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Roald Dahl

From the publication of James and the Giant Peach and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory in the 1960s to his death in 1990, Roald Dahl became the most successful children’s author in the world. Nearly twenty years later, a fresh generation of children seek out his work with instinctive fanaticism. His creations endure - through Hollywood movies, theatre adaptations and musical works, but still most potently of all through the pure magic of his writing upon the page.

Visit the 'Dahl Day' website for more information on Roald Dahl.

THE BASICS
Born: Llandaff, Glamorgan, September 13th 1916
Died: November 23rd 1990
Jobs: Shell representative in Tanganyika, Fighter Pilot, Air Attache, Wing Commander, Author
First Book for Young People: The Gremlins, 1943

THE BOOKS
Roald Dahl was born in Wales of Norwegian parents – the child of a second marriage. His father and elder sister died when Roald was just three. His mother was left to raise two stepchildren and her own four children. Roald was her only son.

He had an unhappy time at school - at Llandaff Cathedral School, at St Peter’s prep school in Weston-super-Mare and then at Repton in Derbyshire. He excelled at sports, particularly heavyweight boxing, but was deemed by his English master to be “quite incapable of marshalling his thoughts on paper”. There was one advantage to going to Repton, however – the school was close to Cadbury’s and the company regularly involved the schoolboys in testing new varieties of chocolate bars.

Dahl’s unhappy time at school was to influence his writing greatly. He once said that what distinguished him from most other children’s writers was “this business of remembering what it was like to be young”. Roald’s childhood and schooldays are the subject of his autobiography Boy.

At 18, rather than going to university, Roald joined the Public Schools Exploring Society’s expedition to Newfoundland. He then started work for Shell as a salesman in Dar es Salaam. He was 23 when war broke out and signed up with the Royal Air Force in Nairobi. At first, the station doctor balked at his height (6ft 6in) but he was accepted as a pilot officer and spent the early part of the war flying birdplane Gladiator fighters against the Italians in the Western Desert of Libya. Dahl’s exploits in the war are detailed in his autobiography Going Solo. They include having a luger pointed at his head by the leader of a German convoy, crashlanding in no-man’s land (and sustaining injuries that entailed having his nose pulled out and reshaped!) and even surviving a direct hit during the Battle of Athens.

Eventually, he was sent home as an invalid but transferred, in 1942, to Washington as an air attaché. Here Dahl’s writing career began in earnest following a meeting with C S Forester, author of Captain Hornblower. Forester asked Dahl to tell him his version of the war, intending to write an account for a future publication. Dahl chose to set down his experiences on paper. Forester was so impressed with Dahl’s writing that he immediately found a magazine editor to take it for publication. Roald remained in the States, achieving recognition through short-stories for newspapers and magazines.

Roald Dahl’s first novel for children was not, as many suppose, James and the Giant Peach but The Gremlins, which was published in 1943 and adapted from a script written for Disney. Dahl went on to write several film scripts, including the James Bond adventure You Only Live Twice and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. He disliked many of the film adaptions of his own work which appeared in his lifetime.

Dahl and his family moved back to England in 1960 and settled in Great Missenden in Buckinghamshire at Gipsy House. It was here, in a small hut at the bottom of the garden, that he would write most of his unforgettable books. By all accounts, the hut was a dingy little place but one that Roald viewed as a cosy refuge. Christopher Simon Sykes in Harpers & Queen recalls: “A dirty plastic curtain covered the window. In the centre stood a faded wing-back armchair, inherited from his mother, and it was here that Dahl sat, his feet propped up on a chest, his legs covered by a tartan rug, supporting on his knees a thick roll of corrugated paper upon which was propped his writing board. Photographs, drawings and other mementoes were pinned to the walls, while a table on his right was covered with a collection of favourite curiosities such as one of his own arthritic hip bones, and a remarkably heavy ball made from the discarded silver paper of numerous chocolate bars consumed during his youth.”

Roald’s career had to take second place when his family suffered several tragedies. His oldest daughter Olivia died after a bout of measles developed into encephalitis (inflammation of the brain). Roald’s three-month-old son Theo was brain-damaged after a road accident. With the help of two friends, an engineer and a neurosurgeon, Roald spent months devising a valve for draining fluid from the brain to enable Theo to live independent of machines. The Wade-Dahl-Till valve is still in use today and Theo has made a spectacular recovery - now in his 30s, he recently married. Patricia Neal, Roald’s first wife, suffered three massive strokes but, with Roald’s help and encourgement, she too recovered sufficiently to resume her acting career.

