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Roald Dahl's Autobiography #1

Boy: Tales of Childhood

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Filled with excitement, humor, and the unexpected, this entertaining collection of tales--inspired by Roald Dahl's remarkable childhood--are stories that are not easily forgotten.

176 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1984

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About the author

Roald Dahl

1,440books25.9kfollowers
Roald Dahl was a British novelist, short story writer and screenwriter of Norwegian descent, who rose to prominence in the 1940's with works for both children and adults, and became one of the world's bestselling authors.

Dahl's first published work, inspired by a meeting with C. S. Forester, was Shot Down Over Libya. Today the story is published as A Piece of Cake. The story, about his wartime adventures, was bought by the Saturday Evening Post for $900, and propelled him into a career as a writer. Its title was inspired by a highly inaccurate and sensationalized article about the crash that blinded him, which claimed he had been shot down instead of simply having to land because of low fuel.

His first children's book was The Gremlins, about mischievous little creatures that were part of RAF folklore. The book was commissioned by Walt Disney for a film that was never made, and published in 1943. Dahl went on to create some of the best-loved children's stories of the 20th century, such as Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Matilda and James and the Giant Peach.

He also had a successful parallel career as the writer of macabre adult short stories, usually with a dark sense of humour and a surprise ending. Many were originally written for American magazines such as Ladies Home Journal, Harper's, Playboy and The New Yorker, then subsequently collected by Dahl into anthologies, gaining world-wide acclaim. Dahl wrote more than 60 short stories and they have appeared in numerous collections, some only being published in book form after his death. His stories also brought him three Edgar Awards: in 1954, for the collection Someone Like You; in 1959, for the story "The Landlady"; and in 1980, for the episode of Tales of the Unexpected based on "Skin".

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 3,756 reviews
Profile Image for Luca Ambrosino.
131 reviews13.6k followers
January 24, 2020
English / Italiano

Chosen by my daughter as bedtime reading, this book immediately got an excellent response from her. It's easy for a writer like to produce novels for kids. Even his life takes the form of an extravagant novel for kids. Imagination is fundamental to the writer, and life experience is no less. Probably it's the perfect mix of experience and imagination to constitute the perfect recipe for a successful writer.

Vote: 7


description

Scelto da mia figlia come lettura serale prima di andare "a nanna", questo libro ha subito ottenuto i favori della sua critica. Deve essere semplice per uno scrittore come scrivere romanzi per ragazzi. Perfino la sua vita prende la forma di uno stravagante romanzo per ragazzi. L'immaginazione 猫 componente fondamentale per chi scrive, ma dopo questa lettura capisco che l'esperienza di vita non 猫 da meno. Anzi, probabilmente 猫 proprio la miscela ottimale di esperienza ed immaginazione a dare la ricetta perfetta per lo scrittore di successo.

Voto: 7

Profile Image for Ahmad Sharabiani.
9,563 reviews719 followers
November 7, 2021
Boy: Tales of Childhood (Roald Dahl's Autobiography #1), Roald Dahl

Boy: Tales of Childhood (1984) is an autobiographical book by British writer Roald Dahl. It describes his life from birth until leaving school, focusing on living conditions in Britain in the 1920's and 1930's, the public school system at the time, and how his childhood experiences led him to writing as a career.

It ends with his first job, working for Royal Dutch Shell.

His autobiography continues in the book Going Solo.

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鬲丕乇蹖禺 亘賴賳诏丕賲 乇爻丕賳蹖 17/11/1399賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 15/08/1400賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 丕. 卮乇亘蹖丕賳蹖
Profile Image for Miranda Reads.
1,589 reviews165k followers
December 10, 2020
We all have our moments of brilliance and glory, and this was mine.
This novel consists of a myriad of short stories that centered on memorable events throughout Dahl's childhood. Each story had bits of wonder, adventure, intrigue and terror. Lots of terror.
When writing about oneself, one must strive to be truthful. Truth is more important than modesty.
The stories about doctor's visits and accidents were the most memorable - for they were described in extremely explicit detail. I was covering my mouth and shielding my eyes when he described how he nearly lost his nose in the car accident...and again during the plane accident.

His time at boarding school was the inspiration for Matilda - abuse was rampart and there was little (if anything) that could be done. The students, the teachers and even the Headmaster all took delight in exercising their power. I felt for the little Roald but the author did not write a pity-me memoir.

He included the inspiration for Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. During his early boarding school years, he and the other kids tested new sweets for Cadbury. The children took this extremely seriously and wrote long (and complicated) assessments.

Roald Dahl never grew up. The quality of the writing - the way he uses just the right word made this truly a classic novel.

| | | | | Snapchat @miranda_reads
Profile Image for Calista.
5,174 reviews31.3k followers
April 19, 2018
I should probably give this 5 stars as I really enjoyed this, liked this and it's so good. I mean there is a lot of pain here and it's so funny.

Dahl is telling stories from his childhood. He would holiday in the summer in Norway with his family every year. He also went to boarding school. You can see how this is the seeds for almost all his stories. All the horror of adults he tells come from his experience at school. I can't believe some stuff he had to live through. It was abusive.

There was caning and students could also use corporal punishment on each other. Teacher would single out students and yet he makes it all funny. It was too short and probably a good thing. You see where Charlie and the chocolate factory come from. I mean the Trunchbull from Matilda is right out of his experience.

In the last chapter, I got tickled the most. So the chapter is called fagging. In British boarding school an older boy would have younger classmen under him that did chores and things for him and he was called a fag. This is back in the 20s or 30s before the meaning of the English word took over. One of the boys forces Dahl to go and warm up the outhouse toilet seat for him by sitting on it for 15 minutes or more. He tells Dahl something like, "You have a warm bottom, I don't like a cold bottom fag, I like hot bottom fags." I know it's childish and I simply died laughing. I mean, so funny sounding. How strange the past interacting with the future. There term is still derogatory in a different way. I mean it's still sad they had that kind of power over underclassmen and hopefully it is better for kids now. I guess school has always been hell.

This is worth the read.
Profile Image for Mariah Roze.
1,056 reviews1,057 followers
February 7, 2017
I love reading nonfiction, especially autobiographies. This book was not just any autobiography but a book about Roald Dahl's childhood. Growing up I loved the book Matilda and enjoyed James and the Giant Peach and the BFG and now as an adult I am making it my goal to read all his books. I just set this goal a couple weeks ago and have read this book and The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me.

