Wossname -- June 2016 -- Main issue
News and reviews about the works of Sir Terry Pratchett
wossname at pearwood.info
Sun Jul 3 11:01:01 AEST 2016
Wossname
Newsletter of the Klatchian Foreign Legion
June 2016 (Volume 19, Issue 6, Post 1)
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WOSSNAME is a free publication offering news, reviews, and all the other
stuff-that-fits pertaining to the works of Sir Terry Pratchett.
Originally founded by the late, great Joe Schaumburger for members of
the worldwide Klatchian Foreign Legion and its affiliates, including the
North American Discworld Society and other continental groups, Wossname
is now for Discworld and Pratchett fans everywhere in Roundworld.
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Editor in Chief: Annie Mac
News Editor: Vera P
Newshounds: Mogg, Sir J of Croydon Below, the Shadow, Mss C, Alison not
Aliss
Staff Writers: Asti, Pitt the Elder, Evil Steven Dread, Mrs Wynn-Jones
Staff Technomancers: Jason Parlevliet, Archchancellor Neil, DJ Helpful
Book Reviews: Annie Mac, Drusilla D'Afanguin, Your Name Here
Puzzle Editor: Tiff (still out there somewhere)
Bard in Residence: Weird Alice Lancrevic
Emergency Staff: Steven D'Aprano, Jason Parlevliet
World Membership Director: Steven D'Aprano (in his copious spare time)
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INDEX:
01) QUOTES OF THE MONTH
02) EDITOR'S LETTER
03) REVIEWS: THE LONG COSMOS, FOLIO SOCIETY'S MORT
04) ODDS AND SODS
05) DISCWORLD PLAYS NEWS
06) ACTION REPLAY: SIR PTERRY CHATS WITH JACQUELINE SIMPSON (2010)
07) DISCWORLD MEETING GROUPS NEWS
08) DISCWORLD ARTS AND CRAFTS NEWS
09) AROUND THE BLOGOSPHERE
10) ROUNDWORLD TALES: RAT'S ON THE MENU!
11) IMAGES OF THE MONTH
12) CLOSE
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01) QUOTES OF THE MONTH
"'I believe the countryside creates folklore in the same way that the
mists rise in the evening. I think it just happens. People get feelings.
The chill you feel when you walk in this place and all these things, and
because we want this. We don't want the world to be too inexplicable and
we stand and salute Richard Dawkins as he goes past and would shake
hands with Mr. Einstein, but we just like to think that's not the end of
it. I rather suspect there are people that would give up belief in God
rather than belief in luck."
– Terry Pratchett in conversation with Jacqueline Simpson, 2010
"It's not usually the original artist that's gone back and changed it
from a full colour painting into black and white line – and I was keen
to do that, because I wanted to keep the characters clearly identifiable."
– Paul Kidby, describing his process for creating the Discworld
Colouring Book
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02) LETTER FROM YOUR EDITOR
Greetings, O Readers! You'll notice that the June issue has arrived in
your inboxes in the merrie month of, er, July. This is due to illness
(mine), but while it's not the first time Wossname has gone out late, I
think it pretty much is for the years of my being head honcho (honchess?
honchette?). So let's get on without further delay...
As the number of Discworld plays being performed around Roundworld
continues to rise, the Discworld Plays News section seems like the best
place to put a feature on staging Discworld plays – from the digital
quill of "Lord Vetinari himself". Do have a look at item 5.13 in this
month's issue!
Journalist David Astle, writing about "internet laws" in the Sydney
Morning Herald, mentioned Asimov's Laws of Robotics early on. Then at
the end, he writes, "The final law was foreseen by another sci-fi giant,
Terry Pratchett. Known as the law of exclamation, this applies to online
shouters. In short, the more exclamation marks you use, or capital
letters you bash out, the more flawed your view." I mention this in
passing because of the casual way he calls Pratchett "another sci-fi
giant". Which he was – and ever will remain. Consider the Johnny Maxwell
books. Consider Night Watch. Consider his fantastic short story # ifdef
DEBUG + "world/enough" + "time"... and more. So yes, it warms the
cockles of your Editor's heart to see The Author's name up there on the
Great and Terrible List of Giants. Especially as, unlike Asimov, Clarke
et al, who were strong on ideas but weak on wordcraft and the art of
believable character creation, Pratchett's science fiction has the lot.
Remember, the fifth and final Long Earth book, The Long Cosmos, is now
available in hardcover (Penguin Random House; see various reviews under
item 3.1). And if you've been collecting the series in paperback, The
Long Utopia (book four) is also now available. As is the paperback
edition of The Shepherd's Crown, at last! And more of The Bromeliad.
Also, this is a good time to pre-order the Paul Kidby Discworld
Colouring Book and The Witch's Vacuum Cleaner. And furthermore... all
right, look, the best way to keep up with the myriad of new releases is
to check on http://discworld.com/ and http://www.discworldemporium.com/
in their books sections.
Lastly, here is the only feature Wossname is going to offer about
Brexit. Because the marvellous Evening Harold gave the least "WHUT?"
commentary about it all:
"The UK is under new leadership this morning following a coup by the
Patrician of Ankh-Morpork, Lord Havelock Vetinari. 'Coup is a needlessly
dramatic word,' Lord Vetinari told reporters. 'I can hardly be said to
have violently thrown a government from power when you don't have one,
or an Opposition. Both sides seem entirely preoccupied with what one
might call "internal matters". Indeed barely anyone noticed as I walked
into Number Ten and installed myself in the best office and Drumknott in
an suitable alcove nearby. The only person to do more than raise an
eyebrow was Theresa May who I must say kicks like a mule and has a
command of the baser aspects of the English language that is entirely
formidable.' Until yesterday Vetinari was the tyrant of Ankh-Morpork the
largest and most powerful city on Discworld. A place known to us through
the life-enhancingly brilliant reporting of much-missed travel writer
Sir Terry Pratchett. Today Lord Vetinari says he's the man to lead the
UK through the Brexit crisis. 'A firm hand is all it takes,' he said
calmly..."
Do go read the entire piece. It's a thing of beauty:
http://eveningharold.com/2016/06/29/lord-vetinari-takes-control-of-the-uk/
And now, on with the show!
– Annie Mac, Editor
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
03) REVIEWS: THE LONG COSMOS, FOLIO SOCIETY'S MORT
3.1 THE LONG COSMOS REVIEWS
In The Guardian, by Jenny Colgan:
"If it is pulse-racing narrative you're after, you should know that the
Long Earth books are not so much stories as travelogues. New worlds are
intricately described – the corn fields, the ice belts – and there is
jeopardy, but never anything terribly concerning, even when nuclear war
wipes out half the Datum (the name given to the original Earth). Fans,
of whom I am one, love them for their gently immersive properties: it is
extremely relaxing to travel so many worlds from home in a luxury
airship, 'stepping' with every turn of the page. The Long Cosmos doesn't
meddle with this template: journeys are made, quite slowly; strange
creatures emerge and vanish; things that were lost are found again. Even
the more horrific aspects, such as the lollipop heads – humanoids with
brains so enormous that they are literally spilling out of their skulls
– turn out to be more or less benign. The charm of these books lies in
the way they weave the worlds together: they're not funny, and nor are
they designed to be, unless you find trolls who say 'hoo' intrinsically
hilarious. For The Long Cosmos specifically, a good working knowledge of
the film version of Carl Sagan's Contact is useful, as the book often
plays out as a homage, while long-term fans will be excited to learn
that as well as going east and west, we finally step north. Not all our
questions are answered, but Baxter's scientific grounding will make you
dwell once more on that chilling quantum idea that to exist is to be
observed, as well as on more quotidian reflections about what is
important in life..."
