Roald Dahl • Ages 10+ • KS2 • 45 questions

Boy: Tales of Childhood KS2 Quiz (With Answers)

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Q1 of 45

What type of book is 'Boy' by Roald Dahl?

  • A short story collection
  • A novel
  • An autobiography
  • A diary

Q2 of 45

Where was Roald Dahl born?

  • Cardiff only
  • Norway (he was born in Llandaff but to Norwegian parents)
  • England
  • Wales

Q3 of 45

What was the Sweet Shop incident at school?

  • Dahl ate too many sweets
  • Dahl and his friends put a dead mouse in the gobstopper jar of the horrible sweet shop owner
  • They broke a window
  • They stole sweets

Q4 of 45

Who is Captain Hardcastle?

  • Dahl's headmaster
  • A kind teacher
  • His form tutor
  • A terrifying, twitching senior master at Repton who bullied boys

Q5 of 45

What was 'the boazers'?

  • The prefects who were allowed to cane junior boys at Repton
  • A school punishment
  • A game
  • A type of sweet

Q6 of 45

What happened to Dahl's sister and father when he was young?

  • Both died within weeks
  • His father left for work
  • They emigrated
  • They separated

Q7 of 45

What school did Dahl attend as a senior pupil?

  • Winchester
  • Repton
  • Eton
  • Harrow

Q8 of 45

What was the chocolate box experiment that Dahl and friends participated in?

  • They visited a factory
  • A baking competition
  • They made chocolate as a project
  • Cadbury's sent new chocolate to the school for boys to taste and rate

Q9 of 45

How does Dahl describe the beatings given to boys at his schools?

  • As violent and brutal
  • As rare and mild
  • As occasional and forgotten
  • As fair and reasonable

Q10 of 45

What physical accident does Dahl describe in the book involving a car?

  • He drove into a ditch
  • He crashed his bicycle
  • His mother crashed the car and his nose was nearly cut off by the windscreen
  • He was hit by a car

Q11 of 45

What does Dahl say was the origin of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory?

  • His mother's stories
  • A dream he had
  • The Cadbury taste-testing at school and his childhood love of chocolate
  • A competition he entered

Q12 of 45

Which school does 'Boy' mostly concern itself with?

  • Only Repton
  • Eton
  • Only his prep school
  • St Peter's prep school and then Repton

Q13 of 45

What was Dahl's early attitude toward his school education?

  • He loved it
  • He was a top student
  • He was indifferent
  • He found much of it miserable, particularly the cruelty of teachers and the brutality of the prefect system

Q14 of 45

Why does Dahl say he didn't go to Oxford or Cambridge?

  • His mother couldn't afford it
  • He chose not to
  • He was not clever enough
  • He failed his exams

Q15 of 45

What is the tone of 'Boy' overall?

  • purely sad
  • Entirely angry
  • A mixture of dark humour, genuine pain and nostalgic affection for childhood
  • Entirely happy

Q16 of 45

What is 'Boy: Tales of Childhood'?

  • Dahl's memoir about his own childhood in Wales, England and Norway
  • A novel told from a child's perspective about growing up in the 1950s
  • A collection of short stories about different children
  • A fictional adventure novel about a boy named Boy

Q17 of 45

How does Dahl describe the sweet shop and Mrs Pratchett?

  • A wonderful place where the owner gives children extra sweets
  • A magical place run by a kind elderly woman
  • A forbidden place his mother tells him never to visit
  • A dingy shop run by a horrible, mean woman who the boys despise

Q18 of 45

What trick do Dahl and his friends play on Mrs Pratchett?

  • They smash her window and run away
  • They steal from the till
  • They put a dead mouse in the gobstopper jar
  • They spread a rumour that her sweets make children ill

Q19 of 45

What happens because of the sweet shop prank?

  • They are arrested and taken to the police station
  • Their parents are called in and they are suspended
  • Mrs Pratchett tells their headmaster who canes each of them severely
  • Nothing — Mrs Pratchett never finds out who was responsible

Q20 of 45

How does Dahl's mother react to the caning?

  • She is furious and goes to confront the headmaster herself
  • She is proud he took it bravely
  • She writes a letter of complaint to the school governors
  • She is relieved he was punished

Q21 of 45

What does Dahl think of his experience at boarding school overall?

  • He loved it immediately and made lifelong friends
  • He thrived at sport even if he was not academic
  • He found it cold, sometimes cruel and deeply homesick
  • He was happy but missed his mother terribly

Q22 of 45

What role does Dahl's mother play throughout the memoir?

  • A central, loving and strong presence
  • A strict disciplinarian who enforces rules at home
  • An absent parent who sends money but rarely visits
  • A distant figure who is too busy to be involved

Q23 of 45

What does Dahl include in the book alongside his written memories?

