![]() ![]() You want a fantasy? Here’s one… There’s this species that lives on a planet a few miles above a molten rock and a few miles below a vacuum that’d suck the air right out of them. But you certainly can’t imagine one in Narnia and nor should you. But you cannot imagine a condom machine in Middle-earth. Admittedly, the troll that does all the packing wonders what the women are laughing about when he is packing the Big Boys. I think this is because I’ve got a condom factory in Ankh-Morpork. So, apparently, I’m a post-modern fantasy writer. The classical witch, on the other hand, with her often malevolent interest in the small beer of human affairs, is everything we fear only too well that we would in fact become. Wizards get to do a better class of magic, while witches give you warts The classical wizard, I suggest, represents the ideal of magic – everything that we hope we would be, if we had the power. Chesterton is to take what is normal and everyday and usual and unregarded, and turn it around and show it to the audience from a different direction, so that they look at it once again with new eyes. There is a circle of Hell for (…) teachers who don’t like parents to teach their children to read before they go to school and one furnace away from people who believe that children should only be given books that are suitable for them ‘The creator gave us the brains to prove he doesn’t exist’ (…) ‘It is better to build a seismograph than to worship the volcano’ We live in a science fiction world, and we haven’t noticed. ![]() Instead, it leaks in around our heads while we are doing other things. We expect the future to be like a huge wave, carrying us forward. (…) New ideas can ride in on the back of a joke, old ideas can be given an added edge. Chesterton pointed out, the opposite of funny is not funny, and the opposite of serious is not serious. The problem is that we think the opposite of funny is serious. (…) The fantasy of justice is more interesting than the fantasy of fairies, and more truly fantastic. ![]() But it is also about the even more fantastic idea that humans are capable of intelligence as well. For instance this book is about rats that are intelligent. Weaponry will only keep you alive, but a good ballad can make you immortal. It was the voice of Alan a Dale, the minstrel. I’ve always suspected that Robin Hood was just another robber, but he did have the advantage of a very powerful weapon. Let me give you some quotes, and let’s just contemplate them for a while… It’s a collections of little shards of wisdom from a very smart, very good man. Nothing that would surprise a careful reader of Discworld, quite a lot to help us understand better where was Pratchett coming from and what he wanted to achieve. There are a few dozen short texts here, a bit of autobiography, some trade secrets, some opinion pieces, and, towards the end, more and more on his illness and the approaching death. Title: A Slip of the Keyboard: Collected Non-Fiction The book itself… Ola insisted we add some structure to our posts, so: I consider Moist von Lipwig novels to be among the best depictions of the faults of modern capitalism! There was a lot of anger behind Terry’s writing, and it’s hard to disregards the satirical aspect of his works. A brilliant argument that Pratchett isn’t just a writer of funny stories, but predominantly an intelligent observer of the ways our society work. About A Slip of the Keyboard I’ve learned later, after reading Neil Gaiman’s foreword in The Guardian. It made me cry a little, laugh a lot, and swear to read The Carpet People as soon as I finish my re-read. I really recommend Back in Black to all the Pratchett fans. But nobody’s really dead until all the ripples they have created on Earth have completely died away, so as long as my words and my stories are still sploshing around the planet, there’s life in the old dog yet. They say your life flashes in front of your eyes before you die. There is a very moving documentary from BBC, Terry Pratchett: Back in Black, the story of his life featuring Pratchett just before Alzheimer took him, a master of language struggling with simple words, but still a powerful, wise figure. I prefer to learn about writers’ ideas through their novels, but Pratchett is important enough to me, and his untimely demise started my slow – and now accelerating – re-read of his books, and motivated me to learn more about the man himself. I’m now in the middle (at book 16, to be precise) of the systematic re-read of the entire Discworld and I appreciate him even more. ![]() Terry Pratchett is a very special author, one I’ve been reading for over 20 years. Summer continues, I’m actually starting my vacation tomorrow afternoon, and it’s going to be 2,5 weeks! But blogging requires some regularity, and so I decided to write a few words about a very special book. ![]()
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