Quiz Questions
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Q1 of 45
When is Code Name Bananas set?
- World War Two
- World War One
- The Falklands War
- The Cold War
Q2 of 45
What is the name of the boy at the centre of the story?
Q3 of 45
Where does Eric spend much of his time at the start of the story?
- At school
- At home during the Blitz
- At London Zoo where his uncle works
- In the countryside
Q4 of 45
What animal does Eric form an extraordinary bond with at the zoo?
- A gorilla named Gertrude
- A lion named Gertrude
- An elephant named Gertrude
- A tiger named Gertrude
Q5 of 45
What is Eric's uncle's role at London Zoo?
- A vet
- A night watchman
- A zookeeper who is Gertrude's keeper
- The zoo director
Q6 of 45
What threat forces Eric and Gertrude on their adventure?
- German spies target the zoo
- The zoo is closing
- The government orders dangerous animals to be put down during wartime for safety reasons
- Gertrude is stolen
Q7 of 45
Where does Eric plan to take Gertrude to save her?
- To Scotland
- To the countryside
- To another zoo
- To a farm
Q8 of 45
How does Eric travel through wartime London with a gorilla?
- He doesn't
- In secret, at night
- By hiding Gertrude in a vehicle
- Through the chaos of the Blitz
Q9 of 45
What does Eric's uncle do when he discovers Eric's plan?
- He stops him
- He reports him
- He is unaware
- He eventually helps Eric, choosing Gertrude's survival over the rules
Q10 of 45
What is the name of the villain trying to have Gertrude destroyed?
- General Brute
- Commander Grunt
- Colonel Frog
- Captain Sharp
Q11 of 45
How does Gertrude help Eric during the dangerous wartime journey?
- Her strength and presence protect him from danger and she proves herself more resourceful than expected
- She attracts too much attention
- She protects him from bullies
- She guides him using animal instincts
Q12 of 45
What aspect of wartime London does Walliams vividly depict in the novel?
- The glamour of the era
- Military combat
- The political decisions
- The terror, darkness and community spirit of the Blitz
Q13 of 45
What is the significance of the code name 'Bananas'?
- It is the name of the safe house
- It is Eric's nickname
- It is the gorilla's favourite food
- It refers to the secret mission to save Gertrude
Q14 of 45
What does Eric discover about Gertrude's intelligence and emotional depth?
- She is less intelligent than expected
- She is dangerous throughout
- She is just an animal
- She communicates with Eric, shows fear, grief and joy, and demonstrates a profound emotional capacity that makes clear she is a true companion not just an animal
Q15 of 45
What does the novel ultimately suggest about the bond between humans and animals?
- The deepest bonds of loyalty, love and courage transcend species
- Animals exist to serve humans
- Animals and humans cannot truly bond
- The bond is unusual but not meaningful
Q16 of 45
When is the story set and how does this shape the plot?
- The First World War
- The 1960s
- World War Two
- The 1950s
Q17 of 45
Who are the two main characters?
- Eric and his uncle who is a zookeeper at London Zoo
- Eric, a boy, and Gertrude, a gorilla
- Eric and a soldier guarding the zoo from saboteurs
- Eric and a German boy separated from his family in the bombing
Q18 of 45
What bond forms between Eric and Gertrude?
- Gertrude acts as a protective older sister to Eric
- Eric trains Gertrude to help with secret missions
- A deep and unlikely friendship
- Gertrude is drawn to Eric because he reminds her of her keeper who went to fight
Q19 of 45
What danger does Gertrude face from the zoo authorities?
- They plan to evacuate her away from London permanently
- They plan to send her abroad as a diplomatic gift
- They plan to shoot the dangerous animals to prevent them escaping during a bomb raid
- They want to use her in military research
Q20 of 45
Who is Ratty and what is his role?
- Eric's uncle who works at the zoo and is his only London family
- A zookeeper who secretly funds resistance to the Nazis
- A rat that guides Eric through tunnels
- A fellow evacuee who becomes Eric's reluctant ally
Q21 of 45
How does the wartime setting add emotional weight to the story?
- By explaining why Eric must act alone without adult help
- By allowing Walliams to include exciting action sequences
- By giving it a historically accurate backdrop
- By showing that animals
Q22 of 45
What does the friendship between Eric and Gertrude suggest?
- That animals are always better companions than humans
- That friendships across apparent barriers
- That wartime loneliness was the greatest challenge civilians faced
- That children and animals understand each other in ways adults cannot
Q23 of 45
How does the spy subplot fit with the animal story?
- It is more interesting and the animal story supports it
- It distracts from the animal story
- It raises the stakes
- It was added by the publisher
Q24 of 45
What historical details ground the wartime setting?
- Evacuations, ration books, Anderson shelters, air raids and the Home Guard
- Focus on famous historical figures from the war
- Only the Blitz and evacuation
- Historical details are deliberately avoided to keep it accessible
Q25 of 45
What message does the story carry about animals in wartime?
- That they should have been evacuated from London at the start
- That the bond between humans and animals is stronger than any wartime policy
- That zookeepers were unsung heroes of the Second World War
- That animals deserve the same protection and compassion as people
Q26 of 45
What is the Code Name 'Bananas' and where does it come from?
- It is the name of a top-secret wartime mission Eric stumbles across
- It is the code word Eric and Ratty use to communicate safely
- Eric uses it as a nickname for Gertrude because she loves bananas
- It is the military code name for the gorilla rescue operation
Q27 of 45
How does Eric's mother feel about animals?
