#871
[Title: Boy: Tales of Childhood]
Author: Roald Dahl
Publisher: Puffin
Year: 1984/2001
176 pages
Reread in 2012 (review posted in 2008) as a prelude to reading Matilda. Previous review:
Roald
Dahl's memoir of his childhood is deceptively simple and pastoral. As
is also often the case in Dahl's fiction, a darker substrate is present
as well. These include almost losing his nose in a motoring accident,
stuffing his sister's fiance's pipe with goat droppings, and an incident
with a dead mouse. Dahl tells his story with understatement and
affection. For those unfamiliar with the English boarding school
experience or narrative, this would be an informative book to read along
with the first Harry Potter books. It captures the horrible and
ridiculous aspects of that experience without being overly graphic (as
some boarding school memoirs are), providing a social and institutional
context for understanding the Harry Potter books as well as another
example of the English school boy genre.
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