Roald Dahl Poison: |work|

Readers who enjoy Saki, Graham Greene, or the short fiction of Shirley Jackson.

Here’s a critical review of Roald Dahl’s short story Overview First published in 1950 in Harper’s Magazine and later collected in Someone Like You , “Poison” is one of Dahl’s most celebrated adult short stories. Set in colonial India, it features Dahl’s recurring narrator, the cynical and observant Harry Pope , and his friend Timber Woods . The plot is deceptively simple: Harry, lying in bed, discovers a poisonous krait snake has slithered onto his stomach and is sleeping under his sweat-soaked sheet. What Works Brilliantly 1. Masterful Suspense Dahl builds unbearable tension from a static premise. For over half the story, Harry lies paralyzed with fear while Timber and a doctor debate how to remove the snake. The reader feels every bead of sweat, every whispered word, every creak of the bed. Dahl’s prose is lean and precise—no word is wasted. The ticking-clock structure (the krait could wake at any moment) is executed flawlessly. roald dahl poison

Dahl writes from within his characters’ perspectives. The casual racism of Harry Pope (and even Timber’s paternalism) is accurate to the setting but can be uncomfortable. Dahl does not explicitly condemn it; he leaves the reader to infer the critique. Some may find this insufficient. Readers who enjoy Saki, Graham Greene, or the