- She is frightened of large animals and disapproves of Eric's visits to the zoo
- She worked at the zoo herself before the war
- She loves them as much as Eric does
- She is indifferent
Q28 of 45
What does Gertrude's intelligence suggest about the story's message?
- That gorillas should be treated as humans
- That wartime bonds between species are unique and cannot be recreated
- That zoos are good places for gorillas
- That animals are far more aware and emotionally complex than most people assume
Q29 of 45
How does the wartime blackout affect Eric's nighttime adventures?
- It means he must memorise the route perfectly before it gets dark
- It creates fear and disorientation but also excitement
- It provides cover
- It makes everything more dangerous and he relies on Gertrude's senses
Q30 of 45
What does the children's home Eric comes from tell us about his situation?
- That the home treats its children well and Eric is happy there
- That he is part of the large number of children made vulnerable by the war
- That he has no family connections at all
- That he was placed there because of bad behaviour
Q31 of 45
How does Walliams use the World War Two setting to explore themes of courage in ordinary people?
- WWII is an exciting backdrop, which is consistent with Dahl's characteristic directness as a storyteller
- The wartime context elevates the novel's themes
- The wartime setting is inappropriate for a children's book
- WWII is too serious for comedy
Q32 of 45
What does the threat to Gertrude — a government order to destroy dangerous animals — say about how institutions treat the vulnerable in times of crisis?
- Governments always make right decisions in wartime
- The order is reasonable
- The threat is a plot device, and
- The order represents how bureaucratic thinking
Q33 of 45
How does Eric and Gertrude's friendship challenge conventional ideas about who or what we can truly connect with?
- The friendship is unrealistic
- It shows that gorillas make good pets
- Their friendship argues that emotional intelligence and empathy can create genuine bonds across species
- Animals cannot truly connect with humans
Q34 of 45
What does the chaos of the Blitz allow Walliams to do narratively that peacetime London could not?
- Chaos makes things exciting, and
- Nothing particular
- The Blitz's chaos
- The Blitz is dramatic, and
Q35 of 45
How does Walliams portray the wartime community spirit and what does it suggest about human behaviour in extremis?
- Through encounters with ordinary Londoners who help rather than hinder Eric and Gertrude, Walliams shows that shared danger can dissolve ordinary social divisions and generate extraordinary collective kindness
- Community spirit is a myth
- The Blitz destroyed community
- The community is irrelevant to the plot
Q36 of 45
What does Gertrude represent as a character — beyond being an animal?
- Gertrude is a gorilla, and
- She represents the zoo, and
- She represents Africa, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- Gertrude represents the innocent, the vulnerable, the non-combatant caught in a war that has nothing to do with them
Q37 of 45
How does the novel make a case for civil disobedience — breaking unjust rules — through Eric's actions?
- Civil disobedience is for adults
- The novel supports following all rules
- By making Eric's rule-breaking (saving Gertrude against official orders) clearly morally right, Walliams suggests that just rules deserve obedience but unjust ones demand resistance
- Rules should always be followed
Q38 of 45
What does Eric's relationship with his uncle suggest about the role of adult allies in children's moral development?
- Adults are always wiser than children
- The uncle is irrelevant
- Adults should always lead
- His uncle's eventual support
Q39 of 45
How does Walliams use animals in this novel to comment on human violence and war?
- War commentary is too adult for this book
- Animals are irrelevant to war commentary
- Gertrude — innocent, non-violent, caught in human conflict — embodies the victims of war who had no part in creating it, making the war's cost visible in a form that bypasses the adult abstractions through which war is usually discussed
- Animals represent nature, which is consistent with Dahl's characteristic directness as a storyteller
Q40 of 45
What does the novel suggest about the ethics of keeping animals in zoos, through Gertrude's situation?
- While not condemning zoos directly, the novel makes the reader feel Gertrude's experience of captivity and danger so viscerally that it prompts genuine reflection on whether keeping wild animals in cities creates vulnerabilities that are ultimately cruel
- The zoo question is not raised
- Zoos are always harmful
- It fully supports zoos
Q41 of 45
How does the code name 'Bananas' function tonally in a novel dealing with serious WWII themes?
- Code names are always silly
- It is inappropriately comic
- The code name has no significance
- The playful code name introduces the gentle comedy that runs through the novel
Q42 of 45
In what ways does Code Name Bananas follow the tradition of the wartime adventure story, and how does it update the genre?
- It follows the tradition of wartime heroism and pluck, but updates it by placing an unlikely hero (a small boy) and an impossible companion (a gorilla) at the centre
- The genre is outdated
- There is no wartime adventure tradition
- It copies old war stories, and
Q43 of 45
How does Eric's love for Gertrude model a form of moral courage that transcends self-interest?
- Eric is irresponsible, and
- Eric risks real danger
- Eric acts out of self-interest
- His courage is accidental
Q44 of 45
What does the WWII setting allow Walliams to explore about what it means to be on 'the right side' of history?
- Historical moral questions are too complex for children
- The Allies were right, which is consistent with Dahl's characteristic directness as a storyteller
- By showing a boy disobeying Allied government orders to save an innocent life, Walliams complicates the simple moral geography of WWII
- The setting is irrelevant to moral questions
Q45 of 45
How does Gertrude's fate — surviving and eventually thriving — serve the emotional needs of young readers processing stories about war and loss?
- Children should experience tragic endings
- Gertrude's fate is irrelevant
- Tragic endings are more honest
- Her survival provides the resolution of hope that young readers need