Showing posts with label autobiographies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label autobiographies. Show all posts

Friday, 15 May 2015

Book Reviews: Going Solo

This is another autobiography by Roald Dahl.   This one is about his time in the air force after leaving school.   It's obviously a story about courage, but it's also one about exotic adventures in a far-off land, but mostly it's just about a young man trying to find his way in the world.   It's also about how much surviving a battle is down to chance.   Very harrowing.   The number of near death experiences in this is...quite an eye-opener.   I enjoyed this one much more than Boy.   Again though, some thing that comes through very strongly is the strong relationship between Roald Dahl and his mother.   The ending, where Roald Dahl is shipped home due to injuries and is reunited with his mother moved me to tears.   Perhaps my favorite bit though, is the description of the people he met on the way out to Africa.   It reminds me so much of my life in an expat community.




“What I remember so clearly about the voyage is the extraordinary behaviour of my fellow passengers.   I had never before encountered that peculiar breed of Englishman who spends his whole life working in distant corners of British territory.   Please do not forget that in the 1930s the British Empire was still very much the British Empire, and the men and women who kept it going were a race of people that most of you have never encountered and now you never will.   I consider myself very lucky to have caught a glimpse of this rare species while it still roamed the forests and foot-hills of the Earth, for today, it is totally extinct.   More English than the English, more Scottish than the Scots, they were the craziest bunch of humans I shall ever meet.   For one thing, they spoke a language of their own.   If they worked in East Africa, their sentences were sprinkled with Swahili words, and if they lived in India then all manner of dialects were intermingled.   As well as this, there was a whole vocabulary of much-used words that seemed to be universal among all these people.   An evening drink, for example, was always a sundowner.   A drink at any other time was a chota peg.   One’s wife was the memsahib.   To have a look at something was to have a shufti.   And from that one, interestingly enough, RAF/Middle East slang for a reconnaissance plane in the last war was a shufti kite.   Something of poor quality was shenzi.   Supper was tiffin and so on and so forth.   The empire builders’ jargon would have filled a dictionary.   All in all, it was rather wonderful for me, a conventional young lad from the suburbs, to be thrust suddenly into the middle of this pack of sinewy sunburnt gophers and their bright bony little wives, and what I liked best of all about them was their eccentricities.  
It would seem that when  the British live for years in a foul and sweaty climate among foreign people they maintain their sanity by allowing themselves to go slightly dotty.   They cultivate bizarre habits that would never be tolerated back home, whereas in far-away Africa or in Ceylon or in India or in the federated Malay states they could do as they liked.   On the SS Mantola just about everybody had his or her own particular maggot in the brain, and for me it was like watching a kind of non-stop pantomime throughout the entire voyage.”
 

Monday, 4 May 2015

Book Reviews: Boy

This is Roald Dahl's own account of his childhood.   It describes his time at school, his friends and their escapades, his family and long summer holidays in Norway.   I enjoyed re-reading it, but somehow I wanted more from it.   I wanted the autobiography of one of the most brilliantly creative and imaginative and disgusting children's writers to be full of weird occurences, colourful characters and wacky adventures.   Instead it mostly seems to consist of being miserable at school.   There are a few nasty medical procedures described as well, reminding us how recently we didn't have things such as anaesthetics.   It's not a very happy book.   What does come through is what a great woman Roald Dahl's mother was and what a great influence she had on him and how strong their relationship was.   She sounded like a very strong and brave lady.   And his descriptions of Norway make you desperate to go and spend long summer days exploring the fjords alone to your heat's content.