Community Reviews

Rating(4 / 5.0, 99 votes)
5 stars
29(29%)
4 stars
42(42%)
3 stars
28(28%)
2 stars
0(0%)
1 stars
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99 reviews
March 26,2025
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It was fun to read this again! I read this in school when I was younger and I remember it being different and unique. Now as an adult the plot was still enjoyable. The puns and word play kept the story moving. Milo traveled from one place to the next with colorful characters and situations. I would recommend this timeless classic to anyone. Young and old can appreciate the uniqueness of it all. Thanks!
March 26,2025
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JULY

as part of my personal reading challenges for 2017, once a month i will be revisiting a favorite book from when i was a little bitty karen and seeing if it holds up to my fond memories and determining if i can still enjoy it as an old and crotchety karen.

fingers crossed.

so: first things first. in answer to the question 'does this book hold up?' here’s what’s weird. i have no memory of reading this book as a kid. i know i read it - i remember all of jules feiffer’s illustrations and i have strong memories of taking it off the library shelves and adding it to my stack on a number of occasions, and i also remember it being read to me in elementary school in my AT program (that’s ‘academically talented,’ thank you very much). however, reading it for this project, it was completely unfamiliar to me - i had no nostalgic shiver of recognition, nor any anticipation of what was to come. the only explanation i have for this blank is that while reading this book as a child, i also witnessed an unspeakable crime, after which i was kidnapped and had my memory wiped, accounting both for the lack of memory and the simultaneously strong memory of borrowing it from the library multiple times.

which is fine - i have no interest in remembering unspeakable crimes, and the memory wipe allowed me to experience this book as though for the first time.

baby-karen review:





adult-review:

adults-only this time, i guess. this book is beyond delightful - silly, yes but also genuinely funny and smart. full of puns and paradoxes and wordplay and wonderland-logic, but more sophisticated and less loopy than wonderland - it’s a clever kind of humor that appeals to both kids and adults and also happens to be full of truths:

…you can swim all day in the Sea of Knowledge and still come out completely dry. Most people do.

sure, there are lots of lessons, like the importance of choosing your words with precision, and the necessity of common sense and imagination in learning, as it contributes more lasting value than rote memorization, which is basically the point of this book - milo is a smart enough kid, but he is bored by school, because he has no framework for applying his learning:

”I can’t see the point in learning to solve useless problems, or subtracting turnips from turnips, or knowing where Ethiopia is or how to spell February.”

but once he passes through the magical phantom tollbooth, he begins to actually apply his brain and creativity towards problem-solving adventures both linguistic and numerical, meeting many crazy characters along the way, taking some on as traveling companions, like the wonderful watchdog. who is a dog and a watch at once.



like the watchdog, the lessons milo learns revolve around the ideas of what is possible - broadening his educational perspective, transcending the limited brainbox of formal education and embracing a less structured, more experiential approach to learning.

”one of the nicest things about mathematics, or anything else you might care to learn, is that many of the things which can never be, often are.”

this is one of those revelations that can change a person, and juster reinforces it in a number of ways:

”so many things are possible just as long as you don’t know they’re impossible.”

which is a reasoning that brings to mind that alice in wonderland quote:

Alice laughed: "There's no use trying," she said; "one can't believe impossible things." "I daresay you haven't had much practice," said the Queen. "When I was younger, I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.”

but it’s a different treatment - in alice, the tone is just a giggle; it’s silliness in a vacuum. juster’s take is more encouraging and ultimately more useful as a life lesson, fostering self-confidence:

”…you had the courage to try; and what you can do is often simply a matter of what you will do.”


that is not to say that this is a through-and-through feel-good book. some of the realizations are very sobering slaps:

”But if all the roads arrive at the same place at the same time, then aren’t they all the right way?” asked Milo.

“Certainly not!” he shouted, glaring from his most upset face. “They’re all the wrong way. Just because you have a choice, it doesn’t mean that any of them has to be right.”


this is an amazing insight and i wish i DID remember this book from my childhood days, because lord knows it is a useful lesson and it’s one that many adults haven’t figured out.

of course, we’ve figured out some of the other lessons the hard way:

”You’ll find,” he remarked gently, “that the only thing you can do easily is be wrong, and that’s hardly worth the effort.”


indeed.

the last thing i want to call out is this illustration of the terrible trivium, which looks like nothing less than an early version of slender man:



the terrible trivium is just as insidious as slender man - he doesn’t make kids stab their friends, but as the demon of petty tasks and worthless jobs, ogre of wasted effort, and monster of habit, he definitely brings his share of struggle to us all with his outlook:

”If you only do the easy and useless jobs, you’ll never have to worry about the important ones which are so difficult. You just won’t have the time. For there’s always something to do to keep you from what you really should be doing…

which is interesting to me, because i encountered a similar philosophy recently in Arbitrary Stupid Goal, and when i read it there, i applauded it:

A goal that isn’t too important makes you live in the moment, and still gives you a driving force. This driving force is a way to get around the fact that we will all die and there is no real point to life.

