Who Is The Main Character In The Enormous Egg?

2026-03-25 10:16:12 189
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3 Answers

Kate
Kate
2026-03-28 19:03:40
The main character in 'The Enormous Egg' is a young boy named Nate Twitchell. He's this curious, kind-hearted kid who stumbles upon something wild—a dinosaur egg that hatches in his family's chicken coop! Nate's journey with the baby triceratops, named Uncle Beazley, is this heartwarming mix of childhood wonder and responsibility. I love how Nate isn't just some passive observer; he fights to protect Uncle Beazley from skeptics and even takes him to Washington, D.C. It's one of those stories that makes you remember what it felt like to believe in the impossible.

What really gets me is how Nate's relationship with the dinosaur mirrors growing up. At first, it's all excitement, but then reality hits—feeding a triceratops isn't cheap, and not everyone understands. The book nails that bittersweet feeling of loving something you might have to let go. Oliver Butterworth wrote it in the '50s, but Nate's voice still feels fresh—like that one friend who'd totally adopt a dinosaur if given the chance.
Fiona
Fiona
2026-03-31 08:51:26
Ever meet a fictional kid who feels like they could knock on your door? That's Nate from 'The Enormous Egg' for me. His voice is so genuine—excited about dinosaur poop one minute, dead serious about protecting his 'uncle' the next. The story's technically about the triceratops, but Nate's the soul of it. His quiet determination against grown-ups who don't believe him hits hard, especially when he smuggles Uncle Beazley onto a train. The ending wrecks me every time (no spoilers!), but it's Nate's growth that sticks. He learns about love, loss, and how weird the world can be—all because of one enormous egg.
Reese
Reese
2026-03-31 10:35:47
Nate Twitchell steals the show in 'The Enormous Egg'—a 12-year-old with more grit than most adults. The way he handles this absurd situation (raising a triceratops in rural New Hampshire!) cracks me up. He's not some perfect hero; he gets frustrated when Uncle Beazley crushes the vegetable garden, but he never gives up. The local townspeople think he's nuts, scientists want to take the dinosaur away, yet Nate stands his ground. There's a scene where he teaches Uncle Beazley to 'play dead' to avoid media attention, and it's pure gold.

What makes Nate special is how ordinary he feels. He writes letters to Congress, deals with his exasperated parents, and worries about money—all while caring for a prehistoric creature. The book could've been just a silly romp, but Nate's sincerity turns it into something deeper. It's like 'ET' but with a triceratops instead of an alien, and that kid-next-door energy makes you root for him every step.
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