Roald Dahl told fascinating stories about his childhood up the the age of 18. He explained his extreme love of chocolate and his fear of most of his teachers. I believe these two factors were huge for his writings and stories.

I really enjoyed Roald's autobiography, that he swears wasn't one and I suggest it to anyone that enjoys him as a writer.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
735 reviews29.2k followers
September 16, 2019
I just reread this book after reading it many times during my childhood. It was as compelling as ever. As was I rereading I picked up on so many influences that I unconsciously carried through the rest of my childhood and perhaps even adulthood. Places and ideas that as a child I romanticized; Going to Norway swimming in the fiords and filling a pipe with goat's tobacco with my pack of siblings-- heaven. The way Roald Dahl tells a story--with such good humor and without ornament--makes even getting canned sound like the most marvelous adventure in the world!
It's such a cheerful experience to reread a book you read as a child and find that it still makes you smile in all the same places.
Profile Image for Tahera.
690 reviews268 followers
July 3, 2019
I haven't read many autobiographies but even then I feel that this was a completely different take on what an autobiography should be. Fun and witty, Roald Dahl really manages to take the reader on a ride through his childhood and early adult days and shows a realistic picture of what it was like growing up in England in the early 20th century. I loved how the book is interspersed with his personal photographs taken with his family and in his different schools and well as the letters he writes home to his mother and the witty nicknames he kept for his step sister and brother (ancient half-sister and not so ancient half brother馃槃). Through this book he also shares his point of view on some of the not so pleasant punishment practises in public schools in those days like getting thrashed by a cane, fagging, etc. and includes a chapter on his Head Master at Repton who besides being a Head Master, was a clergy man too and loved using this punishment practice which did create a lot of doubts and questions in the young Roald Dahl's mind about some 'men of God' not practising what they preached.
Profile Image for Diane.
1,098 reviews3,097 followers
May 17, 2015
This is a charming collection of stories from Roald Dahl's childhood. I loved his books when I was a kid (my favorites were Danny the Champion of the World, The BFG and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) and it was fun to hear some true tales from the great storyteller.

One of my favorite stories was about the free candy bars he got when he was at boarding school. Cadbury's would send over boxes of test chocolates, and the boys would sample the new flavors and write their reviews. Dahl said the boys took it very seriously, "nibbling each chocolate with the air of connoisseurs, giving our marks and making our comments. 'Too subtle for the common palate,' was one note that I remember writing down."

Dahl said this experience was important because he realized that large chocolate companies actually had inventing rooms, and he imagined what it would be liked to work there and create new flavors. "I have no doubt at all that, thirty-five years later, when I was looking for a plot for my second book for children, I remembered those little cardboard boxes and the newly-invented chocolates inside them, and I began to write a book called Charlie and the Chocolate Factory."

Another sweet story was when Dahl became homesick while he was away at school, and he decided to fake an appendicitis so he could return home for a few days. He knew the symptoms because his older sister recently had it, and he put on quite a show for the nurse, yelping and moaning in pain. His act worked, until he got home and his regular doctor instantly knew he was faking. The doctor made him promise never to do it again.

I listened to this on audio, narrated by the actor Dan Stevens, and he did a marvelous job performing the different characters. I especially enjoyed the screechy voice he created for the mean woman who ran the local candy shop, Mrs. Pratchett. Roald and his friends so hated Mrs. Pratchett that one day he cooked up a plot to scare her: he put a dead mouse in one of the candy jars. Unfortunately, the mean Mrs. P figured out who had done it and had them whipped by the school's headmaster.

Even though I listened to this book, I had a print copy to flip through, and I do recommend peeking at the pages because it has some lovely photos, notes and drawings. Recommended for all Dahl fans.

Favorite Quote:
[After leaving school, Dahl was hired by the Shell Company and traveled to foreign countries]
"I began to realize how simple life could be if one had a regular routine to follow with fixed hours and a fixed salary and very little original thinking to do. The life of a writer is absolute hell compared with the life of a businessman. The writer has to force himself to work. He has to make his own hours and if he doesn't go to his desk at all there is nobody to scold him. If he is a writer of fiction he lives in a world of fear. Each new day demands new ideas and he can never be sure whether he is going to come up with them or not. Two hours of writing fiction leaves this particular writer absolutely drained. For those two hours he has been miles away, he has been somewhere else, in a different place with totally different people, and the effort of swimming back into normal surroundings is very great. It is almost a shock. The writer walks out of his workroom in a daze. He wants a drink. He needs it. It happens to be a fact that nearly every writer of fiction in the world drinks more whisky than is good for him. He does it to give himself faith, hope and courage. A person is a fool to become a writer. His only compensation is absolute freedom. He has no master except his own soul, and that, I am sure, is why he does it."
Profile Image for NZLisaM.
540 reviews597 followers
December 9, 2024
I recall my teacher reading this to the class in 1986 I believe. As a child I found it hilarious and highly entertaining, and as an adult I wholeheartedly agree. The archaic practices of corporal punishment in schools and barbaric medical treatments and care were horrifying. We don鈥檛 know how good we have it! The author was a little full of himself and his achievements, but considering his lifelong phenomenal success he had earned the right.
Profile Image for Maede.
452 reviews652 followers
May 5, 2024
丕诏乇 亘诏賲 乇賵賱丿 丿丕賱 蹖讴蹖 丕夭 丿賱丕蹖賱 丕蹖賳賴 讴賴 賲賳 毓丕卮賯 禺賵賳丿賳 卮丿賲 丕睾乇丕賯 賳讴乇丿賲. 芦倬爻乇禄 乇賵 賮讴乇 賲蹖鈥屭┵嗁� 丕賵賱蹖賳 亘丕乇 丿乇 丿賵丕夭丿賴 爻丕賱诏蹖 禺賵賳丿賲 賵 丕賵賳 夭賲丕賳 丕蹖賳 讴鬲丕亘 郾鄱郯郯 鬲賵賲賳蹖 丕夭 丕乇夭卮賲賳丿鬲乇蹖賳 丿丕乇丕蹖蹖鈥屬囏з� 亘賵丿

