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  1. Chapter 1. Following the death of his father, a man named Joseph Hooper moves back into his father’s home, a large English mansion called Warings. Joseph has an eleven-year-old son, Edmund Hooper, and his wife, Ellen Hooper, died six years ago. At first, Edmund is lonely and bored at Warings, which he considers a dull, ugly place.

  2. Joseph and Helena have grown closer and when they tell the boys that they are going to get married, both boys are horrified. Charles feels a sense of dread when he is told that he will be attending school with Edmund and that the two will be considered brothers. He drowns himself in the stream at Hang Wood.

  3. The novel to which I’m the King of the Castle is most frequently compared is William Golding’s (1954). Like Hill’s novel, is narrated from the point of view of children, but it’s far from a “children’s book.”. Instead, both Hill and Golding portray children as violent, psychologically complex, and capable of committing profoundly ...

  4. Edmund comes to a case at the end of the room. Using the key, he opens the case, revealing a “Death’s Head Hawk Moth.”. Edmund touches the moth with his finger, and immediately, the moth, “already years dead,” collapses into dust. The chapter ends with the macabre image of Edmund destroying an already-dead animal.

  5. Study Guide for I’m the King of the Castle. I'm the King of the Castle study guide contains a biography of Susan Hill, literature essays, quiz questions, major themes, characters, and a full summary and analysis. The I’m the King of the Castle Community Note includes chapter-by-chapter summary and analysis, character list, theme list ...

  6. English author Susan Hill is best known for the gothic novel The Woman in Black. I'm the King of the Castle was published in 1970, and tells the story of two young boys Edmund and Charles, whose relationship is toxic at best and borders on the sociopathic, their baiting of each other reminiscent of the way in which the boys in William Golding's ...

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  8. With the widest coverage and in-depth analysis, York Notes: I’m the King of the Castle give you everything you need to reach an excellent understanding of Hill’s tragic tale of childhood. With full summaries of each chapter, study notes on key characters including Edmund Hooper and Charles Kingshaw, and discussion of themes such as ‘Isolation’ and ‘Cruelty’, this study guide ...

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