http://bit.ly/29bqyZK
In The Telegraph, by Tristram Fane Saunders:
"It is impossible to read The Long Cosmos without a pang of
melancholy... Although the familiar protagonists have reached their late
sixties, the atmosphere is still one of childlike wonder. The hero,
Joshua, watches the hive of activity around a newly-built spaceship, as
if it were 'to be powered, not by any kind of technology, but by a surge
of shared enthusiasm'. The Long Cosmos may be a bit slapdash in
construction, but it, too, hums with shared enthusiasm, reading like a
roll-call of the authors' favourite things. Whereas the Discworld novels
favoured the wink, here the allusions are far more open: the spaceship
is christened the 'Uncle Arthur', after Arthur C Clarke (with whom
Baxter wrote three novels). Pratchett fans sifting through Baxter for a
gem of Sir Terry won't quite come up empty-handed... There are a couple
of nods to Discworld (including a simian librarian), but only one
vignette has Pratchett's particular spark: the story of wandering
teacher Johnny Shakespeare...
"Like many travellers of the Long Earth, Joshua is a fan of 'ancient'
sci-fi films. As another character – a different nun – remarks, no-one
can remember the Pope, but everyone knows who Captain Kirk is. And so we
meet a 'baby elephant with a mask like a Star Wars stormtrooper,' while
a song Joshua hears sounds 'like samples of an opera in Klingon.' But
these allusions distract from the world of the novel... Although it nods
toward 20th-century fiction, the Long Earth's true parent is 500 years
old this year – Utopia. Amid the recent wave of YA dystopias, it's rare
to find an optimistic vision of the future, but The Long Cosmos is
exactly that..."
http://bit.ly/2999r99
In The Independent, by David Barnett:
"It's a very different beast to those used to Pratchett's humorous
Discworld fantasies - a hard, high-concept science fiction series based
around the central conceit that our world is but one of an infinite
number of parallel Earths, strung out like a multi-dimensional string of
pearls... Although there are a core cast of well-rounded characters,
including central protagonist Joshua Valiente, one of the first to learn
how to “step” between the worlds, and Lobsang, a Tibetan motorcycle
repairman who has been reincarnated as an artificial intelligence
computer (one guesses that to be a very Pratchettian touch) the series
has always seemed less about the people and more about the sense of
wonder of good, old-fashioned science fiction. More than that, it's
about exploration and discovery, and even rediscovery - if we found an
Earth identical to our own but uninhabited and unspoiled, would humanity
do things differently, or just make the same old mistakes?..."
http://ind.pn/299g5PG
In the Daily Mail, by Ned Denny:
"The inspired concept at the heart of Terry Pratchett and Stephen
Baxter's Long Earth series is an immense series of Earths – receding,
perhaps endlessly, like the images in two facing mirrors, but all of
them other than our home planet (‘Datum Earth') empty of human beings.
These books are less tongue-in-cheek than Pratchett's solo work and have
something of the poetry and visionary wildness of an author such as Jeff
VanderMeer. This final instalment – in which humans, Neanderthal-like
trolls and a race of supposedly higher beings known as The Next try to
fathom this cosmic invitation – is enthralling and thought-provoking in
equal measure."
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/books/article-3657393/SCIENCE-FICTION.html
On Flickering Myth, by Tony Black:
"Originally sketched out as a trilogy, The Long Earth saga ultimately
needed extra room to breathe and this fifth and final entry was
completed by Baxter upon Pratchett's untimely death. He does a fine job
in bringing to a conclusion what could have been a jarring juxtaposition
between two very different writers; Pratchett, one of the masters of
comic fantasy, and Baxter, one of the giants in speculative
science-fiction. The Long Cosmos, however, much like the previous four
books, manages to fuse these two disparate talents together in an
enjoyably imaginative, often lightly and comfortably jovial way, shot
through with plenty of pop-culture references and fascinating scientific
concepts... Even with Baxter's penchant for hard science (which is far
more apparent here than Pratchett's acerbic droll, only popping up
occasionally), what never becomes lost in the stepping and conceptual
scientific ideas is the warmth of heart built into The Long Earth story
and it's characters. There's a wistfulness about this book, a sense of
ending, perhaps not just for Joshua but Pratchett himself, and a sense
of looking back on a world unrecognisable and searching for constants,
for memories, for as the trolls call it 'remember'. It's a story about
family, about the loss and rediscovery of family, the importance indeed
of maintaining those relationships and that humanity in the face of so
much ‘other', and in the end about finding a family with those you are
thrown together with, across divides equally in terms of background and
race... While these two writers make this happen with a redoubtably
British tongue in cheek, they do so equally with a true sense of
comforting, innocent wonder and hope, and it makes for lovely, spirited
reading..."
http://bit.ly/29grjCQ
3.2 MORT (FOLIO SOCIETY EDITION) REVIEW
On Den of Geek by Aliya Whiteley:
"It's a beautiful book, and it showed me that Mort is as much a fairy
tale as a fun read. It sinks deep roots into traditional ground, and
this classic hardback version suits the more meaningful aspects of this
story very well indeed. For Mort is a young apprentice, and he has a lot
to learn, and challenges to overcome, before he learns some wisdom and
finds some happiness. And that makes for a really old kind of story, and
a satisfying one, featuring all the recognisable aspects such as love,
moral dilemmas, crushing responsibilities, and a race against time.
Also, what kind of apprenticeship story would this be without an
exacting master? This one has the best – Death himself. Although Death
is busy having an identity crisis and could, on occasion, murder a
curry. It's the surprises I always liked. That curry, those footnotes,
the unexpected lists of foods that are served in Ankh-Morpork or the
sudden appearance of an orang-utan. But this time around it was
Pratchett's propensity to bring a scene to life in classic style that
struck me. He could make it all seem so real before inviting you to
laugh at it, and see through it... Those are good lessons to learn by
holding this new and beautiful version of Mort in your hands, with a
brilliant illustration by Rayyan on the cover that will remind you of
woodcut art from Grimm's Fairy Tales and the like..."
http://bit.ly/297pskB
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04) ODDS AND SODS
4.1 THE SHEPHERD'S CROWN LOCUS AWARD
"The prestigious Locus prizes, which are voted for by the American
speculative fiction magazine's readership, have been running for more
than 40 years, and have gone to authors including Isaac Asimov, Gene
Wolfe and Ursula K Le Guin in the past. This year, Pratchett took the
prize for best young adult novel for his final Discworld book, The
Shepherd's Crown...."
http://bit.ly/29az5hQ
The full list of winners:
http://www.locusmag.com/News/2016/06/2016-locus-awards-winners/
4.2 A FINE SET OF "KILLER QUOTATIONS"
In the Irish Times, Martin Doyle interviews Colin Smythe and author Lisa
McInerney about their favourite Pratchett quotes. Here be an extract:
"Colin Smythe, the Trinity College Dublin graduate who published
Pratchett's first five books and has been his agent since 1987,
admitted: 'I can't remember Terry telling me any jokes. Both poor memory
and because he must have kept them to put in his books. Over the last
decade, I think we talked about facts, research for the book he was
working on, that sort of thing.' In his tribute to his friend in The
Irish Times, Smythe wrote: 'It is hard to look at a future without
Terry, his humour, wicked bubble-pricking comments, his amazing
inventiveness, his style, the deftness of his puns, and the deep moral
sense that pervaded all of the books, without being obtrusive.' So what
is his favourite Terry Pratchett quotation? 'Too many to choose from.
