Quiz Questions
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Q1 of 45
What is the name of the young girl at the centre of Awful Auntie?
Q2 of 45
What is Stella's awful auntie called?
- Aunt Josephine
- Alberta
- Aunt Roberta
- Auntie Mabel
Q3 of 45
What is unusual about Alberta's pet?
- She has a wolf
- She has a pet bear
- She has a giant Bavarian mountain owl called Wagner
- She has a giant snake
Q4 of 45
What has happened to Stella's parents at the start of the novel?
- They have abandoned Stella
- They have been killed in a car crash
- They are in hospital
- They have gone on holiday
Q5 of 45
What is the name of the friendly ghost who becomes Stella's ally?
Q6 of 45
What is Aunt Alberta trying to do to Stella?
- Educate her
- Steal her inheritance and the family mansion
- Send her to boarding school
- Adopt her
Q7 of 45
What is the name of Stella's family home?
- Sweer Manor
- Saxby Castle
- Saxby Hall
- Saxby Manor
Q8 of 45
What period of history is the novel set in?
- Victorian times
- World War Two
- The 1930s
- The 1950s
Q9 of 45
What is wrong with Stella's memory at the beginning of the novel?
- She is simply young
- She has been given something to make her forget
- She pretends not to remember
- She has amnesia from the crash
Q10 of 45
How does Stella come to trust Sid the ghost?
- He appears and scares Alberta
- He helps her piece together her memories and reveals what really happened to her parents
- Stella already knew about him
- He tells her everything immediately
Q11 of 45
What does Alberta use to control Stella?
- Magic
- Drugs hidden in her food and drink
- Locking her in a room
- Threats
Q12 of 45
What is Alberta's plan for the family estate?
- To give it to charity
- To sell it and pocket the money herself
- To convert it into a hotel
- To restore it
Q13 of 45
What is the truth about Stella's parents?
- They died as Alberta said
- They were never in the crash
- They left by choice
- They survived but Alberta has been hiding this from Stella
Q14 of 45
How is Alberta eventually defeated?
- Through Stella and Sid's combined bravery exposing Alberta's plot
- By the police
- By Wagner turning against her
- By Stella's parents returning
Q15 of 45
What is the relationship between Sid and Saxby Hall?
- He built it
- He is a servant
- He was a previous owner
- He died there as a child and has been haunting it ever since, loyal to the family
Q16 of 45
What does Stella wake up to find at the start?
- She is alone in the family house with a note saying her parents have gone away
- She wakes up at Aunt Alberta's house with no explanation given
- She is on a train with no memory of how she got there
- She is in bed with no memory of an accident and is told her parents are dead
Q17 of 45
What kind of person is Aunt Alberta?
- Distant and reluctant but trying to do her duty
- Large, terrifying and scheming to take Stella's inheritance
- Eccentric but kind at heart
- A former circus performer who has become bitter
Q18 of 45
What is Wagner and how does Alberta use him?
- Her butler who secretly helps Stella
- Her deceased husband's faithful guard dog
- A magical creature that guards the house
- Her enormous vicious owl who is used to intimidate and threaten Stella
Q19 of 45
What is Aunt Alberta's plan for Stella's fortune?
- To slowly drain the estate of its assets
- To sell the estate and split the money with an accomplice
- To forge documents making herself permanent guardian and take control of the house and money
- To wait until Stella comes of age then contest the will in court
Q20 of 45
Who is Soot?
- A kind groundskeeper who secretly assists Stella
- A ghost boy who haunts the house and becomes Stella's only ally
- A cat who guides Stella through hidden passages
- A young servant who overhears Alberta's plan
Q21 of 45
How does Stella show courage throughout the story?
- By using her knowledge of the house to trap Alberta
- By standing up to Alberta repeatedly despite being alone and physically small
- By finding legal documents that prove Alberta's plan illegal
- By running away to seek help from police
Q22 of 45
What is the tone of 'Awful Auntie' compared to other Walliams books?
- More realistic with fewer exaggerated or supernatural elements
- Lighter and more purely comic
- Gothic and dramatic
- Funnier and more absurd with less emotional weight
Q23 of 45
What does Stella discover that gives her hope as the story develops?
- That her parents may still be alive
- That her parents knew about Alberta and tried to warn her
- That the servants are on Stella's side and will help her
- That Alberta has made a legal mistake that could be used against her
Q24 of 45
What does Wagner the owl represent in the story?
- Alberta's cruelty and power
- Wisdom — he watches everything but stays neutral
- The wildness of nature intruding on civilised life
- The supernatural elements threaded through the plot
Q25 of 45
How does the Gothic mansion setting contribute to the story?
- It allows Walliams to include historical details
- It explains why no one comes to rescue Stella
- It contrasts with the modern world outside
- It creates atmosphere, isolation and hidden secrets
Q26 of 45
Why is the story set in a period that feels somewhat historical?
- Because Walliams prefers historical settings
- It is set in the present day but in a very old building
- It was written as a tribute to Victorian adventure stories for children
- The old-fashioned country house setting gives it a Gothic atmosphere that a modern setting could not provide
Q27 of 45
What does Stella use from the house to help her fight back?
