Dahl, Roald
Related Category: English Literature, 20th cent. to the Present: Biographies
(rō´äl däl), 191690, British writer known for inventive, often macabre children's books and horror-tinged adult fiction. Dahl spurned a university education in favor of world travel, journeying to Newfoundland and Dar-es-Salaam, where he worked (193739) for an oil company. He was a Royal Air Force (RAF) fighter pilot during World War II, serving in North Africa, Greece, and Syria. He survived a crash in Libya, and was posted (194243) to Washington, D.C., as assistant air attaché. Dahl's first fiction, stories drawn from his RAF experiences, was published in a popular American magazine, and the first of his 19 children's books,
The Gremlins, appeared in 1943. During the later 1940s and 50s, while working as a television writer, Dahl wrote compelling short stories filled with strange characters and eerie twists that were published in such collections as
Someone like You (1953, rev. ed. 1961) and
Kiss Kiss (1959); his collected stories was published in 2006. He returned to young people's tales with
James and the Giant Peach (1961, film 1996). Extremely successful, it was followed by such popular books as
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (1964, filmed as
Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, 1971, and as originally titled, 2005),
Fantastic Mr. Fox (1970),
The Witches (1983, film 1990), and
Matilda (1988, film 1996). He also wrote three novels and several screenplays. Dahl was married (195383) to the actress Patricia Neal.
See his autobiographies, Boy (1984) and Going Solo (1986); biography by J. Treglown (1994); studies by M. I. West (1992) and A. Warren (1988, rev. ed. 1994).