Connect with us

News Beat

David Walliams: All the concerning themes in his bestselling children’s books

Published

on

David Walliams: All the concerning themes in his bestselling children’s books

David Walliams’s children’s books are being looked at with renewed scrutiny after he was dropped by his publisher HarperCollins, following allegations of inappropriate behaviour being made against the author.

A junior colleague is said to have complained about his conduct, leading to other staff members being interviewed.

Former employees alleged to The Telegraph that they were advised to work in pairs when meeting with him and not to visit his home.

A spokesperson for Walliams said he “strongly denies” any claims and was not informed about or party to an investigation by HarperCollins.

Advertisement

Walliams has been faced with much public criticism over the years, including for using blackface in Little Britain, and for making obscene comments about contestants during his time on Britain’s Got Talent.

And despite his literary career being hugely successful – he has brought HarperCollins £100m in sales via dozens of books that have sold more than 60 million copies – Walliams’s books have also repeatedly received negative attention for the stereotypes they reinforce, and have been accused of sexism, classism, fat-shaming and more.

Walliams at a book signing in 2014

Walliams at a book signing in 2014 (Getty Images)

Sexism

Advertisement

Walliams frequently writes about female characters without clothes on, who find themselves in humiliating circumstances. In his 2013 book Demon Dentist, Winnie, a social worker with “an abundant bum”, gets trapped in a wire fence, which she is pushed through.

In the story, Walliams writes: “It took a few moments for Winnie to realise she was now only in her underwear… standing there in her bra and knickers. The bra was quite the biggest Alfie had ever seen. It looked like it could comfortably hold two footballs, and was bright orange. The knickers, that might have doubled as a child’s play tent, were a shocking shade of pink.”

Female characters throughout Walliams’s books are depicted as useless or absent, as having affairs or abandoning their children.

In Billionaire Boy, from 2010, there is a character called Sapphire Stone, a “Page 3 girl” depicted as a gold-digger.

Advertisement

Walliams writes: “Joe looked at the page. There was a photograph of a woman whose clothes seemed to have fallen off. Her hair was dyed white blonde and she had so much make-up on it was difficult to tell if she was pretty or not. Underneath the image it read, ‘Sapphire, 19, from Bradford. Likes shopping, hates thinking.’”

Fat-shaming

Repeated reference is made throughout Walliams’s books to how overweight (and therefore, in his stories, grotesque) certain characters are.

Auntie Dhriti, in 2015’s Grandpa’s Great Escape, cannot leave her flat because of her size. “She was always a large lady,” a character says in the story, “but since living above a sweet shop she has ballooned. I would have to hire a crane and knock down a wall if she ever wanted to pop out.”

Advertisement

Meanwhile Sheila, a stepmother character in 2012’s Ratburger, is described thus: “Zoe’s stepmother was quite short, but she made up for it by being as wide as she was tall.”

He adds that she is “so lazy she would order Zoe to pick her nose for her, though of course Zoe always said ‘no’. Sheila could even let out a groan while changing channels with the TV remote.”

David Walliams and Matt Lucas in ‘Little Britain'

David Walliams and Matt Lucas in ‘Little Britain’ (BBC)

The removal of Chinese character ‘Brian Wong, Who Was Never, Ever Wrong’

Advertisement

In 2021, it was announced that a story containing “harmful stereotypes” about Chinese people would be removed from Walliams’s 2016 book The World’s Worst Children.

Podcaster Georgie Ma had condemned the story, which centres on a studious young Chinese boy named Brian Wong, in an Instagram post that year.

Speaking to The Bookseller, Ma said that the story “normalised jokes on minorities from a young age”, and identified a number of “negative stereotypes” the story perpetuated.

These include the way the character was drawn (”He wears glasses, he looks like a nerd, he’s got small eyes”), jokes about his name, and his stereotyped character traits.

Advertisement

“The overall character plays on the model minority myth where Chinese people are nerdy, swotty and good at maths, we’re not confrontational and we’re high achievers,” said Ma.

In a statement at the time, HarperCollins said: “In consultation with our author and illustrator we can confirm that a new story will be written to replace ‘Brian Wong’ in future editions of The World’s Worst Children.”

Classism

In 2020, activist and food writer Jack Monroe branded the comedian’s stories as “sneering classist fatshaming nonsense”.

Advertisement

In a thread on X (then Twitter), which went viral, Monroe quoted several of Walliams’s books, including The World’s Worst Parents, which was published in the summer of 2020.

Monroe accused Walliams of “targeting the working class” and noted how much of his material was recycled from his controversial Little Britain series.

She condemned Walliams for depicting a single mother of two who lives in a tower block as one of the “world’s worst parents” when “all she does is love her kids and make them laugh”.

Monroe added: “I’m aware I probably come across as a joyless harpy, but a white wealthy man using working-class women as punchlines for his tired old jokes and then spoon-feeding them to children is grim.”

Advertisement

The Telegraph noted that this character’s only “crimes appear to be that she wears a ‘very bad, homemade outfit’ and is boring”.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Copyright © 2025 Wordupnews.com