Book / 2026
A Wrinkle in Time
Suitable
A Wrinkle in Time is a science fiction fantasy novel by American writer Madeleine L'Engle, first published in 1962. It is about Meg And Charles Walence. Their father, who was working on a interesting project called a tesseract, goes missing! Then they meet a boy and some strange women. This story won a Newbery Medal, Sequoyah Book Award and Lewis Carroll Shelf Award For this amazing story! It also has a movie! I Hope you all enjoy! The moral centre of A Wrinkle in Time is strongest when it rewards kindness and curiosity rather than selfishness, cruelty, or arrogance.
AU
Not rated
US
Not rated
UK
Not rated
Global
Children
Content Breakdown
Book content varies by chapter and edition; parents should verify themes before assigning it to younger readers.
Nudity, sex, romance
Score 1/5
No sexual content; romance is absent or very mild.
Scene and content evidence
- A Wrinkle in Time: This category is low because the title does not rely on this material for entertainment.
- Nudity, sex, romance: No sexual content; romance is absent or very mild.
- Starter evidence only: replace this with exact scene notes after a human reviewer watches the title.
Violence and fear
Score 1/5
Little to no violence beyond brief comic peril.
Scene and content evidence
- A Wrinkle in Time: This category is low because the title does not rely on this material for entertainment.
- Violence and fear: Little to no violence beyond brief comic peril.
- Starter evidence only: replace this with exact scene notes after a human reviewer watches the title.
Drugs, alcohol, smoking
Score 1/5
No meaningful drug, alcohol, or smoking content.
Scene and content evidence
- A Wrinkle in Time: This category is low because the title does not rely on this material for entertainment.
- Drugs, alcohol, smoking: No meaningful drug, alcohol, or smoking content.
- Starter evidence only: replace this with exact scene notes after a human reviewer watches the title.
Language
Score 1/5
No profanity or only very mild rude words.
Scene and content evidence
- A Wrinkle in Time: This category is low because the title does not rely on this material for entertainment.
- Language: No profanity or only very mild rude words.
- Starter evidence only: replace this with exact scene notes after a human reviewer watches the title.
Moral Summary
A Wrinkle in Time is a science fiction fantasy novel by American writer Madeleine L'Engle, first published in 1962. It is about Meg And Charles Walence. Their father, who was working on a interesting project called a tesseract, goes missing! Then they meet a boy and some strange women. This story won a Newbery Medal, Sequoyah Book Award and Lewis Carroll Shelf Award For this amazing story! It also has a movie! I Hope you all enjoy! The moral centre of A Wrinkle in Time is strongest when it rewards kindness and curiosity rather than selfishness, cruelty, or arrogance.
From an Islamic family lens, the useful parts are the moments that open conversation about kindness, curiosity, family discussion. Parents can ask whether the characters show adab, honesty, modesty, justice, and responsibility, or whether the story normalises behaviour that should be challenged.
The main caution is that the book may still include elements that need guidance: Book content varies by chapter and edition; parents should verify themes before assigning it to younger readers. Treat this starter review as a map for discussion, not as a replacement for parent judgement.
Islamic Values Reflection
Useful family discussion themes include kindness, curiosity, family discussion. Add exact Qur'an, Hadith, Sunnah, or Sahabah references only after editorial approval.
kindness
draftStarter theme only. Add exact Qur'an, Hadith, Sunnah, or Sahabah references after human review.
curiosity
draftStarter theme only. Add exact Qur'an, Hadith, Sunnah, or Sahabah references after human review.
Positives and Parent Talking Points
kindness
- Ask where the story showed kindness clearly.
- Compare the character's choice with Islamic adab and family expectations.
- Invite children to name one practical way to act on this value this week.
curiosity
- Ask where the story showed curiosity clearly.
- Compare the character's choice with Islamic adab and family expectations.
- Invite children to name one practical way to act on this value this week.
family discussion
- Ask where the story showed family discussion clearly.
- Compare the character's choice with Islamic adab and family expectations.
- Invite children to name one practical way to act on this value this week.
Family Discussion
Which character best showed kindness?
Where did the story conflict with Islamic adab or family expectations?
What would you discuss before recommending this to a younger viewer?