But with the ASG there is a point. It is not such an important point that you postpone joy to achieve it. It is just a decoy point that keeps you bobbing along, allowing you to find ecstasy in the small things, the unexpected, and the everyday.

What happens when you reach the stupid goal? Then what? You just find a new ASG.


i recognized and appreciated this way of thinking, completely forgotting about juster’s version of it until i sat down to write this review and noticed the parallel. which makes my theory about some sort of book-related memory wipe implanted by hypnotic suggestion in my formative years more or less fact.

so, if you haven’t read this one yet, or if you have had your own memory of having read it wiped, get on it. and if you have bred children, make them read it. and do not let them anywhere near unspeakable crimes. which should go without saying, but still.

JANUARY: wait till helen comes

FEBRUARY: the little gymnast

MARCH: zucchini

APRIL: something queer at the library

MAY: good-bye pink pig

JUNE: the girl with the silver eyes

********************************************
shark week was so much later this year than usual that it threw me off, so i'm reading this one just under the gun, and trying to finish two more shark books before the week of festivities ends. YEESH!

come to my blog!
March 26,2025
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n  n    You can swim all day in the Sea of Knowledge and still come out completely dry.n  n
After a long time, this is the first children book I've read. It's a good book. I read this book because of its amazing cover. And the fact that it's my cousin's course book. She lent it to me and I read it in three sittings. And loved it!

It's the story of a bored child, Milo who doesn't find anything interesting in the real world. One day he gets Phantom Tollbooth as present which allows him to go to the Land Beyond. The Land Beyond has two main and important kingdoms, Dictionpolis and Digitopolis. Dictionpolis is ruled by the king of words, Azaz. And Digitopolis is ruled by a Mathemagician. Both kingdoms are at conflict because their kings are biased of their own way of communication. The matters in kingdoms have become worse because of the absence of two princesses, Rhyme and Reason. Milo goes on the quest to save them along with his two companions, a dog and a bug.
n  n    Words and numbers are of equal value, for, in the cloak of knowledge, one is warp and the other weft.n  n
=> To be honest, I was expecting it to be very funny. But it had one or two of such moments.
=> I loved Dictionpolis more than Digitopolis. In Dictionpolis, one *literally* eats his own words. LOL!
And in Digitopolis, there is Subtraction Stew. By eating this, you will feel more hungry than before!
March 26,2025
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I was really looking forward to finding out what all the hub-bub about this book was, sadly at the end of the day I mostly just found it "too clever" and didactic. Think Alice in Wonderland marries The Littlest Prince.

This seems like the kind of book that snooty parents would want their kids to read on the way to fencing lessons while chomping on their organic granola. Always hoping that their ever blossoming renaissance child will wow a crowd of adults with their clever anecdotes and mature vocabulary.

Personally, I believe kids should be selfish, obnoxious intrusions in our lives constantly on the verge of burning down the house while eating highly processed foods and stepping over their Archie comics collection.

(All afore mention opinions can be discounted by the fact that my younger brother loved this book and grew without snooty parents or fencing lessons. Additionaly my own son is currently listening to at least mildly enjoying this book - but still it's soooooo dang OBTUSELY CLEVER - bleh).
March 26,2025
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This was a joy to read again. It's amazing how much of this had faded from my memory since childhood.

Norton takes all these common phrases and ideas and puts them together in a way that makes them feel absurd. He remakes them. This is a great book for kids starting out their reading journey. It sparks the imagination about words. I loved the dictionopolis. That was amazing. Words are important and this book encourages a curiosity about language and words and how things can be used. It is a fun little middle grade read that I'm so glad is still around.

I did listen to this in the car on my way to school and I can't remember many of the wonderful quotes from characters I would love to put down here and comment on. Rhyme and Reason are important in this book and without them we do see what a mess the world can be.

I also enjoy how the Phantom Tollbooth just appears and disappears without ever explaining who are what sent it. It just is. I found that refreshing. This should be school reading or on a reading list at school.

This also reminds me so much of Alice and Wonderland and the absurdity of the characters we meet in this strange land. Milo is simply trying to figure things out. It's the closest thing to it that I know of. It is a sharp witted little story and it's easy to see how it came out of the 60s era. I had fun reading it.

March 26,2025
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n  n
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I'm doing a project where I'm rereading some of my favorite books from adolescence and seeing how they hold up. Some of them are adult books and some of them are children's books. My most recent addition to the project is the delightful middle grade fantasy novel, THE PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH. Including this book on the list might actually be cheating because I read it for the first time elementary school (and also watched the movie, which is supremely creepy in the way that only 1970s movies can be creepy, by which I mean it is basically like a bad acid trip).



