All three of these books were children's staples (well at least I had to read them for elementary school). But, let's look at the underlying themes.
Add your takes on these, if you remember them.
Charlotte's Web, a smart spider saves a fat pig from being slaughtered. Well, if he didn't get fat, then he wouldn't have been considered in the first place. Of course all the animals exhibit Anthropomorphism, which is common in childrens books, which unconsciously helps children either to assign evil or good attributes to animals. Underlying theme in the book, "I don't want to die!", by Wilbur, echoing what people in his predicament say when they are told that they are overweight

Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of Nihm. Mrs Frisby gets help from lab rats who have near human intelligence. They have a mechanized society.Thety have elevators and tap into the electrical grid of a famrhouse. Questions? Why the hell are intelligent Lab Rats who were soo intelligent to escape NIHM laboratories, end up on a farm, why not creat their own damn society.

The Boxcar Children....Ah, this one reeks of 1920's Depression Era logic. Four orphaned kids rool out on their supposedly evil grandfather, who is their legal guardian. But, they decide to live in a freakin Boxcar. Great. Then, it turns out that their "evil" grandfather, wasn't so evil. So, they ran away for no damn reason. The logic is just stupifying. Reminds of the logic that John Steinbeck had in having a family move all the way to California to be fruitpickers, and go thru a city....where there is work...yet, they continue on to Cali...