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丕賱丕賳 賴賲 讴賴 丕蹖賳 賴賲賴 爻丕賱 亘毓丿 亘乇丕蹖 亘丕乇 趩賳丿賲 禺賵賳丿賲卮貙 丕夭 噩匕丕亘蹖鬲卮 趩蹖夭蹖 亘乇丕賲 讴賲 賳卮丿賴. 賮賯胤 賲蹖鈥屫堎嗁� 丿丕爻鬲丕賳鈥屬囏� 乇賵 亘丕 丿蹖丿 丿蹖诏賴鈥屫й� 亘亘蹖賳賲 讴賴 亘蹖卮鬲乇 丕夭 禺賳丿賴鈥屫ж必� 鬲賱禺卮賵賳 賲蹖鈥屭┵嗁�. 丕賲丕 鬲賱禺蹖鈥屫й� 讴賴 賴賲蹖卮賴 夭蹖乇 夭亘賵賳 丌丿賲 亘夭乇诏鈥屬囏ж池� 賵 賳丕诏乇蹖夭賴. 丕夭 胤乇賮蹖 賴賲 亘蹖卮鬲乇 丕夭 賴賲蹖卮賴 賳賯卮 鬲噩乇亘賴鈥屸€屬囏й� 讴賵丿讴蹖卮 乇賵 丿乇 丿丕爻鬲丕賳鈥屬囏й屰� 讴賴 亘毓丿丕賸 賳賵卮鬲 鬲賵賳爻鬲賲 亘亘蹖賳賲

賳爻禺賴鈥屫й� 讴賴 丕蹖賳鈥屫ㄘж� 诏賵卮 讴乇丿賲 賳賲丕蹖卮蹖 亘賵丿 賵 鬲賵爻胤 蹖讴 鬲蹖賲 氐丿丕倬蹖卮賴 鬲賵賱蹖丿 卮丿賴 亘賵丿. 賳鬲蹖噩賴 賵丕囟丨賴 讴賴 毓丕賱蹖 亘賵丿. 丕賱亘鬲賴 丕蹖賳 賳爻禺賴 鬲賯乇蹖亘丕賸 蹖讴 爻賵賲 讴鬲丕亘 丕氐賱蹖賴

讴鬲丕亘 乇賵 賲蹖鈥屫堎嗃屫� 丕夭 丕蹖賳噩丕 丿丕賳賱賵丿 讴賳蹖丿


郾鄞郯鄢/鄄/郾鄣
Profile Image for emma.
2,398 reviews83.4k followers
December 20, 2021
children are boring.

even children who one day grow up to be genre-defining authors are boring.

and this book is pretty boring, too.

it's fine. there are worse things for a book to be. but it's the truth.

part of a series i'm doing in which i review books i read a long time ago, and so on and so forth and what have you
Profile Image for Matt.
4,445 reviews13k followers
January 8, 2017
One of the great authors of children's stories, Roald Dahl entertains readers with this piece that encompasses his life to age twenty. While Dahl clearly states that this piece is not an autobiography (for those sorts of books are filled with stale and dusty tales), this is a fabulous compendium of memories from his early years. The eldest son of two Norwegians, Dahl's early years were a mixture of pain (he lost his sister and father within a single week) and childhood frivolity (he loved to play with his school chums whenever time permitted). In one vivid memory, Dahl recounts his love of sweets and a shopkeeper who had a hate-on for him, which led young Roald to concoct a plan to exact revenge, which backfired horribly. A child from his father's second marriage, Dahl remembers riding with his elder half-sister, who got into a serious motor vehicle accident that almost cost him part of his face, Dahl recounts this with as much humour as the event permits. Dahl works hard to recollect those annual summer vacations outside Oslo, where grandparents doted on him and he could not wait for school to let out each summer. However, those glorious thoughts are countered with memories of the strap and horrid matrons patrolling the dorms when he left for boarding school. By the end, Dahl bridges his memories of entering the workforce and the hope that he might pen another short volume to entice readers to continue on with this journey. Like many of his books, the reader is lured into a blissful experience with Dahl's easy writing and fascinating ideas.

One cannot read Roald Dahl and not feel some connection to the characters that fill the narrative. Although this is a move away from fiction and forces the author to recollect his own life, Dahl is happy to admit he does not remember large portions of life before eight, though his memories flood forward thereafter. While some would think that a man of seventy would have so much to tell, Dahl does not wish to fill pages with dreary recollections, choosing to succinctly tell his early life. I could see some interesting themes in the vignettes Dahl chose to present, which ended up being major children's stories that I read in my younger years. Dahl's use of these memories to craft timeless classics, such as The BFG and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, only adds to the greatness of this short book. Told in a highly animated fashion, the reader cannot help but picture the young Roald heading to see that horrid matron or visiting with his beloved Norwegian grandparents while dreaming of sweets on his way home from school in second form. A piece that was so interesting, I am scrambling to get my hands on the second volume, to hear of his wartime memories. A must-read for anyone who has a little while to relax and loves the style Dahl has made famous.

Kudos, Mr. Dahl for all you did in your life. You will always hold a special place in my heart, which is only strengthened after reading this piece.

Like/hate the review? An ever-growing collection of others appears at:
Profile Image for Jo.
268 reviews1,054 followers
September 22, 2011
(Deciding to re-read this book was inspired by the wonderful ladies at and their fantastic bimonthly meme鈥楨verything Dahl and Magical鈥�. Which I absolutely adore. )


鈥淲hen writing about oneself, one must strive to be truthful. Truth is more important than modesty. I must tell you, therefore, that it was I and I alone who had the idea for the great and daring Mouse Plot. We all have our moments of brilliance and glory, and this was mine.鈥�

