Quiz Questions
Click each answer to check it instantly.
Scroll down to see all answers.
Q1 of 45
Where do Danny and his father live?
- In a flat above a shop
- In a cottage by a river
- In a house in the village
- In a caravan behind a filling station
Q2 of 45
What is Danny's father's secret passion?
- Collecting cars
- Poaching pheasants
- Fishing
- Motorcycle racing
Q3 of 45
Who is the villain of the story?
- Mr Victor Hazell
- Mr Hazell
- The local policeman
- Danny's teacher
Q4 of 45
What method does Danny invent to drug the pheasants?
- Hiding sleeping pills inside sultanas
- Sleeping pills in raisins
- Soaking grain in alcohol
- Making special sleeping powder
Q5 of 45
What happens to Danny's father one night that causes Danny to go out alone?
- He is arrested
- He is injured in an accident
- He gets lost
- He goes poaching and does not return
Q6 of 45
What is Mr Hazell's famous annual event?
- A horse race
- A grand pheasant shoot
- A village fair
- A hunting party
Q7 of 45
How many pheasants do Danny and his father manage to drug?
- About 300
- About 50
- About 200
- About 120
Q8 of 45
Where do all the drugged pheasants fall asleep?
- In Danny's garden
- In Mr Hazell's car park during the shoot
- In the woods
- On the village high street
Q9 of 45
What does Danny drive at the beginning of the story that surprises everyone?
- A go-kart
- A tractor
- His father's car, solo, at age nine
- A quad bike
Q10 of 45
What is the name of the doctor who helps Danny when his father is stuck?
- Dr Spillkins
- Dr BH Hodgkinson
- Dr Clement
- Doctor Spencer
Q11 of 45
What does Danny's father use to teach Danny about the stars?
- A telescope
- Their own hands pointing at constellations
- A book
- The filling station roof
Q12 of 45
What kind of man does Danny describe his father as at the beginning of the novel?
- Strict and serious
- Quiet and reserved
- Adventurous but often absent
- The most exciting and wonderful father in the world
Q13 of 45
How does Mr Hazell treat the local village people?
- With false friendliness
- With distant politeness
- With contempt
- With great kindness
Q14 of 45
What role does Captain Lancaster play in the story?
- He is the kind village headmaster
- He runs the local shop
- He helps Danny's father
- He is Mr Hazell's gamekeeper who is mean to the poachers
Q15 of 45
What is the final fate of Mr Hazell's grand shoot?
- The police stop it
- It goes ahead successfully
- He cancels it himself
- It is completely ruined by the sleeping pheasants waking and flying away as guests arrive
Q16 of 45
Where do Danny and his father live?
- A gypsy caravan beside a filling station on a country road
- A houseboat on a river near a village
- A farmhouse in a remote valley
- A small cottage at the edge of a forest
Q17 of 45
What secret does Danny discover about his father one night?
- His father owns the land around the filling station
- His father used to be a racing driver
- His father is a skilled poacher who has been stealing pheasants from Mr Hazell for years
- His father was once in prison
Q18 of 45
Why does Danny have to drive a car alone at night?
- His father falls into a poaching pit and Danny must drive to rescue him
- His father asks him to deliver something urgently
- His father is too drunk to drive and Danny takes over
- He is trying to get help after an accident on the road
Q19 of 45
How do Danny and his father plan to steal the pheasants from Mr Hazell?
- By disguising themselves as gamekeepers
- By digging a tunnel under the fence
- By hiding sleeping tablets inside raisins for the birds to eat
- By going at night and using nets to catch the birds quietly
Q20 of 45
Who is Mr Victor Hazell?
- A factory owner who has closed down local jobs
- A corrupt police officer who takes bribes
- A strict headmaster who torments local children
- A wealthy landowner who treats local people with contempt and has filled his wood with pheasants for a grand shooting party
Q21 of 45
What goes wrong on the night of the pheasant raid?
- The game keepers patrol all night and nearly catch them
- They collect far more pheasants than planned and struggle to smuggle them all out
- Mr Hazell himself discovers them in the wood
- The sleeping tablets do not work properly
Q22 of 45
How do Danny's father's friends help smuggle the pheasants away?
- They pretend to be inspectors checking on the gamekeeper
- They create a distraction at the village pub
- They use a lorry to take all the birds at once
- They hide the birds in prams and under their clothing to carry them past the keepers
Q23 of 45
What happens to the pheasants during Mr Hazell's grand shooting party?
- The gamekeepers discover the theft before the party begins
- The birds refuse to fly and the party is ruined
- The pheasants wake up from the sleeping tablets mid-flight and flap away causing chaos
- All the birds have vanished from the wood
Q24 of 45
How does Captain Lancaster, the headmaster, treat his pupils?
- He is fair but strict
- He is deeply respected by children and parents alike
- He beats children for minor offences
- He is incompetent and children do not take him seriously
Q25 of 45
What does Danny admire most about his father?
- His courage in standing up to authority
- His warmth, sense of fun and the close bond between them
- His skill as a mechanic
- His storytelling ability
Q26 of 45
What title does Danny earn, and how?
