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Roald Dahl: Heroes and Monsters
Background
How to create a character
- Make them interesting and larger than life
- Make them very attractive or very ugly, very good or very bad
- Provide an opposite character so that readers can make comparisons
- Exaggerate every little detail about them
- Use metaphors and similes to describe them
- Give them names to suit their character
Dahl was a master of exaggeration, particularly in his portrayal of characters, which are either extremely nice or extremely nasty. In his wonderfully evocative descriptions, he uses inventive similes and metaphors to keep the writing lively. Roald Dahl said, ‘if a person is nasty or bad or cruel you make them very nasty very bad and very cruel and, if they are ugly, you make them extremely ugly’. Despite the extreme nastiness of Dahl’s baddies, his heroes and heroines – who are nearly always children – never allow evil to triumph.
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