Roald Dahl's original sketches to be auctioned

Rowenna Hoskin
BBC News
Lyon & Turnbull An aerial image showing sketches of illustrations and a copy of 'Boy' written by Roald Dahl. A person is holding a magnifying glass up to the copy of Boy. The person is wearing a blue shirt.Lyon & Turnbull
Boy is the only book for which Roald Dahl attempted his own illustrations during his career

Roald Dahl's original sketches, created for his memoir, will be sold at auction after being found in an envelope.

Dahl, who was born in the Cardiff suburb of Llandaff, produced the sketches in black ballpoint pen for the book Boy, which was published in 1984.

He died in 1990 aged 74, and in his almost five-decade long career, these are the only book sketches he ever produced.

The sketches will be sold in Edinburgh as part of Lyon & Turnbull's books and manuscripts sale on 18 June.

The sketches are part of a collection estimated to sell for between £20,000 and £30,000.

In his memoir Dahl recalled various childhood exploits, including playing a prank with his friends on the local sweetshop owner Mrs Pratchett by putting a dead mouse in a gobstopper jar.

To illustrate to prank, Dahl drew a mouse lying on top of the sweets with its legs in the air.

The drawings were found in an envelope marked "Dahl's drawings & odds and sods" which belonged to Ian Craig, the art director at publishing house Jonathan Cape.

Getty Images Welsh writer Roald Dahl looks at the camera. The photo is in black and white. He has dark brown hair and is balding on the top of his head. Dahl is wearing a light-coloured knit, white check shirt and dark tie. Getty Images
Roald Dahl had a writing career spanning almost five decades but only created sketches for his memoir, Boy

Mr Craig, who died in 2023, created the final illustrations for the book inspired by Dahl's drawings.

He also oversaw the production of the book and the archive includes his designs, as well as the original page layouts and correspondence.

Mr Craig came up with the title, and received a letter from Dahl saying: "I must thank you for coming up with the first sensible title for my book. 'Boy' is fine. We all like it…"

His widow, Kate Craig, who also worked at Jonathan Cape, said the publication of Boy was "on a very tight publication schedule".

Lyon & Turnbull A sketch of two bottles can be seen on paper to the right with a jar of sweets on its side to the left. The sweets have spilled out of the jar and sit scattered in front of the illustration with colours including red, white and yellow.Lyon & Turnbull
The sketches are expected to sell for between £20,000 and £30,000

Dahl's usual illustrator, Quentin Blake, was "away on holiday," she said, so "Ian asked Dahl if he could help with the illustrations".

"Dahl ended up producing a variety of sketches which Ian used as inspiration for his own drawings.

"Ian never got paid for the illustrations, but Dahl did give him one of his trademark blue cashmere cardigans as a thank you, which he treasured."

Lyon & Turnbull A man with brown hair smiles as he holds a copy of Boy with several people holding the illustrations from the book around him.Lyon & Turnbull
Dominic Somerville-Brown says it's "absolutely thrilling" to see the sketches up close

Dominic Somerville-Brown, Lyon & Turnbull's rare books and manuscripts specialist, said: "It's absolutely thrilling to see Roald Dahl's one-of-a-kind, hand-drawn sketches up close.

"They are a unique addition to his canon and allow us to observe the transformation of his childhood memories into the printed form, a medium in which they would be cherished by generations of readers.

"Ian Craig undoubtedly played a key role in Dahl's publishing success, overseeing not only the production of Boy, but many more of his famous children's stories.

"This archive gives an insight into the creative processes behind a book still enjoyed by children across the world today."

What was Roald Dahl's Cardiff connection?

  • Dahl was born during World War One on 13 September 1916 in Llandaff. His Norwegian father Harald was a ship broker and he was named after polar explorer Roald Amundsen
  • The family moved to live in Radyr - a house called Ty Mynydd - in 1918
  • He went to school in Llandaff until 1925, before being sent out of Wales to boarding school
  • A blue plaque now marks the former sweet shop in Llandaff where Dahl and his friends played the famous trick on the owner, Mrs Pratchett