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Roald DahlA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“He was so drunk that he mistook the fractured elbow for a dislocated elbow […] the pain must have been excruciating […] by then the pullers had done so much damage that a splinter of bone was sticking out through the skin of the forearm […] they simply amputated the arm at the elbow.”
Dahl is interested in exposing and exploring the vastly different standards of medical care that existed in his father’s time—and, a bit later in the book, his own 1920s childhood—in contrast to modern medical practices. The misdiagnosis of Harald’s broken arm and subsequent mistreatment is intentionally shocking to modern readers.
“The loss of an arm, he used to say, caused him only one serious inconvenience. He found it impossible to cut the top off a boiled egg.”
Harald’s use of humor belies the distressing account of the mismanagement of his broken arm, which was excruciatingly pulled apart and led to amputation. His use of humor is stylistically similar to Roald Dahl’s own use of dark, dry humor in distressing moments.
“He was a tremendous diary-writer. I still have one of his many notebooks from the Great War of 1914-18. Every single day during those five war years he would write several pages of comment and observation about the events of the time.”
Roald inherited or was strongly influenced by his father, Harald’s, discipline for writing consistently and documenting the events of his life and the world around him.
By Roald Dahl
Beware of the Dog
Beware of the Dog
Roald Dahl
Billy and the Minpins
Billy and the Minpins
Roald Dahl
Charlie And The Chocolate Factory
Charlie And The Chocolate Factory
Roald Dahl
Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator
Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator
Roald Dahl
Danny, the Champion of the World
Danny, the Champion of the World
Roald Dahl
Esio Trot
Esio Trot
Roald Dahl
Fantastic Mr Fox
Fantastic Mr Fox
Roald Dahl
George's Marvelous Medicine
George's Marvelous Medicine
Roald Dahl
Going Solo
Going Solo
Roald Dahl
James And The Giant Peach
James And The Giant Peach
Roald Dahl
Lamb To The Slaughter
Lamb To The Slaughter
Roald Dahl
Matilda
Matilda
Roald Dahl
Skin
Skin
Roald Dahl
The BFG
The BFG
Roald Dahl
The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me
The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me
Roald Dahl, Illustr. Quentin Blake
The Landlady
The Landlady
Roald Dahl
The Magic Finger
The Magic Finger
Roald Dahl, Illustr. Quentin Blake
The Twits
The Twits
Roald Dahl
The Way Up To Heaven
The Way Up To Heaven
Roald Dahl
The Witches
The Witches
Roald Dahl