I first read this glorious memoir aged twelve when I had to do a project in history on a historical person of my choice.
I went to Staples, giddy as a kipper, and bought about five piles of coloured sugar paper and two packets of gel pens (the smelly glitter ones, of course) and set about completing possibly my favourite piece of homework.
I was minding my own business in the classroom, armed with a Pritt Stick and a copy of every one of his book, when this absolute鈥� so and so鈥� in my class said 鈥楻oald Dahl? Historical? I don鈥檛 think so. You should have chosen a monarch or something. You鈥檙e going to get a rubbish mark.鈥�
Because I was a shy and retiring wallflower back then, I muttered something under my breath and glared at her from underneath my unfortunate fringe.
BUT, if she had said that to me today I would have found a desk, and, with my chest puffed out, I would have declared: 鈥淩oald Dahl is a historical figure because if Roald Dahl hadn鈥檛 written his books then British children鈥檚 fiction鈥� nay, British fiction would have been far too bleak to tolerate. He captured the imagination of so many children and wrote timeless stories that encouraged, and continue to encourage, children who would never normally pick up a book to do just that. And if making generation after generation fall in love with his writing doesn鈥檛 qualify him as a historical person then I don鈥檛 know what does.鈥�
But鈥� like I said.
Mumble. Glare. Unfortunate fringe.
Anyway, I got my project back (and I still have it!) and my wonderful history teacher wrote: 鈥淔antastic and original work here. You really did justice to a wonderful figure in British culture. 10 credits鈥�
10 credits? Fantastic and original. YEAH.
Anyway... back to the book.
I loved how Dahl only briefly mentions the stories that he is known for once. It is only right near the end where he is describing how Cadbury鈥檚 World (Which is just like Charlie's Chocolate Factory by the way!) used to send the boys of his boarding school sample chocolate to taste and how this lead to him writing Charlie and his adventures.
So whenever it was mentioned that his grandfather was nearly seven foot tall or how the young boy used to wonder how gobstoppers worked, you can鈥檛 help but feel that Dahl is giving you a knowing wink or whispering a secret that only the two of you are privy to.
Witnessing these glimmers of inspiration that lead him to write his beloved stories, all those years later, was definitely my favourite thing about this book.
Mrs Pratchett with her blouse covered in 鈥渢oast-crumbs and tea stains and splotches of dried egg-yolk鈥� and hands that 鈥渓ooked as though they have been putting lumps of coal on the fire all day long.鈥�
Remind you of any one?



Or the Matron, that 鈥渓arge fair-haired woman with a bosom鈥� who 鈥渞uled with a rod of steel.鈥�




And Dahl鈥檚 Bestemama with her perpetual chair rocking or Bestepapa, who sits 鈥渟aying very little and totally overwhelmed.鈥�

Paired with photographs, hand-written letters home and, of course, Quentin Blake鈥檚 glorious illustrations (My favourite one being the bug-eyed, twitching Captain Hardcastle), Boy is still one of my all-time favourites.

I could quite happily fill this review with quotes.... but I'll just leave you with this one...

鈥淎naesthetics and pain-killing injections were not much used in those days. Dentists, in particular, never bothered with them. But I doubt very much if you would be entirely happy today if a doctor threw a towel in your face and jumped on you with a knife.鈥�



You can find this review and lots of other exciting things on my blog
Profile Image for James Hartley.
Author听10 books143 followers
May 19, 2017
This is a good little book - quite a historical artefact now as Dahl, writing in the mid-80麓s, talks about events which are taking place about 100 years ago from today. He麓s a very clear, cutting writer, with plain yet highly original style. This is mostly because of he sticks to writing about what HE finds interesting - caning, for example, which is described over and over in great detail. As he says, he is revolted by it - especially luxuriating in describing the ritual his Repton headmaster would go through when caning a child - making them bend over his sofa as he alternated between caning their bare buttocks and smoking his pipe. This man, as Dahl explains, went on to become a Bishop and then Archbishop of Canterbury. Elsewhere he describes his Norwegian heritage, the removal of his adenoids (at home, without anaesthetic) and a filthy-nailed sweetshop harridan.

My favourite passage comes late in the book, when he compares the life of the businessman he was then - working for Shell - with the writer he would later be.

"The life of a writer is absolute hell compared with the life of a businessman. The writer has to force himself to work. He has to make his own hours and if he doesn麓t go to his desk at all there is nobody to scold him. If he is a writer of fiction he lives in a world of fear. Each new day demands new ideas and he can never be sure whether he is going to come up with them or not. Two hours of writing fiction leaves this particular writer completely drained. For those two hours he has been miles away, he has been somewhere else, in a different place with totally different people, and the effort of swimming back into normal surroundings is very great. It is almost a shock. The writer walks out of his workroom in a daze. He wants a drink. He needs it. It happens to be a fact that nearly every writer of fiction in the world drinks more whisky than is good for him. He does it to give himself faith, hope and courage. A person is a fool to become a writer. His only compensation is absolute freedom. He has no master except his own soul, and that, I am sure, is why he does it."

Amen.
Profile Image for Melissa.
9 reviews1 follower
September 29, 2007
My interest in reading this novel was stimulated a few weeks ago when I visited some friends, one of whom over the course of the evening dug up his collection of Roald Dahl books and proceeded to reintroduce us the magic we had near forgetten we had experienced as children in reading them.

I have always loved the sheer dottiness of the tales of Roald Dahl - the horrid nature of the some of his adult characters and the heroic nature of his young but strong willed main characters.

What I loved about this book was that, not only was it written in the eccentric and yet no-nonsense style Dahl was known for, but it also gave me fascinating insight into some of the influences that shaped his writing.

One experience of note that I particularly warmed to was the tale of the woman who owned the sweet shop near his school, who had hideously dirty fingers, and was the fond recipient of one of Dahls' school boy pranks - putting a dead mouse inside one of her lolly jars to find.

From this, and some of the members of his family (the ancient older sister for example) I can only imagine Dahl gained the inspiration for his extraordinarily nasty characters - Aunt's Sponge and Spiker, the Twits, and George's horrible Grandma.

Charming were also some of his harder experiences - the joys of growing up in a time where there was no such thing as anaesthetic and so getting your tonsils out was a lot more painful.

Enchanting were his recounts of visiting his Norwegian family on holidays as a child, the confusion of language barriers and cultural differences I'm sure inspired some of Dahls more eccentric characters - Mr Willy Wonka for instance.

All in all, this reads more like one of Dahl's fictional novels and not like an autobiography at all. Not one for pomposity, Dahl cheerfully deleted the duller elements of his life, for which I am thankful. Nevertheless, this book is a wonderful recount of a well spent (for the most part) childhood. For those fans of autobiographies, who love to read to understand what makes a person tick, this story of childhood will not disappoint. This book goes far to impress upon the reader the events that led to the cheerful dottiness his readers loved him for.
Profile Image for Sita.
108 reviews57 followers
October 8, 2011
I read this in year 7 for English and I loved it.