Both James and the Giant Peach and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory were published in the USA several years before appearing in the UK in 1967. Of the latter, Elaine Moss wrote in The Times, “It is the funniest children’s book I have read in years; not just funny but shot through with a zany pathos which touches the young heart.” The book went on to achieve phenomenal success all over the world. The Chinese edition was the biggest printing of any book ever – two million copies!

An unbroken string of bestselling titles followed, including The BFG, Danny The Champion of the World, The Twits, The Witches, Boy and Going Solo. Sales of Matilda, Roald’s penultimate book, broke all previous records for a work of children’s fiction with UK sales of over half a million paperbacks in six months. Roald Dahl died in 1990 at the age of 74. He was working to the end on The Vicar of Nibbleswicke.

Since Roald Dahl’s death, his books have more than maintained their popularity. Total sales of the UK editions are around 37 million, with more than 1 million copies sold every year! Sales have grown particularly strongly in America where Dahl books are now achieving the bestselling status that curiously proved elusive during the author’s lifetime.

In a World Book Day 1999 survey amongst 15,000 7-11 year-olds, Matilda was voted the most popular children’s book. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Twits and The BFG also featured in the top ten.

Movies of James and the Giant Peach, Matilda, The BFG, The Witches and particularly Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (starring Johnny Depp) have been much more successful, commercially and artistically, than the earlier adaptations.

The Roald Dahl Children’s Gallery, part of Bucks County Museum in Aylesbury, is a major attraction for all Dahl fans.

Throughout his life Roald Dahl gave time and money to help people in need. After his death, his widow Liccy Dahl established The Roald Dahl Foundation to continue this tradition. The Foundation offers grants in three key areas – Literacy, Neurology and Haematology – supporting or funding projects that help people in many practical ways. The Foundation is also bringing classical music to children by making it fun, through music compositions based on Roald Dahl’s work. For further information, please contact The Roald Dahl Foundation on 01494 890465.

WHAT HE SAID...
"I have a passion for teaching kids to become readers, to become comfortable with a book, not daunted. Books shouldn’t be daunting, they should be funny, exciting and wonderful; and learning to be a reader gives a terrific advantage.”

“If you are going to get anywhere in life you have to read a lot of books.”

“Writing is all propaganda, in a sense. You can get at greediness and selfishness by making them look ridiculous. The greatest attribute of a human being is kindness, and all the other qualities like bravery, and perseverance are secondary to that.”

“I only write about things that are exciting or funny. Children know I’m on their side.”

“If you want to remember what it’s like to live in a child’s world, you’ve got to get down on your hands and knees and live like that for a week. You’ll find you have to look up at all these… giants around you who are always telling you what to do and what not to do.”

“Watch with glittering eyes the whole world around you because the greatest secrets are always hidden in the most unlikely places. Those who don’t believe in magic will never find it.”
From The Minpins

WHAT THEY SAY ABOUT ROALD DAHL...
His appeal to children…

“He speaks to children. He doesn’t speak down to them. He asks them to think, he asks them to be afraid, and he asks them to conquer his fears.” Danny de Vito

“Sometimes his work was a little too strong for grown-ups. It was scary and messy, but children understood that this was only because lots of adults were not very nice themselves, beastly even.” Yorkshire Post

“The very particular strength of his writing… is that it speaks directly to children. He uses their vision to see things and their expressions to describe them.” The Independent

“Roald Dahl… addressed his child readers over the heads and behind the backs of disapproving adults, and they loved him for it. He revelled in the vulgar and disgusting, drawing delighted cries of “yuck” with his graphic descriptions of food caught in the beard of Mr Twit.” The Independent

“You never get the feeling when reading Dahl that he was showing off for the sake of it, although there’s often no shortage of verbal pyrotechnics in his stories. One of his many skills lay in not talking down to either his junior or grown-up audiences. Sheer magic.” Publishing News

“Dahl books, strong on plot and instilled with a tremendous sense of mischief, insist on seeing the world through children’s eyes, and often portray adults as silly, uncomprehending or insensitive; no wonder kids love them.” Sainsbury’s – The Magazine

His importance as a writer…
"One of the most widely read and influential writers of our generation ." The Times

“Dahl’s influence on the generations of readers who have moved enthusiastically from one of his novels to the next has been dramatic.” The Scotsman