  • Recipes from Norway that his family cooked
  • Illustrations he drew himself as a child
  • Maps of places he visited as a child
  • Real photographs and documents from his own past that help prove his stories

Q24 of 45

What does Dahl say about the practice of beating boys at school?

  • That it was mainly used by teachers who had been beaten themselves
  • That it helped make boys tougher and more disciplined
  • That it was brutal and wrong
  • That it was an unfortunate but normal part of life

Q25 of 45

What does the memoir suggest about how Dahl's childhood shaped his writing?

  • That his happy holidays gave him all his best ideas
  • That he kept his real life entirely separate from his fiction
  • That the cruelty, strange characters and injustice he witnessed fed directly into his stories
  • That school made him want to write adventure stories for boys

Q26 of 45

Where does young Roald Dahl spend his summer holidays?

  • In Norway with his Norwegian mother's family
  • At the family home in Wales
  • In Scotland with relatives
  • At a boarding school summer camp

Q27 of 45

What does Dahl say is the best part of being a child?

  • Having all your meals provided
  • The freedom of the imagination
  • Having no responsibilities
  • Not having to work

Q28 of 45

How does Dahl describe his father Harald?

  • A strict father who believed in discipline
  • A distant man who worked long hours
  • An adventurous man who inspired Dahl's love of travel
  • A remarkable man

Q29 of 45

What does the book suggest school was like for many children of Dahl's generation?

  • The best years of their lives despite the hardships
  • Frequently brutal
  • More relaxed than schools today
  • Strict but fair and providing good opportunities

Q30 of 45

What does the title 'Boy' tell us about Dahl's perspective in writing this memoir?

  • That the book is only about boyhood experiences, not girlhood
  • That he is writing specifically for boys
  • That the stories are so dramatic they could only happen to a boy
  • That he is looking back through the eyes of the boy he once was

Q31 of 45

How does Dahl use memoir to illuminate the autobiographical roots of his fiction? What connections can you draw between 'Boy' and his novels?

  • one book connects, and
  • 'Boy' reveals the biographical sources of Dahl's fiction
  • His fiction was imagined independently
  • 'Boy' has no connection to his fiction

Q32 of 45

Dahl describes the beating of schoolboys with great specificity. What is his purpose in documenting this, and what does it reveal about attitudes to childhood in early twentieth-century Britain?

  • Detailed documentation serves as historical record and protest
  • These details were unimportant
  • He was exaggerating, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • He celebrated it, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure

Q33 of 45

How does the death of Dahl's father and sister shape his emotional development as revealed in 'Boy'? What do these losses suggest about his later writing of vulnerable characters?

  • His childhood was happy despite this
  • The deaths had no lasting effect
  • Loss affects children briefly, and
  • Early bereavement created a sensitivity to loss, vulnerability and the fragility of happiness that permeates his fiction

Q34 of 45

Dahl writes about his Norwegian heritage with pride. How does cultural identity contribute to his perspective as both a writer and a person?

  • Culture doesn't affect writers
  • His writing is entirely British
  • Being Norwegian is irrelevant
  • His Norwegian background gave him an outsider's perspective on Britain

Q35 of 45

The Sweet Shop mouse episode is one of the book's most famous passages. How does it illustrate the relationship between childhood powerlessness and the desire for justice?

  • The dead mouse represents a child's only available act of resistance against adult cruelty
  • It was funny
  • Children shouldn't do such things
  • It is just a funny prank

Q36 of 45

How does memoir differ from fiction as a form, and how does Dahl exploit these differences in 'Boy'?

  • He exaggerated everything, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • Memoir and fiction are the same
  • Memoir is better than fiction
  • Memoir creates authority through personal truth

Q37 of 45

Dahl's description of Cadbury's chocolate testing is joyful amidst a generally painful account. What is the narrative function of these moments of pleasure?

  • They interrupt the narrative
  • They show his real character
  • Moments of joy create contrast that intensifies both experiences
  • Chocolate was important to him

Q38 of 45

How does Dahl present the education system of his era? Is his critique balanced or one-sided?

  • He celebrates his education, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • He is fair to teachers
  • He was too young to judge, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • The critique is largely unsparing

Q39 of 45

What is the relationship between the adult Dahl narrating and the child Dahl experiencing? How does retrospective narration create meaning?

  • Memoir has no narration
  • They are the same voice
  • Retrospective narration creates irony
  • The narrator is a character

Q40 of 45

Dahl is often described as anti-establishment. How does 'Boy' provide evidence for the roots of this attitude?