Me, I normally hate school books. But this one was different, I really liked this one. It was just so interesting. I can still remember half the stuff that happened in the book. That is how much it stuck with me. I recommend this to fans of Roald Dahl and even non fans, this book is different from all his other work.

description

Good different...

I still recommend it, the things that happen and how he describes it is just...

description

That is the only word to describe the book.

Such a sparkly review...
Profile Image for D.
526 reviews83 followers
July 28, 2023
Autobiography of Roald Dahl. It covers him from age 5 - 20. Very amusing read, although, at times, there are horrifying stories about physical punishments administered by apparently sadistic 'masters'. Amazingly, one of the worst of these masters later became archbishop of Canterbury.
Profile Image for Jane Stewart.
2,462 reviews940 followers
November 9, 2017
3 陆 stars. I was sad and angry that so much punishment and cruelty was done to boys in the school system.

Roald went to a Welsh school for kindergarten. The teacher beat him with a cane. His mother then sent him to different English schools thinking they were the best schools in the world. But sadly, in every school he went to he was beaten with a cane either by teachers, headmasters, or boys with the title Boazer(Prefect). When Roald was a teen he was a star athlete. That usually would have made him a Boazer. But the administrators would not make him a Boazer since they knew he would not use a cane to beat younger boys. I think this was a horrible way of life in the schools back in the 1920s and 1930s. It was widespread. Many of the teachers and staff were cruel. Sometimes innocent boys were accused of things just to be able to punish them.

CAUTION - VIOLENT AND GRAPHIC CONTENT IN SPOILER:


There were other stories that were interesting and did not make me as mad as the above.

This is nonfiction - 25 short essays about events in the author鈥檚 life from age 6 to age 20.

DATA:
Narrative mode: 1st person. Story length: 172 pages. Swearing language: none. Sexual content: none. Setting: mostly 1920s and 1930s Wales & England. Copyright: 1984. Genre: autobiography, memoirs.
Profile Image for Becky.
1,550 reviews1,899 followers
December 26, 2015
Before this year, I'd never read any of Dahl's work, and when I picked this up I didn't realize that it was an autobiography. So imagine my surprise when I crack the book open and see nothing at all whimsical or silly. Which is cool, but just not what I expected. Not reading the description strikes again!

Anyway, this is a nice collection of stories from Dahl's childhood and while I think that maybe a bit is embellished (who can remember that much detail from early childhood?), I enjoyed it quite a lot. I especially liked his family, and how awesome his mother was. She was definitely a strong and committed woman to do what she did for her family.

I definitely saw some influence on his stories here, which isn't surprising but was fun because it's like watching the building blocks of the creative process being put into place. I'll look for the second book in this series if I can find it because I'd love to get to where he was actually a working writer and read more about that. Dahl comments briefly here about it, but only to contrast a more structured and "normal" job with fixing oneself to write and be creative. Interesting stuff.

Also, I'm very glad that I never had to be an outhouse toilet-seat warmer. O_o
Profile Image for James.
472 reviews
August 14, 2017
This is the first instalment of Dahl鈥檚 autobiography 鈥� written with his customary wit, style and accessibility. 鈥楤oy鈥� provides an entertaining insight into Dahl's early years and upbringing. Included here are some events that undoubtedly provided influence and ideas for some of his later novels.

Minor quibble 鈥� in the edition I was reading, many of the facsimiles of excerpts from letters / reports etc. from Dahl鈥檚 childhood were somewhat difficult to read due to the size of the writing and maybe would have benefited from being slightly larger copies of the originals?

Definitely well worth a read for all fans of Roald Dahl.
Profile Image for Andy.
1,616 reviews63 followers
April 27, 2020
This was one of those eye openers for me as a child; I read Boy countless times (and back home still have the well worn edition from 1986). The concept of an autobiography was so new and radical, at a time when reading was all make believe and fiction; it 'really happened', it wasn't made up! Rather, a magical book that opened up another world, glimpsing a life I would never experience.

His remembrances of childhood and school life are frank, vivid and frequently horrific. In particular, his account of the unexpected removal of his adenoids has vividly stuck with me to this day, since I read it the first time (starkly imprinted as I too had my adenoids removed as a child and the graphic depiction freaked me out entirely). Tales of life at boarding school, fagging, the cane, chocolate and tuck boxes, a memorable car trip and a general air of menace exposed a truly different way of life.

Reading it now, I'm struck by how brief and narrow it is. It just seemed so much bigger as a child (much like headmasters, I guess). Still, I enjoyed revisiting it immensely. It's also great to pick out those glimpses of future Dahl stories and characters. This is a truly great book for kids to read and discover, even more so as we move further away from the era depicted.

Dahl says near the beginning that everything is true but it really doesn't matter either way. It's all story-telling magic. Well worth reading, whatever your age. Now, on to his later years...

April 2020
I've just finished reading this with my 7 year old, initially after dinner and then at bedtime. It's his first autobiography and he seemed to enjoy it and wants to read on (though I think Going Solo may not keep his attention at this point). Great for discovery, we learnt lots about Norway and how badly children have been treated (he seemed to find that aspect fascinating).
Profile Image for Jessica.
Author听34 books5,875 followers
May 29, 2018
Absolutely charming stories about Dahl's family and his early school days. As he says, it's not actually an autobiography, but its the bits and pieces he remembers. And you can see how those memories informed his books, and how his intelligent, close knit and fantastical family inspired him as well. Complete with illustrations and snippets of his letters home as well.
Profile Image for Tim Orfanos.
353 reviews38 followers
December 4, 2018
螌蟺蠅蟼 蠂伪蟻伪魏蟿畏蟻喂蟽蟿喂魏维 伪谓伪蠁苇蟻蔚喂 慰 螡蟿伪位 蟽蟿慰谓 蟺蟻蠈位慰纬慰 蟿慰蠀 尾喂尾位委慰蠀 (1984), 未蔚谓 苇纬蟻伪蠄蔚 渭喂伪 伪蠀蟿慰尾喂慰纬蟻伪蠁委伪, 伪位位维 苇谓伪 渭蠀胃喂蟽蟿蠈蟻畏渭伪 蟺慰蠀 伪蟺慰蟿蔚位蔚委蟿伪喂 伪蟺蠈 伪谓伪渭谓萎蟽蔚喂蟼, 蟿喂蟼 慰蟺慰委蔚蟼 伪谓苇蟽蠀蟻蔚 伪蟺蠈 蟿慰 蠀蟺慰蟽蠀谓蔚委未畏蟿蠈 蟿慰蠀. 螣喂 伪谓伪渭谓萎蟽蔚喂蟼 伪蠀蟿苇蟼 尉蔚魏喂谓慰蠉谓 伪蟺蠈 蟿畏谓 畏位喂魏委伪 蟿蠅谓 6 蠂蟻蠈谓蠅谓 魏伪喂 魏伪蟿伪位萎纬慰蠀谓 蟽蟿畏 畏位喂魏委伪 蟿蠅谓 20 蠂蟻蠈谓蠅谓, 蟿慰 1936.