But how about...? "Susan... it wasn't a good name, was it? It wasn't a
truly bad name, it wasn't like poor Iodine in the fourth form, or
Nigella, a name which means ‘oops, we wanted a boy'. But it was dull.
Susan. Sue. Good old Sue. It was a name that made sandwiches, kept its
head in difficult circumstances, and could reliably look after other
people's children.`It was a name used by no queens or goddesses
anywhere. And you couldn't do much even with the spelling. You could
turn it into Suzi, and it sounded as though you danced on tables for a
living. You could put in a Z and a couple of Ns and an E, but it still
looked like a name with extensions built on. It was as bad as Sara, a
name that cried out for a prosthetic H." Far too long, I know. How about
a talking raven on a battle-field, looking for eyeballs and other
scraps, saying "Carrion regardless. That's what I say."? Or the cleric
in a band that went off with all its takings, and was arrested. "And
what did they do with that felonious monk?"...'..."
http://bit.ly/297hBPT
4.3 MORE ABOUT THAT ALABAMA PRATCHETT COURSE
You may remember a mention is last month's main edition of a special
interim course, on the works of Pratchett, being taught at the
University of Alabama. I have since had a conversation with the gracious
Mark Hughes Cobb, whose piece in the Tuscaloosa News gives additional
detail and insight. Do have a read! A few bits:
"Terry Pratchett's books sprawl all over the kitchen, the bathroom, by
the bed, everywhere. Those have been read, are being read, and will be
read again. 'With Pratchett, you kind of live with it,' said Barton, an
instructor in the University of Alabama English department, teaching an
interim course on his work, titled 'Special Topics in Literature:
Discworld.'... Pratchett subverted fantasy tropes to reflect human
follies and foibles about gender, war, religion, technology, racism,
xenophobia, and more. 'He creates this entire universe of characters you
would want to know,' Barton said, 'and people who just seem very
genuine, seem who they are. At times it's almost a kind of muted, almost
dry, very quiet kind of funny, and at other times, it's just broad
hilarity.'... Barton used Gaiman's elegy as an introduction for the
class. 'It's almost like he knew what I was going for,' she said.
They're also looking at recurring, developing characters. Pratchett drew
Sam Vimes close to his heart, a gutter-poor child who grew up with
fists, knees and elbows in the mean streets. Through unbending will and
innate decency, Sam rises to command the watch, and become Duke of
Ankh-Morpork, a bluntly honest antithesis to the effete, the snobs and
white-collar criminals... 'Vimes resists classicism, resists
superiority,' Barton said. 'If you want to make who you are, you have to
put your boots on and walk the streets. You have to, as he does in
"Night Watch," create yourself.' Other texts they'll study include
novels 'Thud,' 'Making Money' and 'Raising Steam.'..."
http://bit.ly/1Yh6WXP
4.4 PAUL KIDBY ON CREATING THE DISCWORLD COLOURING BOOK
Here be a short, fascinating video about how Mr Kidby turned his
Discworld paintings into a black and white colouring book. Watch it!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oZ7IBBbwmuw
4.5 ABOUT TELLING LIES TO CHILDREN
From The Science of Discworld to the wider world, with its own
extensively footnoted page on Wikipedia:
"Scientists Jack Cohen and Ian Stewart first discussed the term in their
non-fiction book, The Collapse of Chaos: Discovering Simplicity in a
Complex World (1994). They elaborated upon this concept in their
non-fiction book: Figments of Reality: The Evolution of the Curious Mind
(1997). Cohen and Stewart further delved into a discussion of the issue
with author Terry Pratchett in the book The Science of Discworld (1999).
The term subsequently gained traction by academics and has been since
discussed within the framework of teaching methodology. British author
David Langford said his favorite theme within Discworld was the
lie-to-children trope. Andrew Sawyer included the subject itself in his
article titled: 'Narrativium and Lies-to-Children: Palatable Instruction
in "The Science of Discworld"'. Tim Worstall wrote for Forbes that
lie-to-children was ubiquitous across multiple academic disciplines...
The definition given in The Science of Discworld (1999) is as follows:
'A lie-to-children is a statement that is false, but which nevertheless
leads the child's mind towards a more accurate explanation, one that the
child will only be able to appreciate if it has been primed with the
lie'. The authors acknowledge that some people might dispute the
applicability of the term lie, while defending it on the grounds that
'it is for the best possible reasons, but it is still a lie'. This
viewpoint is derived from earlier perspectives within the field of
philosophy of science.
"In a 1999 interview, Pratchett commented upon the phrase: 'I like the
lies-to-children motif, because it underlies the way we run our society
and resonates nicely with Discworld.' He was critical of problems
inherent in early education: 'You arrive with your sparkling A-levels
all agleam, and the first job of the tutors is to reveal that what you
thought was true is only true for a given value of "truth".' Pratchett
cautioned: 'Most of us need just "enough" knowledge of the sciences, and
it's delivered to us in metaphors and analogies that bite us in the bum
if we think they're the same as the truth.'..."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lie-to-children
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
05) DISCWORLD PLAYS NEWS
5.1 NEW: MORT AT THE EDINBURGH FRINGE (AUGUST)
Duck in a Hat are coming back to Edinburgh with another Discworld
production!
"Mort doesn't know what to expect when he starts his new job: apprentice
to the Grim Reaper (scythe, hooded cloak, and all). But things slip out
of his control when he saves a princess destined to die, tearing apart
the fabric of reality. With the help of Death's adopted daughter and a
mysterious manservant, can Mort thwart destiny, save the princess, find
true love and have his own happily ever after? Presented by the team
behind the 2015 sell-out Terry Pratchett's Eric, this is a hilarious new
adaptation of Pratchett's beloved tale of life, death and destiny."
When: 15th–28th August 2016 (excepting 21st)
Venue: Paradise in Augustine's, 41–43 George IV Bridge, Edinburgh, EH1 1EL
Time: 7.35pm all shows
Tickets: £9.50 (£8), available from
https://edinburghfestival.list.co.uk/event/590050-terry-pratchetts-mort/
or by phone 0131 510 0022
http://duckinahat.weebly.com/
https://twitter.com/duck_in_a_hat (for updates)
5.2 NEW: LANCRE WITCHES ON THE ROAD! CARPE JUGULUM IN ESSEX (AUGUST)
"Come and join Chameleon's Web Theatre Company for a fun-filled show
suitable for all ages from 4-104. Although we can guarantee the quality
of the performance we cannot guarantee the British weather so please
bring appropriate clothing for an outdoor performance! Please bring
rugs, low backed chairs and picnics but be warned – the residents of
Lancre are very partial to a sausage roll or two!"
