Ratings7
Average rating3.1
Everybody needs friends— especially a boy in a dress!
Dennis' life is boring and lonely. His mother left two years ago, his truck driver father is depressed, his brother is a bully and, worst of all, "no hugging" is one of their household rules.
But one thing Dennis does have is soccer—he's the leading scorer on his team. Oh, and did we mention his secret passion for fashion?
When Dennis' friend Lisa discovers his stash of Vogue magazines, she convinces him to vamp it up and wear a dress to school. But in class, his hilarious hijinks as "Denise" are brought to a screeching halt when the headmaster discovers his secret and delivers the worst punishment of all—Dennis is expelled from school and therefore forbidden to play in the soccer Final Cup!
Can the team win the most important game of the year without their star player? And, more importantly, will Dennis gain the love and respect of his friends and family, even in a dress?
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So...it's a sweet story, and goodness knows we need more stories about accepting people and embracing their differences. And I quite enjoyed Walliams' writing style (lots of directly addressing the reader and sharing in-jokes with them). But what drove me absolutely bonkers was the incorrect use of (or, generally, the lack of correct) punctuation throughout the book. Many battles are fought over the Oxford comma, but it's not correct to have a sentence like, “I'm going to be late, Dad!” without the comma before “Dad”. It's the difference between “Let's eat Grandma” and “Let's eat, Grandma”, to quote an internet meme I've seen a hundred times. And this book was full of mistakes like that. I read a lot of children's books (I used to be the buyer for the children's department in a big chain of bookshops), and I've never seen an author omit that sort of comma. I don't know why Walliams did it, or why nobody corrected it, but it irritated me no end. Children learn how to write by reading, and if they read it and it's wrong, they're going to learn it wrong. For that reason alone I wouldn't give this book to my children (or pupils, if I were a teacher).