螣 伪谓伪纬谓蠋蟽蟿畏蟼 胃伪 纬蔚位维蟽蔚喂, 胃伪 蟽蠀纬魏喂谓畏胃蔚委 魏伪喂 胃伪 伪蟺慰蟻萎蟽蔚喂 渭蔚 蟿喂蟼 蟿蟻慰渭蔚蟻苇蟼 蟺蔚蟻喂蟺苇蟿蔚喂蔚蟼 蟿慰蠀 蟽蠀纬纬蟻伪蠁苇伪, 慰喂 慰蟺慰委蔚蟼 尉蔚魏喂谓慰蠉谓 渭蔚 蟿慰谓 胃维谓伪蟿慰 蟿慰蠀 蟺伪蟿苇蟻伪 蟿慰蠀, 渭蠈位喂蟼 57 蔚蟿蠋谓, 蟽蠀谓蔚蠂委味慰谓蟿伪喂 渭蔚 蟿畏谓 蔚蟺喂尾慰位萎 蟽魏位畏蟻蠋谓 渭蔚胃蠈未蠅谓 未喂伪蟺伪喂未伪纬蠋纬畏蟽畏蟼 蟽蟿伪 尾蟻蔚蟿伪谓喂魏维 蟽蠂慰位蔚委伪 魏伪喂 魏慰位位苇纬喂伪, 蔚谓蠋, 蟿伪蠀蟿蠈蠂蟻慰谓伪, 蔚谓蟿蠀蟺蠅蟽喂维味慰蠀谓 畏 蔚蟺慰喂魏慰未慰渭畏蟿喂魏萎 蟽蠂苇蟽畏 蟿慰蠀 螡蟿伪位 渭蔚 蟿畏 渭畏蟿苇蟻伪 蟿慰蠀 魏伪喂 蟿慰 蟺蔚蟻喂蟺蔚蟿蔚喂蠋未蔚蟼 苇谓蟽蟿喂魏蟿蠈 蟿慰蠀.

螣 蟿委蟿位慰蟼 蟿慰蠀 尾喂尾位委慰蠀 蟺蟻慰苇蟻蠂蔚蟿伪喂 伪蟺蠈 蟿慰谓 蟿蟻蠈蟺慰 渭蔚 蟿慰谓 慰蟺慰委慰 慰位慰魏位萎蟻蠅谓蔚 蟿伪 蟺慰位蠀维蟻喂胃渭伪 纬蟻维渭渭伪蟿维 蟿慰蠀 蟺蟻慰蟼 蟿畏 渭畏蟿苇蟻伪 蟿慰蠀 (未蔚谓 苇纬蟻伪蠁蔚 蟿慰 蠈谓慰渭维 蟿慰蠀, 伪位位维 蟿畏 位苇尉畏 'Boy').

螆谓伪 伪蟺蠈 蟿伪 蟺喂慰 蟺蟻蠅蟿蠈蟿蠀蟺伪 尾喂尾位委伪 蟿慰蠀 螡蟿伪位, 蠈蟺慰蠀 伪谓蟿喂魏伪蟿慰蟺蟿蟻委味蔚蟿伪喂 苇谓伪 渭蔚纬维位慰 渭苇蟻慰蟼 蟿畏蟼 蔚蠀蟻蠅蟺伪蠆魏萎蟼 魏慰蠀位蟿慰蠉蟻伪蟼 蟿畏蟼 未蔚魏伪蔚蟿委伪蟼 蟿慰蠀 '20 魏伪喂 蟿慰蠀 '30.

螔伪胃渭慰位慰纬委伪: 4,3/5 萎 8,6/10.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
4,027 reviews3,329 followers
September 25, 2018
Like so many children, I grew up with Roald Dahl鈥檚 classic tales: James and the Giant Peach, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and Matilda. I was aware that he had published work for adults, too, but hadn鈥檛 experienced any of it until I was asked to join a blog tour in advance of Roald Dahl Day (September 13th). Last year Penguin brought out an eight-volume paperback set of Dahl鈥檚 short stories, grouped thematically. I focused on Innocence: Tales of Youth and Guile, which opens with a reprint of Boy (1984), the closest thing to an autobiography that Dahl wrote. That鈥檚 in spite of his prefatory disclaimer:
An autobiography is a book a person writes about his own life and it is usually full of all sorts of boring details. This is not an autobiography. 鈥� throughout my young days at school and just afterwards a number of things happened to me that I have never forgotten. 鈥� Some are funny. Some are painful. 鈥� All are true.

Dahl鈥檚 father was a one-armed shipbroker who鈥檇 moved from Norway to Wales for the coal. His mother, Harald鈥檚 second wife, was also from Norway, so Dahl was a full-blooded Norwegian. After his father鈥檚 early death he attended Llandaff Cathedral School and then boarding school and public school in England. Sofie Dahl, quietly tough, tended her brood of six children and stepchildren, giving them magical summers on a Norwegian island and keeping her cool during the car accident in which Dahl鈥檚 nose was almost severed.

