sound is silent, and where you have to take care to avoid getting lost in the Doldrums or jumping to (the island of) Conclusions. Milo’s quest is to find the princesses Rhyme and Reason and restore them to the realm. His sidekick is a watchdog named Tock (who ticks); the most loathsome demon in his way is a bureaucrat called the Senses Taker.
From Harry's list on the struggle of the individual in the crazy world.
If you love The Phantom Tollbooth...
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