Roald Dahl Is the Author Thesis

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All of his efforts were recognized, however insufficiently, through the awarding of the World Fantasy Lifetime Achievement Prize in 1983. He had been once more nominated for the prize in 1978, but he would only receive it at his second nomination, five years later (Wands, 2010). Several of his works were adapted to television and the big screen.

4. Dahl's Matilda

Matilda is one of the most representative works for Roald Dahl for several reasons. First, it is part of the series addressed to children. Then, it has been so well received by the public that it was put into film in 1996. Finally, it is inspired from the author's own life and experiences at the boarding school. Matilda is as such the story of a young girl, Matilda Wormwood, with high intelligence, who is neglected by her parents that force her to watch television, and abused by her teachers, mainly Miss Trunchbull. Miss' Trunchbull's niece, Miss Honey appreciates Matilda's intelligence, but her efforts to move the young girl to a more advanced class are impeded by her ruthless aunt. As Matilda discovers her telekinetic powers, she plays a trick to convince Miss Trunchbull to return the estate she had stolen from her niece. At the end of the book, Matilda's family moves and leaves her with Miss Honey (Dahl, 2004).

The story presented in Matilda is an apparently sad one, and parents might feel reluctant to reading it to their children or to encouraging them to read it. In spite of this perception nevertheless, the book has elements of amusement, in which the children fight back with the weapons they have at their disposal.
It is as such an educative work, teaching children to make the right decision and to stick up for themselves. But what is even more so important is for parents to discuss the book with their children and to assure them that it is fantasy, rather than reality.

5. Dahl's Literary Influence

As it has been mentioned throughout the previous pages, Dahl' inspiration for his children's stories came from his own life, namely his experiences while at boarding school. At that age, he simply could not understand how an adult could be so cruel and unfair to a defenseless child. These feelings gave birth to books such as Matilda in which the young rebel against the cruel matures.

Another source of inspiration was constituted by the author's own mother. He recollects how she would tell him and his siblings stories of her home town in Norway. "The young Roald loved stories and books. His mother told Roald and his sisters tales about trolls and other mythical Norwegian creatures. "She was a great teller of tales," Roald said, "Her memory was prodigious and nothing that ever happened to her in her life was forgotten" (Infloox, 2009). As a tribute to her, he even constructed a character in her honor (the grandmother in The Witches).

Then, aside mother and school, Dahl's work was also influenced by the classic writers. Like Matilda, young Dahl enjoyed reading, and he early on began to read the works of classics. So many of his later stories are inspired from Rudyard Kipling's or Charles Dickens's writings......

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"Roald Dahl Is The Author" (2010, January 14) Retrieved May 30, 2025, from
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