Going Solo Roald Dahl Essay

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Going Solo is a memoir of Roald Dahl's work in East Africa and his service to the RAF in World War II. This book includes so much of the buildup in World War II, including British Emigration. British Emigration plays a big role in the memoir because many Brits, including Roald Dahl, were leaving Britain at the time of the war. British Emigration is still around today as well, not only in the early 1900's. In Going Solo, Dahl had worked for the Shell Company, and many people, including him, had emigrated from the country and they were to "stay out there for three years in a stretch." Going Solo had many real-life topics, and British Emigration is one of them. Great Britain has been experiencing a large exodus, one that's been happening since WWII. According to Philip Johnston, many Brits left their country "to retire, though many young people are leaving for work". Economical and demographical reasons also had drove them away. They had emigrated to places like America and Spain. In fact, between 1820 and 1920, "over 2.5 million people had emigrated from Great Britain to the US." Roald Dahl had been a part of this mass migration, because he had was to spend years in East Africa before he got roped up into fighting in the war. …show more content…

Thousands of Brits had migrated away from Britain, mostly to America, New Zealand, France, and Spain, since 2006. 2015 has had the "highest level of net migration recorded in calendar years," with 332,000 people emigrating (Johnston). 2016 also had 248,000 people leave as well. Many emigrants come looking for work. According to formal studies, "These people either had a definite job (31% of all immigrants) or came to look for a job (16% of all immigrants)." This is the same in Roald Dahl's time, where many Brits were emigrating to East

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