When: 5th, 6th, 7th, 13th and 14th August 2016
Venue: various; see below
Time: various; see below
Tickets: £11 (£9 concessions; family ticket £34), available from
http://www.chameleonsweb.co.uk/www.ticketsource.co.uk/chameleonsweb or
bookable by phone on 0333 666 3366 (local rate, £1.50 booking charge
which includes postage of tickets)
Venues are:
5th August: The Amphitheatre, Park Drive, Promenade Park, Maldon, Essex
CM9 5HX at 6pm
For more info: http://www.visitmaldon.co.uk/promenade-park/
6th August: Tollesbury Community Centre, East Street, Tollesbury, Essex
CM9 8QD at 7pm (indoors)
For more info: http://bit.ly/299hVmL
7th August: Beth Chatto Gardens, Elmstead Market, Colchester, Essex CO7
7DB at 6pm
For more info:
http://www.bethchatto.co.uk/events/theatre-performance-in-the-gardens.htm
13th August: The Whalebone, Chapel Rd, Colchester, Essex CO5 7BG at 5pm
For more info: http://www.thewhaleboneinn.co.uk/
14th August: Dedham Vale Vineyard, Green Lane, Boxted, Colchester, Essex
CO4 5TS at 6pm
For more info: http://www.dedhamvalevineyard.com/
Tour Information Line - 07936067657 (please note tickets cannot be
purchased from this number)
http://www.chameleonsweb.co.uk/next.html
5.3 NEW: GUARDS! GUARDS! IN THE WIRRAL (JULY)
Greasby Players, who produced a run last year of Wyrd Sisters, will be
staging Guards! Guards! this month!
When: 13th -16th July 2016
Venue: Westbourne Hall, Westbourne Road, West Kirby, Wirral CH48 4DQ
Time: 7.30pm
Tickets: £8.00 (£6.00 concessions). To book, ring 677 9187 or visit
Greasby Players' Facebook page (URL below)
https://www.facebook.com/GreasbyPlayersWirral/
http://www.wirralradio.co.uk/news/whats-on/
5.4 REMINDER: WYRD SISTERS IN DARLINGTON, FOURECKS (JULY)
Darlington Theatre Players' production of Wyrd Sisters, which started on
the 17th of June, is still going!
When: to 9th July 2016
Venue: Marloo Theatre, 20 Marloo Road, Greenmount, Western Australia
(phone 08 9255 1212)
Time: 8pm evening shows; 2pm Sunday matinees
Tickets: adults $22, concession/child $20, family ticket $70, available
from Gwyne Marshall (Bookings Officer) at the Marloo Theatre Box Office
(phone 08 9255 1783). To purchase online, go to
http://www.marlootheatre.com.au/wyrdsisters nd click on the Buy Tickets
button
http://www.marlootheatre.com.au/
5.5 REMINDER: WYRD SISTERS IN NORTH YORKSHIRE (JULY-AUGUST)
The Richmond Amateur Dramatic Society aka RADS will be staging their
production of Wyrd Sisters in July. RADS chairman Mike Walker writes,
"For anyone who hasn't visited the Georgian Theatre Royal, it is an
experience in itself, being Britain's oldest working theatre in its
original form; a Grade 1 listed building and an accredited museum. It is
an 18th century 'courtyard' theatre which seats just over 200 people,
the furthest seat being only 10.7m from the stage! I do hope Terry
Pratchett fans will be interested in seeing Wyrd Sisters in this
fascinating setting."
When: 28th–30th July and 4th–6th August 2016
Venue: Georgian Theatre Royal, Victoria Road, Richmond, North Yorkshire,
DL10 4DW
Time: 7.30pm all shows
Tickets: £6.50 to £12.50, available online at
https://tickets.georgiantheatreroyal.co.uk/ or ring the box office 01748
825252
http://www.richmond-ads.org.uk/
http://www.georgiantheatreroyal.co.uk/
5.6 REMINDER: MORT IN YORK (JULY)
We Are Theatre will be presenting their production of Mort in July.
Getting closer now...
When: 21st and 22nd June 2016
Venue: Joseph Rowntree Theatre, Haxby Road, York YO31 8TA
Time: 7.30pm all shows
Tickets: £10 (£8 concessions), available from the York Theatre Royal box
office (phone 01904 623568). For group bookings, contact
wearetheatre at googlemail.com or ring 07521 364107
www.wearetheatre.co.uk
5.7 REMINDER: CARPE JUGULUM IN SLOUGH (JULY)
Colnbrook Amateur Stage Theatre aka CAST will stage their production of
the Stephen Briggs adaptation of Carpe Jugulum in July!
When: 13th-16th July 2016
Venue: CAST, Colnbrook Village Hall,. Vicarage Way, Colnbrook, Berks SL3
0RF. Phone 07944 215487 (Secretary)
Time: 7.45pm all shows
Tickets: TBA. Normally £8 (£6 concessions), eventually available online
at http://www.cast-online.org.uk/box-office/
http://www.cast-online.org.uk/
5.8 REMINDER: MORT IN READING (JULY)
Theale Green School will be staging Stephen Briggs' adaptation of Mort
in July!
When: 13th July
Venue: Greek Theatre, Bradfield College, Bradfield, Reading, Berks RG7
6BZ (13th)
Time: 7pm
Tickets: £7 (£5 concessions), available to reserve from Nicki Cowen via
email: ncowen at thealegreen.w-berks.sch.uk
5.9 REMINDER : LORDS AND LADIES IN NEWCASTLE (JULY)
The People's Theatre, "the premier amateur theatre company in the North
of England", will stage their production of Lords and Ladies, adapted by
Irana Brown, in July. "We're no strangers to Discworld and this funny
and fast-moving adaptation of (the much-missed) Sir Terry's fourteenth
novel sees the welcome return of Granny Weatherwax and Nanny Ogg to our
stage. It promises to be lots of fun, so book early to avoid
disappointment!"
When: 19th-23rd July 2016
Venue: People's Theatre, Stephenson Road, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 5QF.
Phone: (0191) 275 9875
Time: 7.30pm all shows
Tickets: £13.50 (£11 concessions). Box Office on 0191 265 5020 or email
tickets.peoplestheatre at email.com. (Box Office is open weekdays
10.30am–1pm and Mon, Wed, Fri evenings 7.30–8.30pm). To book online, go
to the inappropriately-named Intelligent Tickets, and be prepared to
jump through a truly daft series of hoops:
http://www.intelligent-tickets.co.uk/index.php?th=pe
http://bit.ly/1lMl3Vj
5.10 REMINDER: GOING POSTAL IN CARDIFF (AUGUST)
The Monstrous Productions Theatre Company, who specialise in staging
Pratchett plays and have so far raised – and donated – over £18,000 for
Alzheimer's Research UK, are taking on the Ankh-Morpork Post Office for
their next project!
"Moist Von Lipwig is a conman, forger and all-round confidence
trickster, always on the look out for the next big game. Until one of
his many personas has a run-in with the law and is hanged to within a
inch of his life. And so begins the biggest game of all. He must restore
Ankh-Morpork's defunct post office to it's former glory or else have a
second shot at dancing the hemp fandango. On his side he has the Disc's
oldest junior postman, Stanley ('ask me about pins!') and his pottery
probation officer, Mr Pump. It's a mighty task, made mightier by
competition from Ankh-Morpork's newest technology, the Clacks, and its
piratical owner, Reacher Gilt."
