Log In
|
My Passes
|
Sign Up
Learning Guides
Teacher Resources
Test Prep
College Readiness
Schools & Districts
All of Shmoop
Literature
Bible
Poetry
Shakespeare
Mythology
Bestsellers
Dr. Seuss
Pre-Algebra
Algebra
Algebra II
Geometry
Biology
US History
Flashcards
DMV
Careers
SAT
ACT
AP Exams
En Español
Essay Lab
Videos
Literary Critics
Shmoop Shtuff
Cite This Page
To Go
The Phantom Tollbooth
by
Norton Juster
Home
Literature
The Phantom Tollbooth
Analysis
Symbolism, Imagery, Allegory
Intro
Summary
Themes
Quotes
Characters
Analysis
Questions
Quizzes
Flashcards
Best of the Web
Write Essay
Teaching
Symbolism, Imagery, Allegory
The Phantom Tollbooth
Meals
Gifts
The Doldrums
The Castle in the Air
The Tollbooth
Advertisement
Table of Contents
AP English Language
AP English Literature
SAT Test Prep
ACT Exam Prep
ADVERTISEMENT
The Phantom Tollbooth Symbolism, Imagery & Allegory
Sometimes, there’s more to Lit than meets the eye.
The Phantom Tollbooth
Yep, that's right. This whole book is an allegory. Wait, what's an allegory again? We're glad you asked. We can understand an allegory as "any writing in verse or prose that has a double meaning. T...
Meals
Meals play an important part in many fantasy stories – just think of the famous tea party in Alice in Wonderland.And if you've read enough fairy tales, you know that eating the food in magical la...
Gifts
Milo receives an important gift in nearly every landmark he hits on his journey through the Lands Beyond. If you've ever read another quest story, you know that this isn't unusual. Everywhere a tra...
The Doldrums
The Doldrums are one of the first places Milo visits in the Lands Beyond, so we get the feeling they're probably pretty important. When he first arrives, her meets the Lethargarians, a group of col...
The Castle in the Air
The phrase "castle in the air" is often used to describe a fabulous daydream that someone's having about a fantastic future. The castles people fantasize about aren't based in reality. After all, t...
The Tollbooth
In several of the interviews Norton Juster gave to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of The Phantom Tollbooth, he mentioned one big worry he had: that twenty-first-century readers won't know what...
Next Page:
Questions
Previous Page:
Characters