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Born:
September
13,
1916,
Llandaff,
South
Wales -
United
Kingdom.
Roald
Dahl was
one of
the
greatest
story-tellers
of all
time. He
was born
in
Llanduff,
South
Wales,
of
Norwegian
parents,
in 1916,
and
educated
in
English
boarding-schools.
Then, in
search
of
adventure,
the
young
Dahl
took a
job with
Shell
Oil in
Africa.
When
World
War II
broke
out he
joined
the RAF
as a
fighter
pilot,
receiving
terrible
injuries
and
almost
dying in
a plane
crash in
1942.
It was
following
this
“monumental
bash on
the head”
and a
meeting
with C.
S.
Forester
(author
of the
famous
Captain
Horatio
Hornblower
stories)
that
Roald
Dahl's
writing
career
began,
with
articles
for
magazines
such as
The New
Yorker.
He wrote
successful
novellas
and
short
stories
for
adults,
such as
Tales of
the
Unexpected,
before
concentrating
on his
marvelous
children's
stories.
The
first of
these,
James
and the
Giant
Peach,
in 1960,
was
followed
by
Charlie
and the
Chocolate
Factory,
and an
unbroken
string
of
hugely
successful,
best-selling
titles.
Roald
Dahl
worked
from a
tiny hut
in the
pale
orchard
of the
Georgian
house in
Great
Missenden,
Buckinghamshire
which he
shared
with his
wife,
Liccy.
He was
always
brimming
with new
ideas
and his
many
books
continue
to bring
enormous
enjoyment
to
millions
of
children
and
their
parents
throughout
the
world.
Roald
Dahl
died on
November
23,
1990. |