  • Repton's cruelty, its class snobbery and the failure of adults to protect children from institutional violence created deep scepticism of authority
  • Dahl was not anti-establishment, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • He was pro-establishment, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • His adult life shows this not 'Boy'

Q41 of 45

How does Dahl use specific, precise detail to make the past vivid? Select one example and analyse its effect.

  • Detail is for colour
  • Dahl uses general descriptions, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • Precision makes memory feel trustworthy
  • Specificity doesn't matter in memoir

Q42 of 45

The book is subtitled 'Tales of Childhood.' Why 'tales' rather than 'memories' or 'stories'? What does this word choice signal?

  • Tales and memories are the same
  • It was random
  • 'Tales' implies shaped narrative rather than raw memory
  • Dahl made everything up, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure

Q43 of 45

How does the relationship between Dahl and his Norwegian mother shape his character? What qualities does she model that appear in his work?

  • His mother's resilience, independence and fierce protectiveness despite multiple bereavements model the qualities that recur in Dahl's admirable characters
  • His mother was unimportant
  • His mother was difficult
  • Norwegian mothers are all strong

Q44 of 45

What does 'Boy' reveal about how writers develop? Is childhood suffering a necessary ingredient in great writing?

  • Dahl's writing wasn't affected by childhood, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • All great writers suffered
  • While not necessary, Dahl's experience shows that childhood pain creates emotional intelligence
  • Writers don't need difficult childhoods

Q45 of 45

If you were studying Dahl's fiction without reading 'Boy', what would you miss? What does biographical understanding add to literary appreciation?

  • Dahl's biography is not interesting, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • Biography adds interpretive depth
  • Texts should be read alone
  • Biography adds nothing

All Answers

  1. Q1: An autobiography
  2. Q2: Norway (he was born in Llandaff but to Norwegian parents)
  3. Q3: Dahl and his friends put a dead mouse in the gobstopper jar of the horrible sweet shop owner
  4. Q4: A terrifying, twitching senior master at Repton who bullied boys
  5. Q5: The prefects who were allowed to cane junior boys at Repton
  6. Q6: Both died within weeks
  7. Q7: Repton
  8. Q8: Cadbury's sent new chocolate to the school for boys to taste and rate
  9. Q9: As violent and brutal
  10. Q10: His mother crashed the car and his nose was nearly cut off by the windscreen
  11. Q11: The Cadbury taste-testing at school and his childhood love of chocolate
  12. Q12: St Peter's prep school and then Repton
  13. Q13: He found much of it miserable, particularly the cruelty of teachers and the brutality of the prefect system
  14. Q14: He chose not to
  15. Q15: A mixture of dark humour, genuine pain and nostalgic affection for childhood
  16. Q16: Dahl's memoir about his own childhood in Wales, England and Norway
  17. Q17: A dingy shop run by a horrible, mean woman who the boys despise
  18. Q18: They put a dead mouse in the gobstopper jar
  19. Q19: Mrs Pratchett tells their headmaster who canes each of them severely
  20. Q20: She is furious and goes to confront the headmaster herself
  21. Q21: He found it cold, sometimes cruel and deeply homesick
  22. Q22: A central, loving and strong presence
  23. Q23: Real photographs and documents from his own past that help prove his stories
  24. Q24: That it was brutal and wrong
  25. Q25: That the cruelty, strange characters and injustice he witnessed fed directly into his stories
  26. Q26: In Norway with his Norwegian mother's family
  27. Q27: The freedom of the imagination
  28. Q28: A remarkable man
  29. Q29: Frequently brutal
  30. Q30: That he is looking back through the eyes of the boy he once was
  31. Q31: 'Boy' reveals the biographical sources of Dahl's fiction
  32. Q32: Detailed documentation serves as historical record and protest
  33. Q33: Early bereavement created a sensitivity to loss, vulnerability and the fragility of happiness that permeates his fiction
  34. Q34: His Norwegian background gave him an outsider's perspective on Britain
  35. Q35: The dead mouse represents a child's only available act of resistance against adult cruelty
  36. Q36: Memoir creates authority through personal truth
  37. Q37: Moments of joy create contrast that intensifies both experiences
  38. Q38: The critique is largely unsparing
  39. Q39: Retrospective narration creates irony
  40. Q40: Repton's cruelty, its class snobbery and the failure of adults to protect children from institutional violence created deep scepticism of authority
  41. Q41: Precision makes memory feel trustworthy
  42. Q42: 'Tales' implies shaped narrative rather than raw memory
  43. Q43: His mother's resilience, independence and fierce protectiveness despite multiple bereavements model the qualities that recur in Dahl's admirable characters
  44. Q44: While not necessary, Dahl's experience shows that childhood pain creates emotional intelligence
  45. Q45: Biography adds interpretive depth
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