Any time they were separated, Dahl wrote to his mother once a week, without fail. The book includes facsimile excerpts from some of these letters, along with black-and-white family photographs and drawings. This is more of a scrapbook than a straightforward chronological memoir, especially in the way that it moves between playful and disturbing vignettes from Dahl鈥檚 school days. It鈥檚 particularly delightful to spot incidents that inspired his children鈥檚 books, such as a plot to plant a dead mouse in the mean sweet shop lady鈥檚 gobstopper jar and the boxes of new-recipe Cadbury鈥檚 chocolates that would arrive at Repton School for testing by eager boys.

Pranks and larks and holidays: these are all here. But so is crushing homesickness and a bitter sense of injustice at being at the mercy of sadistic adults. Dahl had his adenoids removed without anesthesia, and at school he received and witnessed many a vicious caning. Aware that such scenes are accumulating uncomfortably, he addresses the topic directly:
By now I am sure you will be wondering why I lay so much emphasis upon school beatings in these pages. The answer is that I cannot help it. All through my school life I was appalled by the fact that masters and senior boys were allowed literally to wound other boys, and sometimes quite severely. I couldn鈥檛 get over it. I never have got over it.

When he graduated, instead of going to Oxford or Cambridge, he wanted to see the world and have adventures, so he spent the summer of 1934 exploring Newfoundland and joined the Shell Company at age 18. His first placement was to East Africa for three years; soon afterwards he would become a fighter pilot in the Second World War. In the short years he spent as a London commuter, he realized how easy a 9-to-5 office job is compared to making a living as a writer. (I could sympathize.)
The life of a writer is absolute hell compared with the life of a businessman. The writer has to force himself to work. He has to make his own hours and if he doesn鈥檛 go to his desk at all there is nobody to scold him. If he is a writer of fiction he lives in a world of fear. Each new day demands new ideas and he can never be sure whether he is going to come up with them or not. 鈥� A person is a fool to become a writer. His only compensation is absolute freedom. He has no master except his own soul.

I don鈥檛 often like reading books from a child鈥檚 perspective (particularly novels with a child narrator) because I find that the voice can ring false. Not so here. Nearly 60 years later, Dahl could use memory and imagination to fully inhabit his childhood self and give a charming survey of the notable events of his life up to age 20. I鈥檇 highly recommend Boy to fiction and nonfiction readers alike.


[I dipped into Trickery: Tales of Deceit and Cunning and particularly liked 鈥淭he Wish,鈥� in which a boy imagines a carpet is a snakepit and then falls into it, and 鈥淧rincess Mammalia,鈥� a Princess Bride-style black comedy about a royal who decides to wrest power from her father but gets her mischief turned right back on her. I鈥檒l also pick up Fear, Dahl鈥檚 curated set of ghost stories by other authors, during October for the R.I.P. challenge.]


Originally published on my blog, .
Profile Image for [ J o ].
1,962 reviews522 followers
February 8, 2017
A really lovely, endearing and funny account of a very lovely, endearing and altogether adventurous childhood from a wonderful author. Full review to follow.



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Profile Image for Vonia.
612 reviews97 followers
February 24, 2021
What child is not completely enamored by the stories written by Roald Dahl? For that matter, what adult does not have a special place in their heart for his audacious, fantastical, magical, whimsical tales? Charlie & The Chocolate Factory, James & The Giant Peach, Fantastic Mister Fox, Matilda. To name only a few. Not to mention his equally magnificent fiction / nonfiction for adults.

Here is a chance for a behind-the-scenes look into this storyteller's world. What was this man's childhood like to have the imagination necessary for such grandeur stories? What were his formative years like? His family? Friends? In his teenage years, did he know he wanted to be a writer?

Boy: Tales of Childhood answer these tantalizing inquiries, and more. Readers learn of seven-year-old Roald's personal adventures with the candy shoppe down the street, which no doubt inspired Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory, and a woman whom owns the shoppe that shares similarities with characters featured in The Magic Finger, even Matilda. Aside from that, it is a historically accurate look at life in England/Wales in the early twentieth century, from the onset of automobiles to the questionable medical practices to English boarding schools to the economical industry at the time.

He is raised by two loving parents in Norway, until the death of his sister Astri, followed soon thereafter by his late father (likely attributable to the grief over his favorite daughter). He attends Llandaff Cathedral School for two years, until his tencious mother, raising him and his siblings alone and determined to follow her late husband's wishes that his children have an English prepatory education ("The very best is the world"), sends Roald Dahl to St. Peter's in Weston-super-Mare, Somerset. His mother and siblings (two from his late father's first marriage, three sisters with his own mother, minus Astri, making four!) remained in nearby Wales.

At nine years old, boarding school was understandable a lonely, intimidating experience. From his memories of the Headmaster and Floor Matron, readers are given the undeniable inspiration for what became the novel Matilda.

The role of the headmaster continues to be central in Roald's life when he begins Public School at thirteen, this time at Repton near Derby. His family had relocated to Kent by then. More anecdotes of his early years are told, often endearing, always hilarious. As a photographer (amateur) myself, I was inordinately thrilled to learn of his affinity for it. He was also an unexpected captain for Fives (similar to handball) and Squash during these years.

At Repton, Roald and his classmates were given boxes of chocolates from The Cadbury Corporation, in exchange for their feedback on each piece. A fine marketing test group strategy by them, but, better yet, another childhood memory that contributed to Charlie & The Chocolate Factory!

At eighteen, opting out of university, Roald begins prosperous career at The Shell Company in England. Two years later, the company reassigns him to a post in East Africa, to his delight. Unfortunately, a few short years later, in 1939, World War II dawns, relocating Roald again, this time to Nairobi, then all over The Mediterranean, serving as a Royal Air Force pilot. Alas, as the author promises, that is another story (later published as Going Solo).

Included in this are personal portraits of Roald at various ages (an adorable child,an ambitious teenager, a handsome and charming young man), family photographs, places he lived, attended for his early education, visited, etcetera. Of course, for everything else there are the iconic sketches and doodles by Quentin Blake (readers will remember the same hand that illustrated all their favorite children's stories).

For twenty years, from 1925 to 1945, his mother conscientiously saved Roald's more than six hundred letters to her, equally diligently, lovingly written year after year. A priceless archive, especially for a writer such as himself, given to him as a gift on his mother's deathbed. Parts of these are interlaced between the text (thus exhibiting young Roald's evolving penmanship), colorfully but authentically supplementing, telling a tale almost as grand as the fiction he wrote for decades.