THE PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH is about a boy named Milo who is depressed and jaded and doesn't really take joy in anything. One day, a present shows up in his apartment. It's a cardboard tollbooth. Having nothing better to do, he decides to try it and ends up transported to a very strange world where numbers come out of mines and words can be eaten and demons live in the land of Ignorance.



This is definitely a book for children but it's wonderfully clever and I think one of the things I love most about it is how many layers it has. Like ALICE IN WONDERLAND, Juster loves to play with words and meaning, and it's just so witty. Every time I read it, I pick up more references, and I think that's the mark of a perfect work of children's literature-- something that becomes additive over the years and gains, rather than loses, its value.



3.5 stars
March 26,2025
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This is an all-time favorite of mine.
My fifth-grade teacher, Miss Shannon, read it to the class chapter by chapter, and I was so absorbed in the story I cajoled my grandma into buying me a copy so I wouldn't have to wait for the next day's reading time. I recently re-read it with my kids and they loved it, too. The humor (downright Monty Python-esque in places) and vocabulary was a bit over their heads, but they still got into it. Seriously, what's not to love about a talking dodecahedron?
Highly recommended for adults and kids over perhaps age 8, or younger if you are reading it to them.
March 26,2025
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I love (good) children's books, and this is definitely one of the best I've ever read. My only regret is that I didn't get to enjoy it as a child.

I recommend reading Mia's review, because it's a true work of art, and without it, I would have never learnt about this wonderful little book.

The Phantom Tollbooth is a delightful book full of wordplay, and what incredible wordplay at that! It is a children's book, which not just teaches about numbers and letters and words and responsibility, but I recommend it for all users, young and old. It is full of interesting, absurd, ridiculous characters like the Whether Man, the Watch Dog, kings Azaz and Mathemagician, princesses Rhyme and Reason; as well as fascinating places like the Island of Conclusions and the Valley of Silence. It is full to the brim with puns, alliterations, rhymes and such utterly clever wordplay, I probably literally squealed in delight sometimes.
Take, for instance, part of the Lethargians' schedule:
n  “From 9:30 to 10:30 we dawdle and delay.
“From 1:00 to 2:00 we linger and loiter.
“From 4:00 to 5:00 we loaf and lounge until dinner.
“From 6:00 to 7:00 we dillydally.
n


On the way, Milo, the ten year old protagonist, learns many valuable lessons; such as learning to pick his words carefully before speaking, so he can make sense, and understanding the importance of mathematics in life. He also learns that most things in life are only impossible, if one perceives so. He learns about the meaning of sound, and the value of silence. Most of all, he learns to learn from his mistakes. He learns that things we see may not always be as they seem, and that it is important to understand rather than just idly see.

n  “You must never feel badly about making mistakes,” explained Reason quietly, “as long as you take the trouble to learn from them. For you often learn more by being wrong for the right reasons than you do by being right for the wrong reasons.”n

I myself had so much to learn from the book, betwixt all the laughs and the amusement provided by the wordplay. Math, for instance, has always been my Achilles' heel. I also have the terrible habit of jumping to conclusions. The vivid imagery provided by this book on both these...elements kind of made me want to work on myself in these aspects. Remember that without Rhyme of Reason, a Castle of Air will always float away. Remember the importance of an Average, and the problems with Overbearing Know-it-All and Gross Exaggeration.

It's a little difficult for me to write anymore than I have, for fear of spoiling this, but I recommend it highly. Read it if you're feeling bored; read it if you're feeling low. Whether a child or an adult, you'll laugh, cry, learn, and be a little bit wiser after you're done.
March 26,2025
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This was the latest book being taught and discussed in my daughter’s class, but with a state exam coming up, they took a little break. But we didn’t: we decided to run through it as fast as we could. It was also a book on my wife’s shelf that she’d encouraged me to read for the longest time.

Not only is it a kid’s book, not only is it fantasy, but it’s also got some odd turns of phrase, puns, and playing on words galore. Milo’s bored, and suddenly he finds a car and a tollbooth in his room. He hops in the car, drops a coin in the booth, and before long he’s on the road to Digitopolis. From there he’s in the doldrums, jumps to conclusions, and has a bunch more adventures in wordplay. Soon he finds himself on an adventure with a watchdog named Tock and The Humbug to rescue Rhyme and Reason and save the kingdom.



Loved these characters. Quirky and weird is the name of the game. And each one has a quirk that makes some sense, to whom Milo plays the straight man every time. Kind of reminds me of Costello in a lengthy version of “Who’s On First?” The plot takes off about 2/3 of the way through, when the adventure to rescue the princesses really begins. They’re chased all over by demons and tripped up all over.

