Roald Dahl Tales of the Unexpected
Reading Journal #1
In his collection of
short stories, Tales of the Unexpected, Roald Dahl conveys human nature from a
rather satirical perspective. In fact, unlike in his stories for younger
children, this work aimed at adults brings to light the sociopathic aspects of
human beings. Each of the short stories deals with a horrible and crazy issue: in
the first story, “Taste”, Mike Schofield decides to take a risky bet wagering
his own daughter; in the second story, “Lamb to the Slaughter,” Mary Maloney
kills her husband with a frozen lamb leg; in “Man from the South”, a boy
engages in a crazy bet with a stranger where he must wager his finger; and etc.
However, Roald Dahl presents these creepy plots in a comical manner with an
unexpected yet realistic twist at the end of each story.
From the stories we
have read so far, I cannot clearly make out what Roald Dahl was attempting to
convey through the book. I can be sure, though, from the way Dahl described his
characters that he did not mean highlight the greatness of mankind. Rather, I
would say his stance on human nature was critical perhaps even a bit cynical.
From the short stories of the Tales of the Unexpected, many of the characters
are sociopathic. Most of the characters show irrational decision making, insane
obsessions, and susceptibility to the temptation of betting. In “Taste,” the
temptation of gaining two houses gets the better of Mike Schofied, Mary Maloney
in “Lamb to Slaughter” loses her mind (but not her cool) and kills her husband
in a cold calculated method, in “Skin,” the temptation of food and a good life
makes Drioli pay with his skin/life. These events are very unrealistic
situations in our everyday life. But here, in these stories, Roald Dahl puts
the characters in an extreme situation, and the characters are forced to make a
decision. It’s an interesting approach of making the readers imagine “what if?”
Right now, sitting comfortably in our rooms, we would never imagine having our
fingers chopped off for anything. But could we know for sure that we will be
able to resist the temptation of a free sports car? We, the readers, are never
going to be put in such a situation but if we are, what kind of a decision
would we make and what are the consequences? In most of these stories, the
characters fall for temptation and ends up losing something very dear to them
(or at least almost in the case of “Man from the South”.) All in all, many of
these stories revolve around plots that highlight the folly of human nature.
For me, these short stories
felt much like dark humor. It is not only shown throughout the plot but also in
the tone of narration. For stories like “Taste”, “Lamb to the Slaughter,” “Dip
in the Pool” and “Skin,” where the plot is told from a third person viewpoint
by an outside narrator, it was quite notable how the tone of the narrator is
more light and amused rather than grave even as he/she is describing something
terrible. Moreover, because in many stories the ending is never explicitly
given away by the narrator, there is still a room for imagination as to what
happened in the end. By leaving conclusion for the readers to decide, the narrator is more so able to take a lighter stance to a heavily grave issue.
Good journal. I think the only true sociopaths we've encountered have been the landlady and Man from the South. The rest of the characters exhibit human folly at its finest. A cocktail of greed, revenge, and thrill seeking manage to surface in every story, and maybe the task from now on will be searching for stories in the book that break the established rules. Keep reading.
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