- Champion poacher
- Champion of the World
- Champion son
- World's best driver
Q27 of 45
How does the father-son relationship in this story differ from most Dahl books?
- It is typical of Dahl
- It is more complicated
- It is distant because the father is often away working
- It is one of the most tender in all Dahl's work
Q28 of 45
What does poaching represent in this story despite being illegal?
- It is a harmless tradition that the law wrongly criminalises
- It is shown as justified rebellion against a cruel and unjust authority figure
- It is presented as morally wrong but Danny forgives his father
- It shows the father's dishonesty and Danny must learn to be better
Q29 of 45
How does Dahl use the setting of the filling station and caravan to establish the story's tone?
- It emphasises how far Danny is from any help when things go wrong
- It creates a sense of an unconventional, independent life full of interest
- It shows the family is failing financially
- It explains why Danny is isolated from other children
Q30 of 45
What does Danny's mother's absence mean for his relationship with his father?
- It creates resentment and sadness
- It means the bond between Danny and his father is uniquely close
- It means Danny misses out on normal childhood experiences
- It explains why Danny's father sometimes makes poor decisions
Q31 of 45
Danny describes his father as 'the most marvellous and exciting father a boy ever had.' How does Dahl present the father-son relationship, and what makes it so central to the novel?
- The father-son bond is the emotional heart of the novel
- Danny is young, and
- The relationship is ordinary
- It is just a nice relationship
Q32 of 45
Danny and his father are poachers. Dahl presents this as heroic. Is it? What does this moral framing suggest about law and justice?
- Laws should always be obeyed
- Poaching is clearly wrong
- The novel condemns poaching
- Dahl separates legality from morality
Q33 of 45
How does Dahl use the physical contrast between Danny's humble caravan home and Mr Hazell's grand estate to develop the novel's class commentary?
- It is just setting
- Mr Hazell worked hard for his estate
- The contrast is a direct class critique
- Class is not the point
Q34 of 45
Danny's idea of hiding pills in sultanas is the crucial invention of the plot. What does it suggest about Dahl's view of children's intelligence?
- It was a clever trick, and
- Children possess creative intelligence that adults underestimate
- Danny's father taught him
- Danny was lucky
Q35 of 45
The novel is told entirely from Danny's first-person perspective. How does this narrative choice affect the reader's relationship with the story?
- First person is more realistic
- It makes the story simpler
- First-person narration creates intimacy and makes the reader completely aligned with Danny's values and judgements
- It limits the story
Q36 of 45
Mr Hazell is described as having 'small, piggy eyes.' How does Dahl use physical description to guide the reader's moral response?
- Physical description is realistic, and
- Dahl deliberately uses unflattering physical details as moral shorthand
- Hazell might be kind
- Physical description is neutral
Q37 of 45
The pheasants waking up and flying away at the shoot is the climactic triumph. What makes this particular form of revenge so satisfying narratively?
- It is violent violent
- It is non-violent, absurdist and perfectly timed
- It was lucky
- The revenge is too mild
Q38 of 45
Danny's mother is absent — she died when he was young. How does this absence shape the father-son dynamic and the novel's emotional tone?
- Single-parent families are common
- Danny doesn't miss her
- Her absence is irrelevant, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
- The mother's absence concentrates all warmth in the father-son bond, making it unusually close and giving the father traits that might conventionally be split between two parents
Q39 of 45
The novel opens with a description of the cosy caravan and the joy of simple living. What is Dahl suggesting about happiness and material wealth?
- Happiness is found in simplicity, love and security
- Caravans are nice
- The caravan is setting, and
- Rich people can also be happy
Q40 of 45
How does the village community function in the novel? What does Dahl suggest about solidarity among ordinary people?
- The village is irrelevant
- The community helps very little
- Village people are passive
- The village represents community solidarity
Q41 of 45
Danny is only nine years old yet acts with remarkable bravery and resourcefulness. Is this believable? What does Dahl gain by making his hero so young?
- A young protagonist magnifies the achievement
- It is realistic realistic
- It was a story choice, and
- Nine-year-olds can do anything
Q42 of 45
Dahl includes a note to parents in the book, criticising parents who do not give their children time and attention. How does this note frame your reading of the novel?
- The note was added later
- The note changes nothing
- It is irrelevant irrelevant
- It reveals Dahl's didactic intention
Q43 of 45
Mr Hazell hosts a famous shoot for important people. What does this event represent in terms of British class and social performance?
- It is just a party
- It represents harmless tradition
- Shooting parties are traditional
- The shoot represents aristocratic performance of status
Q44 of 45
Compare Danny's father with the other fathers or authority figures in Dahl's work. What makes him exceptional?
- He is quite typical
- All Dahl fathers are good
- Danny's father has flaws
- Unlike most Dahl adults who are neglectful, cruel or absent, Danny's father is present, respectful, adventurous and treats his son as an equal
Q45 of 45
The novel ends with Danny reflecting on his father. What is the emotional effect of this ending, and what does it suggest about legacy and love?
- It is just a conclusion
- It is a bit sad
- The ending is too sentimental
- The ending transforms the adventure into a meditation on love and gratitude