Wednesday, 11 June 2008
http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/christina-patterson/christina-patterson-fashions-denial-of-the-skeleton-in-its-closet-844175.html
An atheist (almost) to the end
Perhaps it's because he looks a bit like the Archbishop of Canterbury, or perhaps it's because, as he very bravely told the world, he's losing his mind (to a truly horrible disease), but the famous atheist Terry Pratchett, near-genius creator of fantasy worlds, has, apparently, succumbed to one himself. "I suddenly knew," he said in an interview this week, "that everything was OK". "On the other side of physics," he added, "there just may be an ordered structure from which everything flows." Well, who knows, there might be – though, as we all know, from Bush, and Blair, and Bin Laden, suddenly "knowing" something is rarely an indication of anything very reliable. Still, I hope it's some consolation. Next up, Richard Dawkins.

Tested camera on wall - picture of the site of Albatross House.
Dropped cards into work - took an hour.
Went to farmers' market and spent £45 on cheese (this is the real shit) with and £8 on chorizo with Patrick.
Bought bacon bap from van - delayed by (homeless?) woman who was failing to pay, then failing to find her purse (she'd got it out already).
Charity shopping. Nada.
Boots for prescription. Tesco for remains of food shop. Need crackers, though. And something else. I forget. I couple more cards.
Listening in to discussion on Pratchett book: Mr Discworld Monthly remains unconvinced. C'est le vie. http://www.discworldstamps.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=10560&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0&sid=6edbaefd7475f22bf5239f1dc6ef9a8f
Further projects are... projected.
( Re: Shelving - cut for dullness )
( Terry Pratchetts )
Ah well, five days to go before we break for Xmas - well, until I need to do all this marking... Off to do something with brussel sprouts.
Here's a review from WOSSNAME that's nicer than the one in Discworld Monthly:
12) A NOT VERY SHORT HISTORY OF NEARLY EVERYTHING PTERRY:
The Unofficial Companion to the Novels of Terry Pratchett
Reviewed by Annie Mac
"Ohh noes! It's another Pratchett compendium! And I bet they forgot
to mention *this* and they didn't give enough credit to *that* and
what do we need another book for when we already have the Discworld
Companion and the Annotated Pratchett File and and and..."
Yes, it's another Pratchett compendium. But it certainly deserves
to exist. And I like it.
It's a labour of love -- lot of labour, and a whole lotta love.
Compiler/editor Andrew Butler, who also co-edited Terry Pratchett:
Guilty of Literature, has obviously devoted a Librarian-worthy
(oook!) amount of time and care to creating this ambitious reference
work, and a team of eleven writers, academicians and general Pterry-
nuts have also contributed greatly to the content.
There are plenty of Discworld and general Pratchett fans who can
confidently -- and correctly -- answer, at parties, every question
every compiler of a Wyrdest Link-type trivia game could possibly
come up with, but Andrew Butler and his co-researchers have
*actually taken the time to write things down*. A myriad of things.
Useful things, interesting things, thought-provoking things, not-a
-lot-of- people-know-that things, and all of it covering or relevant
to Terry Pratchett's entire oeuvre. All the novels are here, not
only Discworld ones but also the Bromeliad series, the Johnny
Maxwell Series, Good Omens, the Unadulterated Cat, etc.; all the
well-known and lesser-known short stories, from The Sea and Little
Fishes to Hollywood Chickens to Turntables of the Night, plus the
collected odds and sods of Pterry's other work such as magazine
pieces; not to mention the Science of Discworld novels, the Mapp
books, the artwork collections, the audio versions, the animated
versions, the stage versions, the screen versions...it's an
impressive collection, and it has a good heart. What's not to like?
While the Discworld Companion (and its updated edition) might offer
a greater number of entries about various characters, places,
philosophies and whatnot, these only cover the Discworld novels.
While the online Annotated Pratchett File might offer masses of
fine-ground explanations for every little detail of so many of the
novels, you can't hold it in your hands and turn the pages at will.
The Unofficial Companion, in my opinion, goes a long way toward
filling that gap. In its pages you'll find biographies of vital
members of Team Pterry (e.g. Stewart and Cohen, Kirby and Kidby,
Stephen Briggs, Colin Smythe et al), essays on important themes,
history, sociology and the like in Pratchett's work (e.g. religion,
feminism, politics), and entries on other relevant or influential
works of popular culture such as the Carry On farces, Hollywood
comedies, and the novels of Neil Gaiman, Fritz Leiber, Robert
Sheckley and Douglas Adams, to name but a few. There are also a fair
number of illustrations and even photographs of Discworld fans at
play -- the one of the self-titled Silver Horde is remarkably, um,
authentic -- and there's a selected bibliography.