When: 17th-20th August 2016
Venue: The Gate Arts Centre, Keppoch Street, Roath, Cardiff CF24 3JW
Time: 7.30pm evening shows (doors open at 7pm); 2.30pm matinee on the
20th (doors open 2pm)
Tickets: £8 (£6 concessions), available from
http://7889269b08cd.fikket.com/ – also by email
(monstrousproductions2012 at gmail.com, pay by cheque or bank transfer)
Also, if you are local to the Cardiff area (or fond of travelling), the
Monstrous company works to a great model: "We announce auditions for
upcoming productions about a month before casting. We have a laid back
audition process and people travel from all over the South Wales area.
No experience is necessary, our only stipulation is that members must be
over 18 and younger than 70. Membership is £10 per year. We rehearse
twice a week over the course of a few months, with some social
activities thrown in."
http://www.monstrousptc.com/
5.11 REMINDER: GUARDS! GUARDS! IN BRISBANE (OCTOBER)
The Brisbane Arts Theatre takes on yet another Discworld play later this
year, in October and November.
"From the legendary author Sir Terry Pratchett comes the eighth novel in
the Discworld series and first featuring the Ankh-Morpork City Watch.
Long believed extinct, a superb specimen, The Noble Dragon has appeared
in Discworld's greatest city. Not only does this unwelcome visitor have
a nasty habit of charbroiling everything in its path, in rather short
order it is crowned King (it is a noble dragon, after all). With some
help from an orangutan librarian, it is the task of the Night Watch to
overpower the secret brotherhood and restore order to the kingdom in
this fantastical Discworld adventure."
When: 8th October through 12th November 2016
Venue: Brisbane Arts Theatre, 210 Petrie Terrace, Brisbane, QLD 4000.
Phone: (07) 3369 2344
Time: 8pm Thursdays, Fridays & Saturdays (except 10th November); 6.30pm
Sundays (16th & 30th October)
Tickets: Adults $31, Concession $25, Group 10+ $25, Group 75+ $20,
Student Rush $10 (10 mins before curtain), available online at
http://bit.ly/1QGbXBF
http://www.artstheatre.com.au/show/guardsguards
5.12 NEW: WYRD SISTERS IN BOLTON, LANCS (MARCH 2017)
Bolton Little Theatre, "a vibrant amateur theatre company run by
members" since 1931, will be presenting their production of Wyrd Sisters
next March.
When: 6th – 11th March 2017
Venue: Bolton Little Theatre, Hanover Street, Bolton BL1 4TG
Time: 7.30pm
Tickets: £10 (Monday night 3 for 2 special), available at
boltonlittletheatre.ticketsource.co.uk – group bookings of 10+ (£9)
should be booked through the Box Office. "You can book at Bolton Little
Theatre box office in person or by telephone on Monday night from 7.30
to 9pm and Friday mornings from 10.30 to 12 noon – no extra charge if
paying by cash or cheque and you can book during the run of the plays or
you can book online at boltonlittletheatre.ticketsource.co.uk ...credit
card charges will apply. Tickets can be e-tickets (no charge) mobile
phone ticket (50p) standard post (£1.50)."
http://www.boltonlittletheatre.co.uk/terry-pratchetts-wyrd-sisters/
5.13 STEPHEN BRIGGS: HOW TO STAGE AN OFFICIAL PRATCHETT PLAY
Here be some samples of his advice and instructions. But do go read the
page itself, because it has all sorts of important things on it. And a
scorpion pit. No, really:
"We have licensed hundreds of productions in over twenty countries and,
although, by and large, everything works on a fairly informal and
good-natured basis, we are dealing with material which is copyright and
with areas from which some people earn all or part of their living, so
there do have to be rules. It's the lesson of bitter experience; for
every fifty groups that are happy to 'play the game', there are one or
two who'll 'try it on'. If you're in any doubt about anything – ask
first! At the foot of this page (just below the scorpions!) is a Dropbox
link to the info about, and application to stage, the seven of my plays
which I administer for the Orangutan Foundation... Discussions are also
in hand to publish my dramatisations of Lords & Ladies and Terry
Pratchett: the Shakespeare Codex...
"All requests for permission to licence amateur dramatic or professional
productions in English or in translation of Terry Pratchett's novels
adapted by Stephen Briggs, and published by Corgi and Oxford University
Press, should be sent to me.
"Other adaptations of Terry Pratchett's novels are published by Methuen
Drama (part of the Bloomsbury Group), and by Samuel French, details of
which follow. For requests to perform the Methuen titles: Going Postal,
Jingo, Monstrous Regiment, Night Watch, Interesting Times, The Fifth
Elephant & The Truth and for their application form and contact details,
see
http://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/company/permissions/permissions-performance-rights/
"The Samuel French publications are
Making Money: https://samuelfrench-london.co.uk/books/making-money
(adapted by Stephen Briggs)
Carpe Jugulum: https://samuelfrench-london.co.uk/books/carpe-jugulum
(adapted by Stephen Briggs)
Maskerade: https://samuelfrench-london.co.uk/books/maskerade (adapted by
Stephen Briggs)
Lords and Ladies:
https://samuelfrench-london.co.uk/books/lords-and-ladies (adapted by
Irana Brown)
Samuel French control the amateur dramatic rights in these plays in the
English language, but for professional stage rights and translation
rights contact me. To contact Samuel French, see
https://samuelfrench-london.co.uk/contact
"If you were thinking of writing your own adaptation of any of Sir
Terry's novels, please contact me immediately – before starting any
work, or committing any financial or other resource. There is now much
more TV and movie interest in Terry's works, and this greatly
complicates the previously fairly liberal access enjoyed by amateur
groups. The rights to Terry's works are closely controlled, and you
should not assume permission will be forthcoming. If you fail to get
permission up front, your production will be halted – regardless of the
stage it has reached..."
To read the full page, go to http://www.stephenbriggs.com/terry-pratchett
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
06) ACTION REPLAY: SIR PTERRY CHATS WITH JACQUELINE SIMPSON (2010)
Here be the transcript of a conversation between Sir Pterry and
folklorist Jacqueline Simpson at the 2010 UK Discworld Convention. The
recording was done by Katie Brown and Julie Sutton, so I imagine one or
both of them did the transcribing. Some extracts:
"TP: I'm interested in the history of London which is absolutely superb
because it's impossible to believe things that happen in the biggest,
richest city in the world, in Georgian England all the way up to the
death of Victoria. That kind of interest is also a kind of folklore
because many of the things that happened then get an aura of folklore
about them, and it turns out that it isn't folklore. Have you heard the
song Knees up Mother Brown?
"JS: I believe so. And so small that it became possible to imagine that
she had been turned into minced meat and put in a tin. Right, did you
know that Knees up Mother Brown was actually originally based on the
terrible murder of Mrs. Josephine Baxter in Bow in 1870, and she was not
only killed but dismembered by her husband? Rather similar, have you
heard of Sweet Fanny Adams and what happened to Sweet Fanny Adams? Well
she was chopped up, apparently by her boyfriend, was that the case?