But it’s the ending, and the relationships, and the sweet connections that really got me. Oh, boy. Rhyme and Reason have a few paragraphs that tell me why education is worth it, why learning new things and exploring ideas is one of the keys to a good life. I took screenshots and might just put a few quotes up in my office. Same for what Milo learns at the end. Great life lessons told in an endearing way. That knocked it into the 4.5-star category for me. The kind of book I wanted my daughter to read.

And so, she did. She was looking for something to do, so she sat on the couch and crushed it. Several weeks before her class. Makes a dad so proud.

Find the kid in your life and read this with them!

March 26,2025
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I don't know how I made it this far in life by not reading a novel built entirely around wordplay. The Phantom Tollbooth was not at all what I expected, and I found it quite enjoyable, mirthful, blithesome, convivial. While I can see why it's compared to Alice in Wonderland, Carroll never had much charm for me, and I found a lot of charm in this book.

The Phantom Tollbooth has what may become one of my all-time favorite endings for a middle-grade novel. So many of the quest/travel novels leave the reader feeling a bit bereft for the protagonist upon return. The Phantom Tollbooth shows Milo happier and more interested in his own life, though sad that the Tollbooth has vanished, which I found vastly more satisfying.

I'm convinced that this would make an extremely wonderful read-aloud. Feiffer's pictures are wonderful, though I don't love his style. The 50th anniversary edition has a note from Juster, which made me appreciate my reading of the novel even more, as he showed such good humor and affection for this book. If you, like me, have been wondering what the fuss is about, give it a try the next time you feel in the mood for a clever middle-grade adventure.
March 26,2025
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#2018PopsugarReadingChallenge
11. An allegory


Ban đầu tôi đã sợ quyển sách này không đúng với nội dung thử thách yêu cầu - một câu truyện ngụ ngôn - khi mà nhìn qua bìa và đọc giới thiệu tôi nghĩ ngay đến một câu truyện quá hiện đại, không giống với những câu truyện ngụ ngôn tôi từng được học trong chương trình ngữ văn ở trường. Nhưng hóa ra tôi đã nhầm to.
Tôi đã tra từ điển Oxford và đây là định nghĩa của từ allegory:
a story, play, picture, etc. in which each character or event is a symbol representing an idea or a quality, such as truth, evil, death, etc.
Và câu truyện này phù hợp. Ý tôi là hết sức phù hợp. Từng câu, từng chữ, từng nhân vật, lời nói trong câu truyện đều là phép ẩn dụ về những điều thân thuộc nhưng rất ta nghĩa trong cuộc sống như chú chó canh giữ hay chú chó thời gian Tock (watch dog) luôn canh giữ, nhắc nhở để không ai lãng phí thời gian, ý nghĩ của âm thanh, màu sắc, của những lời nói và quyết định qua người Bảo hộ âm thanh, ngài Sắc độ, ong đánh vần, vân vân... rất rất nhiều các phép ẩn dụ mà tôi không thể kể hết được, bạn chỉ có thể tự đọc, tự khám phá thôi.
Trạm thu phí quái lạ còn dày đặc các phép chơi chữ. Cứ cách vài trang tác giả lại lồng ghép khéo léo vào một phép chơi chữ của những từ đồng âm, đồng nghĩa. Lúc đọc tôi đã rất tò mò không biết bản gốc sẽ thế nào, tác giả dùng những từ ngữ gì, thật tiếc biết bao khi không được tự mình đọc bản gốc.

Nội dung câu truyện rất dễ thương về hành trình giải cứu hai cô công chúa Vần điệu và Lý tính cùng những khám phá bất ngờ và rất ngộ nghĩnh của Milo, một cậu bé ban đầu khá buồn tẻ nhưng sau chuyến đi đã trưởng thành hơn rất nhiều.
Chi tiết tôi thích nhất có lẽ là dàn nhạc của ngài Sắc độ. Một dàn nhạc không hề có âm thanh mà dàn nhạc này tạo lên những sắc màu dệt lên một buổi bình minh rất đẹp, rất huy hoàng.
Truyện còn có rất nhiều tranh minh họa rất hợp, rất đẹp. Nét vẽ của họa sĩ không hề rõ ràng, toàn bộ bức tranh là những nét vẽ rối rắm nhưng lại hết sức ngộ nghĩnh, rất hợp với nội dung câu truyện.

Trạm thu phí quái lạ khiến tôi nhớ lại một câu truyện của Việt Nam đó là Ai và Ki ở xứ sở những con số tàng hình (tôi không nhớ rõ tên truyện cho lắm) nhưng Trạm thu phí quái lạ xứng đáng ở bậc trên câu truyện kia rất nhiều, cả về nội dung và ý nghĩa.
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