Mister Pip

[Mister Pip]
Year: 
2006
Type: 
Public: 
Publisher: 
Hachette Collections
Year of publication: 
2008
Pages: 
223
Moral assessment: 
Type: Literature
Nothing inappropriate.
Some morally inappropriate content.
Contains significant sections contrary to faith or morals.
Contains some lurid passages, or presents a general ideological framework that could confuse those without much Christian formation.
Contains several lurid passages, or presents an ideological framework that is contrary or foreign to Christian values.
Explicitly contradicts Catholic faith or morals, or is directed against the Church and its institutions.
Literary quality: 
Recommendable: 
Transmits values: 
Sexual content: 
Violent content: 
Vulgar or obscene language: 
Ideas that contradict Church teaching: 
The rating of the different categories comes from the opinion of Delibris' collaborators

The novel tells the story of Matilda, a young girl living on the island of Bougainville, in the Pacific, amid a civil war in the early 1990s. Her father has emigrated, her mother endures the pain of his absence, and the local school has been closed because of the conflict.

Amid the ruins emerges Mr. Watts, a white man who decides to stay, reopen the school, and introduce the children to Great Expectations by Charles Dickens. The power of imagination and of literary storytelling becomes, for Matilda, a refuge, a guide—something as real as the tangible world. The narrative voice contrasts what happens in the outer world with what takes place within: fears, absences, memories, hopes.

It is a book that not only entertains but uplifts. It reflects on the transformative power of books, on education, on courage in the face of adversity, and on human dignity amid disaster. It contains moments of pain but also of beauty—in the way it describes flora and landscape, in its silences, in the light that still filters through dark times.

Author: M NH, Mexico
Update on: Oct 2025