"TP: In fact what I just told you about Knees up Mother Brown is
entirely an invention, but the point is, it's how I work... it's very
easy as it were to make up folklore, I would hesitate to say that's
because it's made up anyway... I was reading about the folklore of
Ireland and I'd got hooked on Lord of the Rings, so you'd read anything
that had runes in it or fairies or anything. I was coming across
folklore which was really very interesting and possibly that might have
been where the whole thing really began. You start off with the fantasy
and then you find out that the fantasy may be not exactly as unreal as
you thought and that becomes very exciting that there are people alive
at that time who knew people who had known , the Witch of County Clare,
around which a folklore has gathered rather similar to that to Robin
Hood, who I suspect was a real person but who wound around himself,
because of the way folklore works, tales of other bandits at the same
time. That really fascinated me. Going through the book there's a type
of folkloric creature called the Phouka, which can take many shapes. And
there was one story that was passed on by a farm labourer who was, early
evening, digging away at his potatoes, and he heard this sizzle and he
saw coming across the uneven landscape, something like a carpet but made
out of silver, and as it passed over the humps and hollows in the ground
it took the shape of them. And when I read that a chill went down my
spine because I thought, this sounds electrical, this sounds like
something real. Fairies, that sounds like something Guinness, about
three pints of Guinness I would have thought. But the sizzle as it
travelled, I couldn't help thinking, ‘that was something'. I'd loved to
have known what it was..."
and:
"JS: One of the things I like about folklore in Discworld, is that it's
not only rural, ok it's all over Lancre, it's all over the Chalk, but
you also have urban folklore in Ankh-Morpork itself. You have children's
games, you have beliefs that have sort of worn down and got distorted
but are still there.
"TP: The rhyme that I made up for Wintersmith... 'Iron enough to make a
nail', was it 'phosphor enough to make a match'?
"JS: You asked me about that at the time and I've never found a source
for it, but like you I'm convinced that it was real or at any rate
something very like it was real. I think I remember it being in a sort
of science for kids book back in the ‘30's.
"TP: I know I invented the last two lines 'Hands enough to hold a child'.
"JS: Oh yes, that wouldn't have been, no, that's you, definitely you.
"TP: Ah, and what was the other one, 'Time enough for love', or was it
'Heart enough for love'?
"JS: 'Heart enough for love,' I think.
"TP: And that's why the Wintersmith couldn't quite make a man because he
didn't understand the last two lines.
"JS: When I was saying about the folklore in Ankh-Morpork, I was
thinking of things like when Vimes goes back to Cockbill Street, is it,
where he was brought up, and sees the kids playing hopscotch?
"TP: Oh yes, in the school yard, if you were unlucky it was your name as
well! But in the running gutters of Ankh-Morpork they play pooh sticks.
"JS: Yes, I loved that! That was one of the occasions when I
disgracefully laughed for ten minutes in a public place..."
For the full transcript, go to http://bit.ly/1WM8I4d
[Editor's note: the entire piece is a good read!]
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
07) DISCWORLD MEETING GROUPS NEWS: UPDATES AND REMINDERS
The Broken Drummers, "London's Premier Unofficially Official Discworld
Group" (motto "Nil percussio est"), meets next on Monday 4th July 2016
at the Monkey Puzzle, 30 Southwick Street, London, W2 1JQ. For more
information, go to http://brokendrummers.org/ or email
BrokenDrummers at gmail.com or nicholls.helen at yahoo.co.uk
*
Canberra, Australia's Discworld fan group is Drumknott's Irregulars: "We
are a newly established Terry Pratchett & Discworld social group in
Canberra called Drumknott's Irregulars. The group is open to all, people
from interstate and overseas are welcome, and our events will not be
heavily themed. Come along to dinner for a chat and good company. We
welcome people all all fandoms (and none) and we would love to see you
at one of our events, even if you're just passing through. Please
contact us via Facebook
(_https://www.facebook.com/groups/824987924250161/_) or Google Groups
(_https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/drumknotts-irregulars_) or
join us at our next event."
*
"The Gathering of the Loonies (Wincanton chapter)" is a public Facebook
meeting group: "This group, by request of Jo in Bear will continue to be
used for future unofficial (not run by the Emporium) fan Gatherings in
Wincanton. Look here for information." [Editor's note: this is an active
group. If you use Facebook, it may be worth joining!]
https://www.facebook.com/groups/373578522834654/
*
The Pratchett Partisans are a fan group who meet monthly at either
Brisbane or Indooroopilly to "eat, drink and chat about all things
Pratchett. We hold events such as Discworld dinners, games afternoons,
Discworld photo scavenger hunts. We also attend opening night at
Brisbane Arts Theatre's Discworld plays." The Partisans currently have
about 200 members who meet at least twice a month, usually in Brisbane.
For more info about their next meetup, join up at
https://www.facebook.com/groups/pratchettpartisans/ or contact Ula
directly at uwilmott at yahoo.com.au
*
The City of Small Gods is a group for fans in Adelaide and South Australia.
"We have an established Terry Pratchett & Discworld fan group in
Adelaide called The City of Small Gods, which is open to anyone who
would like to come - you don't have to live in Adelaide or even South
Australia, or even be a Discworld fan, but that's mostly where our
events will be held, and we do like discussing Pratchett's works. Our
(semi-) regular meetings are generally held on the last Thursday of the
month at a pub or restaurant in Adelaide. We have dinner at 6.30pm
followed by games until 9pm. The games are usually shorter games like
Pairs, Sushi Go, or Tiny Epic Defenders, with the occasional Werewolf
session, as these are the best sort of games that work in a pub setting.
Every few months, we have a full day's worth of board games at La Scala
Cafe, 169 Unley Rd, Unley in the function room starting at 10am. In
addition, we will occasionally have other events to go and see plays by
Unseen Theatre Company, book discussions on Terry's latest, craft, chain
maille or costuming workshops or other fun social activities."
The next Games Day will be held on 24th July; the next Monthly Dinner
and Games at the Caledonian Hotel, on 28th July. For more info, go to
www.cityofsmallgods.org.au
*
The Broken Vectis Drummers meet next on Thursday 7th July 2016
(probably) from 7.30pm at The Castle pub in Newport, Isle of Wight. For
more info and any queries, contact broken_vectis_drummers at yahoo.co.uk
*
The Wincanton Omnian Temperance Society (WOTS) next meets on Friday 5th
August 2016 (probably) at Wincanton's famous Bear Inn from 7pm onwards.
"Visitors and drop-ins are always welcome!"
*
The Northern Institute of the Ankh-Morpork and District Society of
Flatalists, a Pratchett fangroup, has been meeting on a regular basis
since 2005 but is now looking to take in some new blood (presumably not
in the non-reformed Uberwald manner). The Flatalists normally meet at
The Narrowboat Pub in Victoria Street, Skipton, North Yorkshire, to
discuss "all things Pratchett" as well as having quizzes and raffles.
Details of future meetings are posted on the Events section of the
Discworld Stamps forum:
http://www.discworldstamps.co.uk/forum/
*
Sydney Drummers (formerly Drummers Downunder) meet next on Monday 4th
July 2016 at 6.30pm (probably) in Sydney at 3 Wise Monkeys, 555 George
Street, Sydney,2000. For more information, contact Sue (aka Granny
Weatherwax): kenworthys at yahoo.co.uk
*
The Treacle Mining Corporation, formerly known as Perth Drummers, meets
next on Monday 4th July 2016 (probably) from 5.30pm at Carpe Cafe, 526
Murray Street, Perth, Western Australia. For details follow Perth
Drummers on Twitter @Perth_Drummers or join their Facebook group:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/Perth.Drummers/ – or message Alexandra
Ware directly at <alexandra.ware at gmail.com>
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
08) DISCWORLD ARTS AND CRAFTS NEWS
8.1 GOODIES FROM DISCWORLD.COM
* The BU t-shirt!
