Reviews

Boy and Going Solo, by Roald Dahl

brinastewart's review against another edition

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3.0

I think Dahl did a good job writing from 2 times in his life. This wasn't your normal biography/autobiography and it kept it from being really dry. If you are a Dahl fan, you would probably enjoy these 2 book/stories.

hisdarkmaterials's review against another edition

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5.0

I preferred 'Boy' just that little bit more to 'Going Solo' but they are unmissable, so Dahl, utterly entrancing & wonderful.

starrydreams's review

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funny informative fast-paced

3.75

riniiix's review against another edition

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4.0

4.5
this is overall an extremely interesting book. roald dahi is one of my fav writer so i was really excited to read his autobiography and know more about his life.

the book is divided in two parts. in the first part he talks about his young life from age 6 till high school. the second part is my fav he talk about his life after high school and what he decided to do with it. it's really amuses me that he had all this adventures and he visited many countries.

i know that everyone have their diffiicltly in life but i feel roald went through many things and he was a really hard working person.

although this is a non fiction book but roald wrote it as if he is writing his own story like his other fiction books. i hope this makes sense. if you are a fan of his work i highly recommend to read his autobiography :(

thiagobrandolezi1's review against another edition

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4.0

As I said on my update when I finished reading Boy, that book was exquisite and really entertaining.
Too bad the same didn't happen with Going Solo. I guess since this book deals with some more serious and dark topics, it ended up not being as entertaining as Boy. I mean, there were some sections that made me laugh really hard, like the part where the cook's wife was caught by a lion and in the end everything turned out fine.

bookmarkhoarder's review against another edition

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emotional funny relaxing medium-paced

4.0

smoothgoat's review

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bored me. i was like nine

sarajesus95's review

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adventurous emotional fast-paced

4.75

21_wildcat's review

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emotional funny hopeful inspiring lighthearted relaxing fast-paced

5.0

trish204's review against another edition

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5.0

Ok, so this is my second attempt and the review better not be lost again. Grrr.

So what to say about this great dramatisation? First of all, there are two books that were adapted here:
1) Boy - in which Roald (named after Roald Amundsen, the famous explorer after whom the Amundsen Scott Base in Antarctica is named) describes his childhood, family tragedy, how they moved to England, the tricks he played on other people, the English school system (more about money for the headmaster than education, lots of thrashings) and his time as a tester for a nearby chocolate factory.
2) Going Solo - which is divided into two parts. The first part deals with a now yound adult Dahl who starts working for Shell and is sent to Africa (his dream come true)! There, he encounters colonialism (I know it was accurately described but I cringed every time somebody called one of the natives "Boy!"), a lot of VERY silly British people and basically has a good time. In the second part, war is declared and he becomes an Air Force officer.


It is clear right from the start that life was never actually easy on Roald. His mother was very sweet but other than that, it really is a miracle that he was able to see so many good and funny things in life. It begins with
SpoilerRoald's father losing his arm to an incompetent doctor when he was only a teenager. He becomes relatively successful nevertheless and marries young, for love. Sadly, after giving birth to her second child, the wife dies. Roald's father became depressed but realized that he needed to remarry, for the children's sake (no comment). He marries Roald's mother and together they have 4 more children. However, the oldest daughter (from the first marriage) dies of a burst appendix aged 7 which throws the father into severe depression and ultimately kills him only weeks after (pneumonia). In his last will the father declared that the family should move to England because the education was better there. *snorts*

There are a few incidents that really made me burst from laughter - not because they were actually funny (young Roald almost lost his nose once) but because of the way Roald Dahl told the story.

But it doesn't get much better later. Apart from colonialism, there is of course WWII. Roald Dahl never had ANY training but was suddenly made an officer and got a few flying lessons. That qualified him.
SpoilerBut before he could see much action, he crashed his plane in the Lybian desert. This was mostly due to bad intel which made him unable to find his squadron.
Honestly, I was shocked and appalled when hearing about the immense incompetence of the British military in those days. No wonder the Germans managed to win so many battles!
Especially the stories in Greece and, later, Lybia were awful and I kept wondering how this strapping young man managed to keep his spirits up when all around him was nothing but darkness and despair. In the end,
Spoilerit is the medical aftermath of his very first crash that gets him a medical discharge
so he returns home to his mother with whom he had an immensely close relationship until her end (he wrote letters to her every week). Which is where the book ends.

For anyone interested, he didn't stay in England long. In 1942 he was sent to Washington DC and even became a spy for the British government.

In 1953 he married the Hollywood actress Patricia Neal with whom he had 5 children and was married for 30 years before they got divorced (apparently so he could marry his second wife because that came VERY shortly after). His second marriage apparently remained childless. When aged 7 (ironically when thinking of Roald's sister), his oldest daughter, Olivia, died (of measles). Seven years after getting married, Dahl himself died of pneumonia.

What I didn't know was how much he was involved in charity work regarding neurology, hematology and illiteracy. Moreover, I also didn't know that Gremlins was penned by Dahl (it was his first ever children's book). When he needed money in the 60s, he also wrote a few screenplays such as 2 adaptations of Ian Fleming's James Bond stories or the screenplay for his very own book Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (the one with Gene Wilder).

There were, of course, darker sides to Dahl too. Such as the alleged anti-semitism. He once wrote:
“There’s a trait in the Jewish character that does provoke animosity […] I mean there is always a reason why anti-anything crops up anywhere; even a stinker like Hitler didn’t just pick on them for no reason.”
Apparently it is for that reason that the Queen never knighted him (which is stupid considering what other people were knighted despite their imperfect characters and things they said, but whatever).

Anyway, what I learned here is that world views were fundamentally different when Dahl was a child and young adult and that despite the sheer insurmountable odds, he seems to have barely ever been afraid. He did what had to be done and was pracmatic enough to say that feeling terror or dread helped no-one. Nevertheless, he was never cold or indifferent. Quite the contrary.
SpoilerWhen his sergeant shot that German civilian shortly after WWII had broken out, he was apparently very much shocked and not very happy. Equally, he always mourned the senseless loss of young lives during the war.
His courage in WWII despite not actually having known what he was doing at first, coupled with his constant curiosity (he always questioned and scrutinized everything) and his way of seeing something comical in the darkest of moments, made him a special person in my eyes (not to mention his absolutely brilliant books).