This was such a pleasure, as Roald Dahl is one of my favorite children's book authors. Many share my sentiments. May he rest in peace.
Profile Image for Sara Kamjou.
655 reviews482 followers
February 11, 2017
丕蹖賳 讴鬲丕亘 亘賴 賳賵毓蹖 亘賴 毓賳賵丕賳 夭賳丿诏蹖賳丕賲賴鈥屰� 乇賵賱丿 丿丕賱 卮賳丕禺鬲賴 賲蹖鈥屫促� 丕賲丕 丕氐賱丕 卮亘蹖賴 蹖讴 亘蹖賵诏乇丕賮蹖 禺爻鬲賴 讴賳賳丿賴 賳蹖爻鬲. 讴鬲丕亘 倬乇 丕夭 丿丕爻鬲丕賳鈥屬囏й� 亘丕賲夭賴 丕夭 夭賳丿诏蹖 卮禺氐蹖 乇賵賱丿 丿丕賱 賴 賵 亘丕 禺賵賳丿賳 丕蹖賳 讴鬲丕亘 賲蹖鈥屫ㄛ屬嗃屬� 讴賴 卮禺氐蹖鬲 禺賵丿卮 鬲丕 趩賴 丨丿 鬲賵蹖 禺賱賯 丿丕爻鬲丕賳鈥屬囏ж� 賲丐孬乇 亘賵丿賴.
卮禺氐蹖鬲 賲丕丿乇 乇賵賱丿 丿丕賱 乇賵 禺蹖賱蹖 夭蹖丕丿 丿賵爻鬲 丿丕卮鬲賲. 讴爻蹖 讴賴 亘丕 賵噩賵丿 丕蹖賳讴賴 乇賵賱丿 鬲讴鈥屬矩池必� 亘賵丿賴 賵 卮賵賴乇卮 賴賲 丕賵丕蹖賱 亘趩诏蹖 亘趩賴鈥屬囏ж� 丕夭 丿賳蹖丕 賲蹖鈥屫辟� 賱賵爻 亘丕乇卮 賳賲蹖丕乇賴. 丨賳蹖 賵賯鬲蹖 賯乇丕乇 賲蹖鈥屫促� 亘乇賴 丌賮乇蹖賯丕蹖 卮乇賯蹖 亘賴 噩丕蹖 丕蹖賳讴賴 賲孬賱 丕讴孬乇 賲丕丿乇賴丕 丕夭 丿賵乇蹖 亘趩賴鈥屫� 睾乇 亘夭賳賴 鬲卮賵蹖賯卮賲 賲蹖鈥屭┵嗁�! 禺賱丕氐賴 丕蹖賳讴賴 賲丕丿乇卮 亘乇丕賲 丕賱賴丕賲鈥屫ㄘ� 賵 鬲丨爻蹖賳鈥屭┵嗁嗀� 亘賵丿.
Profile Image for Dona's Books.
1,020 reviews167 followers
August 5, 2024
It doesn't really matter how much I like it. The truth is, it's got some problems because it's so old.

Review to come.
Profile Image for Joey.
262 reviews52 followers
February 23, 2015
I am very fond of reading books about children鈥檚 bitter experiences. Perhaps I believe in American psychologist, Erik Fromm鈥檚 belief that 鈥� to understand children, we, adults, try to think like a child again.鈥漊nfortunately, not all adults are aware of this fact. That鈥檚 why the main purpose of literature is to educate people about life, basically about children life. I have read some books about children. I can hardly ever forget Angela鈥檚 Ashes by Frank McCourt ( 5 stars ), The Butcher鈥檚 Boy by Patrick McCabe ( 3 stars ), Torey Hayden鈥檚 books such as The Innocent Child and its sequel The Tiger鈥檚 Child ( I was so generous to fault to give both 5 stars at that time when I was not yet critical on Good Reads. ) I also cried over the classical books such as Charles Dicken鈥檚 Oliver Twist and David Copperfield. Even Beloved by Toni Morrison, one of my favorite fictional writers , punched my chest although the character is a young teen-ager gives eerie feelings. For local books, one is the Connecting the Dots by Gojo Cruz ( 5 stars ) which author swept me off my feet. ( laughs ) Such books are awash in the same theme: human cruelty in children, perhaps, out of ignorance.

This book of Road Dahl is one of the books above. This may be intended to make readers laugh. Of course, I did. However, the real highlight of this , even Dahl admitted it at the end of the story, is his miserable experiences as a student in the hands of his school head masters, teachers, and matrons. ( or you鈥檇 rather I put it bluntly , under the rotten educational system in Britain at that time ) Dahl narrated how he was such a poor innocent child . He was an archetype of educational upbringing. He had been beaten many times. So had his classmates. He had been humiliated and treated unfairly. So had his classmates. Admittedly, I abandoned myself to his said stories. If I had been his classmate at that time, I would have been so defiant that I could have been booted out. ( laughs ) So , the title of this book fits all the stories- Boys: Tales of Childhood.


I always want to be an active advocate for children鈥檚 rights, particularly for their education. Like Dahl, I was also a victim of wrong education from teachers who may have been ignorant of child psychology. As a teacher now , I believe in teaching students based on their individualism.

The good thing about this is that Road Dahl was still able to make us laugh despite those harboring ill-feelings. He was like a friend I have just made, sharing his ala Thomas-Sawyer stories. The atmosphere he built was so amiable that I felt sympathy for him. In addition, reading it was so easy unlike the other autobiographies or novels about children which require higher level of thinking. He narrated his stories age by age and every sentence is well-written. Since it is a children book, I hope young readers take precious lessons from it. And I do not think that it should be banned from the hands of young readers just like of what happened to his Charllie and the Chocolate Factory which received negative criticism. Duty on their distorted realities! ^^

Road Dahl said in his preface that an autobiography for him is full of all sorts of boring details. If I take him for his words, what he meant to say I believe is like what the famous American writer, William Arthur Ward, said:

鈥淭he adventure of life is to learn. The purpose of life is to grow. The nature of life is to change. The challenge of life is to overcome. The essence of life is to care. The opportunity of like is to serve. The secret of life is to dare. The spice of life is to befriend. The beauty of life is to give.鈥�

Yippee! ^^

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