"So, thinking about heading to Fourecks on your Summer break? We have
everything you need to arrive in style and stay 'cool' in the sun! For
this design in classic fit we use 100% cotton, highest quality t-shirts
which are 205gsm in weight. They have self-fabric shoulder to shoulder
taping to maintain shape. The image is applied using a hard-wearing
Superflex Vinyl. White on Royal Blue. For the ladies skinny fits we use
high quality 190gsm weight t-shirts. They have taped neck & shoulder to
maintain shape and double stitched hems. Material 96% cotton/4% elastane
single jersey for comfort and shape retention with shaped seams for a
feminine fit. The image is applied using a hard-wearing Superflex Vinyl."
Round-neck BU t-shirts are available in all sizes from Small to Extra
Extra Large; Ladies Skinni Fit are only available in Small (UK 8-10) or
Extra Large (UK 18).
Each Bugarup University tee is priced at £15. For more information, and
to order, go to:
http://discworld.com/products/bags-clothing/bugarup-university-t-shirt-white-royal-blue/
* The BU hoodie!
"For this design we use AWDis Hoodies which are 280gsm in weight. They
have a double-fabric hood with self-coloured draw cord, front pouch
pocket, ribbed hem & cuffs and set in sleeves. Twin needle stitching
detail to armholes, hems & cuffs. 80% cotton / 20% polyester."
The BU hoodie is available in sizes from Small (36" chest) to Extra
Extra Large (50"/52" chest) and is priced at £28. For more information,
and to order, go to:
http://discworld.com/products/bags-clothing/bugarup-university-hooded-top-white-royal-blue
* The Element Octarine collection!
Element 117 has been officially named, and neither Discworld fans not
Motorhead fans got their wish. But for those of you who either 1) remain
in the Roundworld equivalent of a certain river in Djelibeybi or 2) are
in possession of the healthy sense of the ridiculous that every
Discworld aficionado should have, here's your chance to own some very
special items...
The Octarine 117 button badge. Priced at £1 each. For more information,
and to order, go to:
http://discworld.com/products/badges/148/
The Octarine 117 coaster. Priced at £2.50 each. For more information,
and to order, go to:
http://discworld.com/products/coaster/octarine/
The Octarine 117 magnet. Priced at £2 each. For more information, and to
order, go to:
http://discworld.com/products/coaster/octarine/
The Octarine 117 chopping board. Priced at £15 each. For more
information, and to order, go to:
http://discworld.com/products/gimlets-kitchen/discworld-chopping-board-copy/
* Gorgeous postcards!
The Check Mort postcard! "Created as a part of the Terry Pratchett
Memorial goodie bag, this postcard features artwork painted by Paul
Kidby to commemorate the life of Sir Terry Pratchett."
Each Check Mort postcard is priced at £1.50. For more information, and
to order, go to:
http://discworld.com/products/artwork/check-mort-postcard/
The Raising Steam postcard! "Created as a part of the Terry Pratchett
Memorial goodie bag, this postcard features a photo of Terry taken on a
tour during the promotion of Raising Steam."
Each Raising Steam postcard is priced at £1.50. For more information,
and to order, go to:
http://discworld.com/products/artwork/5126-2/
8.2 GOODIES FROM THE DISCWORLD EMPORIUM
* The Summoning Dark necklace!
"Solid silver Summoning Dark pendant and chain - a precious gift for
Vimes fans! Wear your affinity with the demon of darkness and Sir Samuel
Vimes with our beautifully crafted supernatural symbol from Terry
Pratchett's bestselling Discworld novels Thud! and Snuff. Hand cast in
solid silver and stamped with the official silver + Discworld hallmarks.
Presented in a Discworld Emporium gift box."
Each Summoning Dark pendant and chain is priced at £35.00. For more
information, and to order, go to:
http://www.discworldemporium.com/summoning-dark-necklace
* New Royal Bank of Ankh-Morpork stamps!
"Featuring artwork by guest artist David Wyatt, The Royal Bank of
Ankh-Morpork $1 issues comprise two designs; chairman of the bank and
top dollar Dog, Mr. Fusspot, and the elegant fiscal facade of the Royal
Bank itself. Both issues are available to collect as a set of two
individual stamps, or on one beautiful whole sheet. Stamp measures 47 x
32mm, Sheet measures 275 x 165mm. Spot the sport! One stamp on every
sheet contains a 'deliberate' mistake or variation - only included on
whole sheets or in lucky LBEs."
A set of two single stamps (RBA-M building and Chairman Fusspot) is
priced at £1.60, and a sheet of 20 at £12.80. For more information, and
to order, go to:
http://www.discworldemporium.com/royal-bank-one-dollar
* A bag of Ankh-Morpork money!
"Treat yourself to a sausage-inna-bun or two with an authentic bag of
five half-dollars from the streets and pockets of Discworld's mercantile
metropolis. Featuring the profile of Ankh-Morpork's esteemed tyrant Lord
Havelock Vetinari, with Morporkia on the flip side, each coin has been
hand-cast and individually worked to achieve a suitably distressed
appearance with an antique patina. Lead-free pewter, each coin has a
diameter or 29mm."
Each bag of A-M half-dollars is priced at £10. For more information, and
to order, go to:
http://www.discworldemporium.com/hogswatch-gift-shop/DiscworldCoins
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
09) AROUND THE BLOGOSPHERE
This is an extended comment – a blogpost in itself – left by "Anne" in
the Hubward Ho! blog's comments section of their Hogfather pot:
"Losing teeth is a physical reality, but adults create a fantasy
structure around the process to...do what, exactly? Add an element of
magic and whimsy to childhood? Revel in the absurdities children of a
certain age will believe in? And why, exactly, would a child who knows
that the Tooth Fairy is not real grow up to be a parent who perpetuates
the myth? ... For me, even as a child, the Tooth Fairy seemed a
particularly nonsensical entity. Why take teeth? Why leave money? Why
the facade of fairy at all – I would have been just as likely to believe
that my teeth turned into money through some kind of pillow-triggered
alchemy. We (meaning "humans") build relationships through shared
experience. Each family has its own stories and traditions, but the
Tooth Fairy enforces the relationships among people within the cultures
that go through that shared ritual. Even if you, as a parent, decide to
forgo the trappings of the Tooth Fairy in your family, your child will
come home from school one day with the learned story from her friends,
and no amount of rational explanation will be enough to justify why
Jeremy got $5 for a lost tooth and she didn't...
"Hogfather is a book about children and belief and the value of that
belief. Without belief in the Hogfather, the sun will not rise.
Believing in things like Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny and the Tooth
Fairy prepare us, as Death says, to believe in the greater myths of
Truth and Mercy. Like the current incarnation of Santa Claus, the modern
incarnation of the Tooth Fairy is cheery packaging over an older
tradition that no longer matches with our modern sensibilities. Early
Norse records include references to a 'tooth-fee' (thanks, Wikipedia!),
where a child's first lost tooth was exchanged for money. Other
practices included burning or burying a child's lost teeth to protect
her. In Northern European cultures, the loss of baby teeth is marked by
this kind of small ceremony. You don't just leave lost teeth lying
around – they're special. They have power. These are the traditions that
Pratchett plays off of in Hogfather, combining the childish trappings of
the Tooth Fairy's realm with the darker magic at the heart of Teatime's
plan. I would argue that there is a metaphor to be found in the role of
the tooth-money exchange and its relationship to belief.
