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Roald Dahl [1916-1990] British
Rank: 101
Poet (with poems)

Children


Roald Dahl was a British novelist, short story writer, poet, screenwriter, and fighter pilot. His books have sold more than 250 million copies worldwide.

Alone, Fear, Freedom, Home, Work



QuoteTagsRank
My father was a Norwegian who came from a small town near Oslo. He broke his arm at the elbow when he was 14, and they amputated it.
101
If my books can help children become readers, then I feel I have accomplished something important.
102
I do have a blurred memory of sitting on the stairs and trying over and over again to tie one of my shoelaces, but that is all that comes back to me of school itself.
103
I shot down some German planes and I got shot down myself, crashing in a burst of flames and crawling out, getting rescued by brave soldiers.
104
I was a fighter pilot, flying Hurricanes all round the Mediterranean. I flew in the Western Desert of Libya, in Greece, in Syria, in Iraq and in Egypt.
105
The writer has to force himself to work. He has to make his own hours and if he doesn't go to his desk at all there is nobody to scold him. Work
106
Had I not had children of my own, I would have never written books for children, nor would I have been capable of doing so.
107
A little nonsense now and then is relished by the wisest men.
108
A person is a fool to become a writer. His only compensation is absolute freedom. Freedom
109
All Norwegian children learn to swim when they are very young because if you can't swim it is difficult to find a place to bathe.
110
All through my school life I was appalled by the fact that masters and senior boys were allowed quite literally to wound other boys, and sometimes very severely.
111
I began to realize how simple life could be if one had a regular routine to follow with fixed hours, a fixed salary, and very little original thinking to do.
112
Though my father was Norwegian, he always wrote his diaries in perfect English.
113
The fine line between roaring with laughter and crying because it's a disaster is a very, very fine line. You see a chap slip on a banana skin in the street and you roar with laughter when he falls slap on his backside. If in doing so you suddenly see he's broken a leg, you very quickly stop laughing and it's not a joke anymore.
114
I find that the only way to make my characters really interesting to children is to exaggerate all their good or bad qualities, and so if a person is nasty or bad or cruel, you make them very nasty, very bad, very cruel. If they are ugly, you make them extremely ugly. That, I think, is fun and makes an impact.
115
I never get any protests from children. All you get are giggles of mirth and squirms of delight. I know what children like.
116
'Dexter' is a very well-oiled machine; it's just a great show and great to be part of.
117
A writer of fiction lives in fear. Each new day demands new ideas and he can never be sure whether he is going to come up with them or not. Fear
118
Two hours of writing fiction leaves this writer completely drained. For those two hours he has been in a different place with totally different people.
119
Unless you have been to boarding-school when you are very young, it is absolutely impossible to appreciate the delights of living at home. Home
120
Did they preach one thing and practice another, these men of God?
121
I am only 8 years old, I told myself. No little boy of 8 has ever murdered anyone. It's not possible.
122
Nowadays you can go anywhere in the world in a few hours, and nothing is fabulous any more.
123
The writer walks out of his workroom in a daze. He wants a drink. He needs it.
124
When I walked to school in the mornings I would start out alone but would pick up four other boys along the way. We would set out together after school across the village green. Alone
125
When you're writing a book, with people in it as opposed to animals, it is no good having people who are ordinary, because they are not going to interest your readers at all. Every writer in the world has to use the characters that have something interesting about them, and this is even more true in children's books.
126
Nobody gets a nervous breakdown or a heart attack from selling kerosene to gentle country folk from the back of a tanker in Somerset.
201
Pear Drops were exciting because they had a dangerous taste. All of us were warned against eating them, and the result was that we ate them more than ever.
202
The Bristol Channel was always my guide, and I was always able to draw an imaginary line from my bed to our house over in Wales. It was a great comfort.
203
The adult is the enemy of the child because of the awful process of civilizing this thing that, when it is born, is an animal with no manners, no moral sense at all.
204
When I was 2, we moved into an imposing country mansion 8 miles west of Cardiff, Wales.
205
I go down to my little hut, where it's tight and dark and warm, and within minutes I can go back to being six or seven or eight again.
206
Pain was something we were expected to endure. But I doubt very much if you would be entirely happy today if a doctor threw a towel in your face and jumped on you with a knife.
207
Prayers were held in Assembly Hall. We all perched in rows on wooden benches while teachers sat up on the platform in armchairs, facing us.
208
To shipbrokers, coal was black gold.
209
An autobiography is a book a person writes about his own life and it is usually full of all sorts of boring details.
210

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