“No one could dispute the huge role he played in getting children hooked into reading by offering them the kind of stories they really wanted to read. Stylistically too, he helped new readers by using language simply and accurately. The quality of his writing is easily discernible by the fluency with which it can be read aloud… For many children Roald Dahl is synoymous with reading. He is the one author whose books are currency among children, being passed eagerly from hand to hand as soon as they appear.” The Independent

“It may well be that (Roald Dahl) is better known than any other English-language author of the second half of this century.” Independent on Sunday

“No other writer has combined imagination, wit and quirkiness as well as Roald Dahl. His books show great literary skill, blending a vigorous style with a powerful use of language.” Junior Education

“If you want to talk about children’s books you have to start with Dahl and finish with him.” Susan Hill

“He was our modern Pied Piper.” The Times

“Roald Dahl was the greatest storyteller of our time.” Sainsbury’s – The Magazine

“Roald Dahl was to children’s books what the late, great Jimi Hendrix was to guitar playing: a dazzling beacon that was so far ahead of the rest that none could catch him and few could match.” Publishing News

“Over a 20-year period, from James and the Giant Peach to The Giraffe, The Pelly and Me, Dahl wrote an astonishing series of books for children of all ages which will be in print as long as there are bookshops to stock them… he is one of the greatest children’s writers of all time, and the finest teller of tales Britain has produced in the second half of this century.” Evening Standard

Memories of the man…

“I ended up spending four hours with the author… indelibly etched on my memory. He wore a dark blue shirt with blue shorts from which his impossibly long legs protruded like twin sticks; his long, lean, marvellously expressive face was creased with years of laughter lines, his mouth never far from a smile that reached his eyes every time. Dahl was amusing, interesting, stimulating company and a charming, punctilious, entertaining host.” Maria Lexton, Time Out

“Every evening after my sister Lucy and I had gone to bed, my father would walk slowly up the stairs, his bones creaking louder than the staircase, to tell us a story. I can see him now, leaning against the wall of our bedroom with his hands in his pockets looking into the distance, reaching into his imagination. It was here, in our bedroom, that he began telling many of the stories that later became the books you know.” Ophelia Dahl

“He loved to collect things. When he was young it was birds’ eggs and chocolate wrappers. As an adult he collected wine and paintings. However, he also collected ideas. He had a small exercise book in which he wrote down words that he liked the sound of. His mind was twitchy, like his fingers, which were always moving, as though he wished he could wrap them around a pencil and keep writing.” Ophelia Dahl

“He loved food. It was, like literature and music, one of the essential good things in life. When he came to Gipsy House, after moving from America, all he was worried about was his pea steamer!” Liccy Dahl

“He did everything with panache right down to cooking poached eggs which he served in pieces of fried bread with holes cut out of them to make a nest… There was never a moment when he wasn’t inventing or making life fun.” Liccy Dahl

“For those who knew him well, the most important things were his fantastic enthusiasm and his great generosity. “Treats!” he would cry, displaying a dinner table laden with quantities of his favourite food: Norwegian prawns, or lobster, or caviar or scrumptious roast beef. Second and third helpings were pressed on his lucky guests. With the coffee he would place on the table a grubby plastic box crammed with chocolate goodies, irresistible to dogs, children and adults alike.” Spiv Barran, Roald’s sister-in-law

The Books...
“Rich in language, humour and charm, The BFG is a wonderful romp in the land of giants.”
Parents

“Candid and absolutely compelling.”
Time Out on Boy

“Dahl’s autobiographies, Boy and Going Solo, reveal a man whose life was as rich as his works. In them, he describes central themes to his fiction – the injustices and corporal punishments of boarding-school life, his travels in Africa and his wartime exploits.”
Junior Education

“This lively tale of a bad-tempered crocodile shares the familiar thread of gruesome detail and slapstick humour which children love.”
Child Education on The Enormous Crocodile

“Full of quirky invention.” The Daily Telegraph on Esio Trot

“Going Solo has to be the most exciting autobiography ever written.”
Early Times

“It is not often that the English language has been put to such good purpose.”
Junior Bookshelf on The Great Automatic Grammatizator and Other Stories

“One of children’s literature’s classic stories… Master storyteller Roald Dahl stretches the imagination of the child like no other.”
Lancashire Evening Post on James and the Giant Peach

“Dahl is in sparkling form with those long lists of preposterous words – whangdoodles, hornswogglers, snozzwanglers and vermicious knids – which his readers adore.”
Shirley Hughes on The Minpins