"Children do not only go through a physical transition into adulthood,
but also a cognitive one. There are all sorts of studies about how
children think and how that thinking changes as they age. Infants can't
recognize themselves in a mirror – 'Theory of Mind' refers to the
cognitive development a child goes through to understand that she is an
individual mind, and, importantly, that other people have their own
individual minds that are not the same as hers... In Western studies,
the last big changes in this development take place between third and
fifth grade (ages 7 to 10). Which, interestingly, is around when
children lose their baby teeth. In the absence of revelation from an
older sibling or schoolmate, children will 'grow out' of believing in
childhood myths. They simply are no longer capable of thinking in the
way that they did when they were younger. The exchange of teeth for
money is a cultural metaphor of the exchange of a child's perspective on
the world to an adult's. But, as we see in Hogfather, the teeth, the
child's perspective, is still powerful, still valuable. It is the
foundation upon which we understand ourselves and our relationship to
the world, even if it is in contrast to what we once believed. A full
Theory of Mind may be the end goal, but it is only through working
through the process that one gets there. And that, I believe, is why we
grow up to be parents who tell our children of the Tooth Fairy – we know
it is not true, but we also know that children need it to be true, if
only for a while."
http://hubwardho.com/2016/06/14/baby-teeth-the-value-of
...and the post itself:
"General sentiment seems to be that Hogfather is a delightful comic romp
through Yuletide tropes. I've also heard it remarked that it's a
wonderfully polished book, and I can't disagree: note, for instance, how
the Bogeyman that fuels the novel's twist appears first on page one. For
a rhet/lit guy, that's deliciously well crafted storytelling. But what I
like best about Hogfather is its philosophical complexity, class
critique, and examination of myth, belief, and justice. The book is so
much more than a jovial winter comedy. In fact, I would also tender the
notion that Hogfather may be the, or one of the, axial turning points in
the whole Discworld series, and that its importance to the saga has to
do, in fact, with how it approaches the idea of myth. So let me ask the
Big Question for today's entry: What does myth, legend, and deep history
look like when your characters walk in the grass under sun alongside the
myths themselves – gods, demons, and wizards? It seems to me that the
question has implications for what kind of universe the Disc is...
Pratchett gives only hints about the Discworld's mythic past – The
Colour of Magic, The Light Fantastic, and Sourcery tell us a little
about a world of surplus magic, ice giants, wizard wars, and common
people bearing the brunt of the fallout. In terms of meta-history, these
stories are not terribly concerned with a real-world historical past so
much as they are with a mytho-fantastic one that includes pulps,
swords-and-sorcery flicks, and a host of high fantasy novels... From the
first page of Hogfather, Pratchett begins to revise his mytho-history.
Immediately, we get the ice times, when there were only small people and
not children. We get the Bogeyman. We get seasonal pagan rites about the
sun. We get the sober admonishment that all stories are, at root, about
blood – even when the fact has been forgotten... Hogfather is the first
book since Sourcery to reconfigure the history of this world
significantly. It's a palimpsest for the latter half of Discworld. The
ice times weren't just an epoch of giants – they were the time in which
common people struggled to survive against nature itself. Likewise, the
recent past wasn't just an age of barbarians or wizardly wars – it was a
time in which, again, common people struggled to see another spring.
More so than Sourcery's high fantasy past, and with more finesse than
the tonal mismatches of Reaper Man and Soul Music, Hogfather's grim,
hardscrabble mytho-history encapsulates the kinds of stories Pratchett
is telling at this point..."
https://hubwardho.files.wordpress.com/2016/02/hogfather-5.jpg
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
10) ROUNDWORLD TALES: IS CATSUP 5p EXTRA?
It seems certain Discworld dwellers aren't the only ones fond of a meal
of tasty rat:
"On 7 March every year, in a remote village in the hills of north-east
India, the Adi tribe celebrates Unying-Aran, an unusual festival with
rats as the culinary centrepiece. One of the Adi's favourite dishes is a
stew called bule-bulak oying, made with the rat's stomach, intestines,
liver, testes, foetuses, all boiled together with tails and legs plus
some salt, chili and ginger. Rodents of all kind are welcomed in this
community, from the household rats often seen around the house to the
wild species that dwell in the forest. The rat's tail and feet are
particularly appreciated for their taste, says Victor Benno
Meyer-Rochow, at Oulu University, Finland, who interviewed several
members of the Adi tribe for a recent study into rats as a food
resource. Rodent meat is the most delicious and best meat they can
imagine The answers he got revealed a different view of the pesky pests.
The respondents told Meyer-Rochow that rodent meat “is the most
delicious and best meat they can imagine. 'I was told: "No party; no
happiness if there is no rat available: to honour an important guest,
visitor or relative, to celebrate a special occasion; it can only be
done if rats are on the menu."'... Little is known about when or how the
Adi people developed their taste for rats, but Meyer-Rochow is certain
it is a long-held tradition, and not formed due to a lack of other
choices of game. Plenty of animals such as deer, goat and buffalo still
roam the forests surrounding the village. These tribes simply prefer the
taste of rodents. '[They] assured me that "nothing beats the rat",' he
says..."
Apparently rat is also, or has been, a favourite food in many other
Roundworld places: in parts of Cameroon; among the Dalit caste in India;
in China during the Tang dynasty (7th through 10th century); in areas of
the south Pacific including New Zealand; and, it seems, quite often in
Cambodia, Laos, Indonesia, Thailand, Ghana and Vietnam, according to the
International Rice Research Institute.
"In Nigeria, for instance, the African giant rat is a favourite among
all ethnic groups, says Mojisola Oyarekua, from the University of
Science and Technology Ifaki-Ekiti (Usti) Nigeria. “It is regarded as a
special delicacy and it is more expensive than equivalent weight of cow
meat or fish..."
Includes many iconographs. You have been warned!
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20151207-the-countries-where-rats-are-on-the-menu
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
11) IMAGES OF THE MONTH
A whole load of witchery – the Colnbrook Amateur Stage Theatre's coven,
ready for their July production of Carpe Jugulum:
http://bit.ly/298pCqm
A small but perfectly formed – and wonderfully whimsical – photo of Sir
Pterry at the TCD Science Gallery, from the Irish Times article above
(item 4.2):
http://bit.ly/29cVSI3
The Check Mort postcard. So beautiful. Buy some! (See item 8.1 above):
http://discworld.com/management/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/checkmort.png
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
12) CLOSE
In The Independent, a cheerful "top ten" list of Shakespeare adaptations
includes Wyrd Sisters, of course: "Wyrd Sisters, Terry Pratchett's sixth
Discworld novel, throws the same three plays, Macbeth, Hamlet and Lear,
'into a cauldron and stirs, with the Bard reimagined as a Dwarf', says
Tom Joyce." The list is worth reading, and can be seen at
http://ind.pn/1Y0GjYY
And that's the lot for June. Take care, and we'll see you next month!
– Annie Mac
The mirror version of this issue can be viewed at
http://wossname.dreamwidth.org/37527.html
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