What a lovely collection of samples and snippets and sometimes full poems/short stories by Roald Dahl. It is nicely divided into four themes: Animals; Magic; Family, Friends and Foes; and Matters of Importance. Through these areas, we get a good glimpse at the diversity of Dahl’s writings, all of which are accompanied by lovely illustrations by Quentin Blake for the most part, but also by Raymond Briggs, Babette Cole, Posy Simmonds and Ralph Steadman.
Having previously read The BFG and maybe a couple other of Dahl’s works (it has been a long time, okay?), I felt myself thrown right into the whirlpool of craziness that is Dahl’s written universe, and with the illustrations that to me at least were so emblematic and in line with his writing. Normally I don’t pay as much heed to illustrations as I should, but there is really an atmosphere with the illustrations of Dahl’s work, and it is simply fabulous.
To go back to Dahl’s writings in general, I found myself continually impressed by his creativity – with words, with language, with style, with tone. Just the names of different candies and bizarre beasts and creatures alone was entertaining! There is nothing quite like the names he has come up with, even if we don’t know what something looks like or how something tastes, the word(s) itself (themselves) portray the feel of the appearance, the flavor, the essence of it.
Reading this gave me the desire to go back and read more of his children’s work, but even more than that, his more auto-biographical works such as Boy and especially My Year. His life seems absolutely fascinating, and the excerpts we have in this Treasury are just teasers of the breadth of his skill at his craft.
I only wish there had been a little more editorial narration/inserts, like the first couple of pieces by his editor and daughter, to better frame the sections of the book – like mini-introductions to each section. Seeing Dahl through is work is marvelous, but there is also something very precious in seeing him through the eyes of those who worked and lived closest to him for very long periods of time.
Favorite quotes:
No book ever ends
When it’s full of your friends
-- page 91, from “The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me”
But sometimes mysteries are more intriguing than explanations[.] – page 196, from “The Minpins”
And above all, watch with glittering eyes the whole world around you because the greatest secrets are always hidden in the most unlikely places. Those who don’t believe in magic will never find it. – page 197, from “The Minpins”
“It doesn’t matter who you are or what you look like so long as somebody loves you.” – page 238, from The Witches, “The Heart of a Mouse”
[Referring to how he’s made the original Grimm version of Hansel and Gretel less gorey:]
It might have been okay, who knows,
If there’d been humour in the prose.
Did I say humour? Wilhelm Grimm?
There’s not a scrap of it in him.) – page 359, from Rhyme Stew, “Hansel and Gretel”
When you grow up
and have children of your own
do please remember something important
a stodgy parent is no fun at all
What a child wants
and deserves
is a parent who is
SPARKY
-- page 375, from Boy
I had learnt even at that tender age that there are no secrets unless you keep them to yourself, and this was the greatest secret I had ever had to keep in my life so far. – page 388, from My Year
Typo:
“ The point is this. – page 221 – remove extra space after quote/before start of sentence.
“Well thrown,sir!” – page 318 – missing spaces around the comma