- Her knowledge of the house's many hidden passages and rooms
- Legal documents found in the library
- Old weapons in the trophy room
- Her grandfather's secret diary
Q28 of 45
How does Walliams make Alberta genuinely frightening rather than just comically unpleasant?
- By giving her supernatural powers
- By revealing she has already harmed a previous ward
- By showing her hurting animals
- By making her physical size and violence feel real
Q29 of 45
What does Soot know about the house that proves crucial?
- He knows where Alberta has hidden the legal documents
- He knows Alberta's weakness and how to exploit it
- He knows the hidden passages and secret routes through the walls
- He knows what happened to Stella's parents
Q30 of 45
What wider message does the story carry about children in danger?
- That children should always seek help from official sources
- That a child alone facing a powerful, cruel adult must find courage and cleverness because no one else will save them
- That children are more resilient than adults give them credit for
- That children should always trust adults even when frightened
Q31 of 45
How does Awful Auntie fit into the tradition of Gothic children's literature?
- Gothic literature is too dark for children
- The novel is comic, and
- It has no Gothic elements
- A crumbling ancestral home, a sinister adult relative, amnesia, a ghost, dark secrets and a vulnerable child at the mercy of evil guardians place the novel squarely in the Gothic tradition
Q32 of 45
What does Alberta represent as a villain? What anxieties does she embody for a child reader?
- Alberta embodies the terrifying figure of the trusted carer who is secretly malevolent
- All aunts are untrustworthy
- She is simply greedy
- She is a pantomime villain with no deeper meaning
Q33 of 45
How does the friendship between Stella and Sid transcend the usual boundaries of children's friendships?
- Their bond
- It is a normal friendship
- Sid is a plot device, and
- Ghost friendships are impossible
Q34 of 45
What does Stella's amnesia allow Walliams to do structurally, and how does it create narrative tension?
- Amnesia allows Walliams to structure the novel as a mystery Stella must solve about her own life, creating reader tension as we discover the truth alongside her
- It is just a plot convenience
- Amnesia is overused in children's fiction
- The amnesia is never explained
Q35 of 45
How does the 1930s setting allow Walliams to explore themes of inheritance, class and female power?
- Historical settings are for period drama, and
- Walliams knows nothing about the 1930s
- The setting is irrelevant
- The 1930s context
Q36 of 45
What does the novel suggest about the theme of memory and identity — specifically, that knowing your own story is essential to knowing yourself?
- Identity has nothing to do with memory
- Memory is unimportant
- Stella acts fine without memory
- Stella cannot act or understand her situation until she recovers her memories
Q37 of 45
How does Walliams use Alberta's enormous size and eccentricity to create a sense of grotesque exaggeration typical of children's literature?
- Alberta is a realistic character
- Alberta's appearance is irrelevant
- Grotesque characters are always simplistic
- Alberta's physical grotesqueness
Q38 of 45
What does the loyal ghost Sid suggest about the power of love and duty to transcend even death?
- Sid's continued haunting of Saxby Hall out of loyalty to the family suggests that love and duty create bonds so strong they survive death
- Ghosts are for excitement, and
- Ghosts are supernatural elements, and
- Sid has no deeper significance
Q39 of 45
How does Stella develop as a character across the novel, moving from victim to agent?
- She is never truly in danger
- Stella is passive throughout
- Stella begins helpless, amnesiac and isolated, but as she recovers her memories and builds her alliance with Sid she becomes increasingly active, culminating in her defeating Alberta entirely through her own courage
- Others save Stella
Q40 of 45
What does the family mansion represent in the novel, and why does its ownership matter so much?
- The mansion is a setting, and
- It is just a building
- Saxby Hall represents heritage, identity and belonging
- Property is about money, and
Q41 of 45
How does the novel present the concept of 'found family' through Stella's relationship with Sid?
- With her real family apparently gone, Stella forms a family of choice with Sid
- Found family is not a theme here
- Sid is not family
- The novel is about blood family, and
Q42 of 45
In what ways does Awful Auntie revisit and rework the fairy-tale trope of the wicked stepmother/guardian?
- It has nothing to do with fairy tales
- Alberta is entirely original
- Alberta is a modern version of the wicked guardian of fairy tales, updated with period detail and psychological plausibility
- Fairy-tale archetypes are too simple
Q43 of 45
How does Walliams handle the difficult topic of parental loss — or apparent loss — sensitively for a young audience?
- He ignores the emotional impact, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- Children's books should not include parental loss
- By combining genuine emotional stakes with comic relief and ultimately a hopeful resolution, Walliams allows young readers to explore grief and loss in a supported, ultimately non-traumatic narrative space
- The topic is handled badly
Q44 of 45
What does the resolution — parents alive, Alberta defeated, estate saved — suggest about the ultimate triumph of truth over deception?
- Deception sometimes wins
- The resolution is too convenient
- Some truths remain hidden
- Truth, however buried and suppressed, always surfaces eventually
Q45 of 45
How does Walliams use the character of Wagner the owl to add both comedy and menace to the novel?
- Owls are always sinister in literature
- Wagner is comic, and
- Wagner is unimportant
- Wagner functions as both a comic grotesque