“The Minpins is a gripping tale of magic and mystery.”
Young Telegraph

“The Twits is really good because it’s silly and a bit disgusting.”
8 year-old reader quoted in Parents

“Dahl’s wicked sense of humour is given full scope in this story… children of 6 to 10 years will lap this up.”
Practical Parenting on The Twits

“A warm, witty tale of the most terrifying creatures on earth.”
Yorkshire Post on The Witches

“Funny, wise and deliciously disgusting.”
Judges of the Whitbread Award on The Witches

AWARDS
The Whitbread Award 1983 for The Witches
Federation of Children’s Book Groups’ Children’s Book Award 1988 for Matilda

PLACE AND DATE OF BIRTH:
Cardiff, 13 September 1916

DIED:
1990

FAVOURITE BOOK:
Mr Midshipman Easy

MOST TREASURED POSSESSION:
A red, forty-year-old exercise book, which he wrote his ideas in.

FAVOURITE MUSIC:
Beethoven

FAVOURITE T.V. PROGRAMME:
The News

FAVOURITE SMELL:
Bacon frying

How could anyone create such fantastic and imaginative stories? Roald Dahl truly had an overflowing imagination. Roald Dahl's life was almost as fantastic as his books - here are just some amazing facts about Roald Dahl...

When he was at school Roald Dahl received terrible reports for his writing - with one teacher actually writing in his report, 'I have never met a boy who so persistently writes the exact opposite of what he means. He seems incapable of marshalling his thoughts on paper!'

After finishing school Roald Dahl, in search of adventure, travelled to East Africa to work for a company called Shell. In Africa he learnt to speak Swahili, drove from diamond mines to gold mines, and survived a bout of malaria where his temperature reached 105.5 degrees (that's very high!).

With the outbreak of the Second World War Roald Dahl joined the RAF. But being nearly two metres tall he found himself squashed into his fighter plane, knees around his ears and head jutting forward. Tragically of the 20 men in his squadron, Roald Dahl was one of only three to survive. Roald wrote about these experiences in his books Boy and Going Solo.

Later in the war Roald Dahl was sent to America. It was there that he met famous author C. S. Forester (author of the Captain Hornblower series) who asked the young pilot to write down his war experiences for a story he was writing. Forester was amazed by the result, telling Roald 'I'm bowled over. Your piece is marvellous. It is the work of a gifted writer. I didn't touch a word of it.' (an opinion which would have been news to Roald's early teachers!). Forester sent Roald Dahl's work straight to the Saturday Evening Post. Roald was now a published writer and set on the path that would lead him to great success.

Roald Dahl's growing success as an author led him to meet many famous people including Walt Disney, Franklin Roosevelt, and the movie star Patricia Neal. Patricia and Roald were married only one year after they met!

The couple bought a house in Great Missenden called Gipsy House. It was here that Roald Dahl began to tell his five children made-up bedtime stories and from those that he began to consider writing stories for children.

An old wooden shed in the back garden, with a wingbacked armchair, a sleeping bag to keep out the cold, an old suitcase to prop his feet on and always, always six yellow pencils at his hand, was where Roald created the worlds of The BFG, The Witches, James and the Giant Peach, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and many, many more.

And if you'd like to find out how he wrote these great stories...

Where did Roald Dahl get his ideas for stories?
Roald Dahl didn't believe that stories just appeared, but that you had to work hard to think of them! 'You start with a germ of an idea,' he once said, '...a tiny germ... a chocolate factory? ... a peach, a peach that goes on growing...'

Roald Dahl would write all of these ideas in his beloved red exercise book. But if his exercise book wasn't handy he would scribble a note on anything to remind himself - even if he had to write in crayon or lipstick!

Roald Dahl's tips to becoming a good author.
These are just some of the hints Roald Dahl wrote down for anyone who would like to become a successful author.

1. You should have a lively imagination.
2. You should be able to write well. By this I mean you should be able to make a scene come alive in the reader's mind. Not everybody has this ability. It is a gift, and you either have it or you don't.
3. You must have stamina. In other words, you must be able to stick to what you are doing and never give up, for hour after hour, day after day, week after week and month after month.

If he hadn't been a writer what might Roald Dahl have been?
Roald Dahl once said that if he had been able to stay on at school 'I'd have studied and become a doctor'. Luckily for us he didn't! It would have been terrible if Roald Dahl had never started writing! Imagine a world without Charlie and his Chocolate Factory, without the BFG, or without the horrible Miss Trunchbull!

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Author Image: Roald Dahl - ©Topham Picturepoint