However, any home-grown reference work -- where "home-grown" means
"lacking the vast fact-checking infrastructure of, say, the
Encyclopaedia Britannica" -- will have its flaws, and the Unofficial
Companion is no exception. Just to give an example: the entry on
Susan Sto Helit describes her as having a white streak in her hair
(and references Elsa Lanchester's Bride of Frankenstein film
character), and also claims, "In theory she is now the Duchess of
Sto Helit, but this has not been mentioned." Um, that would be a no.
Susan -- as we all know -- has a *black* streak in her otherwise
white hair (the Bride in reverse, as it were), and has indeed been
identified as hereditary nobility, e.g. on page 9 of the Gollancz
hardcover of Hogfather:"The only tricky bit had been when her
employer found out that she was a duchess, because...the upper crust
wasn't supposed to work." My relentless proofreader's eye unearthed
other banjaxes, but Susan is a major character in the Discworld
series and thus deserves the highest standard of information-
checking. It's to be hoped that glitches such as these will have
been caught and corrected by the time the Unofficial Companion goes
to press.
My only other nit-pick is that, as with the Discworld Companion, the
Unofficial Companion lacks an index of entries. Note to the
Assembled Pterry Reference Works Brigade: some of us would like to
be able to check in the back to see if there's an entry for, say,
commemorative Quirm cabbage stamps before launching into a search
through every letter that might have something relating to such an
item!
Large (over 450 pages), sweeping in scope (Lu-Tze would be proud)
and reasonably priced (trust me on this), An Unofficial Companion to
the Novels of Terry Pratchett belongs on the bookshelf of any true
Pratchett aficionado, and will be available for purchase early in
the new year.
(This is a review of the proofs, which lack the index and other front and back matter)
Other copies will hit these shores next week. A little later than planned.
31 November said the adverts.
H'mm.
31. November.
As my dad always used to say:
"Thirty days hath September
All the rest I can't remember.
Calendar's hanging on the wall.
So why the %&* ask me at all?"
“I have written the Companion with humour, a light touch and containing a lot of detail,” explained David. “It is the definitive companion to Terry Pratchett’s work and essential reading for all Pratchett fans.”
Who the hell is David and what is he doing in my article?
25 pages left to do - but I need to make a list and check a few things. Accents are kaput, as always in the switch from Word to PDFs (via a layout program?). My bell hooks has unhelpfully become Bell Hooks. Must correct.
Snuck some writing in this morning on getting up - finished chapter eight - and did a bit of chapter nine.
| |
50,817 / 100,000 (50.8%) |
Half way... 600 words a day to finish this year.
Note though that if you just count the first eight chapters which are all drafted, I have 34922 words, suggesting a final word count of 13096 words - which would be 900+ words a day to finish at this length. Not half way. I'll have to write shorter. I suspect that is possible.
Pratchett proofs to look at, though goodness knows when as Saturday is an open day, Monday the big teaching day, and Monday night I'm going to a freebie drink. Plus another edit job returning from the dead past. Sheesh.
Still, I've finally finished chapter six, and the partially written chapter seven I completed tonight. None of chapter eight is written, but a third of chapter nine was (my perspective on it has changed). I need to find the time to keep the momentum.
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45,471 / 100,000 (45.5%) |
Back to about 620 words a day to finish this year.

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The Bookseller has a full page advert - though I've not seen a copy.
And an article by myself appeared in Wossname.
Greenwood Press
UK Amazon Paperback
UK Amazon Hardback
US Amazon Hardback.
It's a real shame that Making Money came too late to be included in the Greenwood Press
book I've been
editing. I've just read this Guardian review which seems timely:
- Boris Johnson's candidacy for mayor of London could have come straight from a Terry Pratchett novel: a lovable buffoon with no discernible accomplishments becomes a leading contender for just those very qualities (ie buffoonery, Liverpool-bashing - is there anything else?). Bullyingly jovial, faintly sinister and with no apparent plans for the city except to promise the exact opposite kind of tyranny as the current tyrant-incumbent, all that remains is for him to be revealed as a multi-tentacled demon to make a jolly good Discworld novel. Vote for him, it may yet happen.
And I was thinking, Northern Rock. Which Patrick Ness mentions. Pratchett writes on "racism, sexism, journalism, death, war, the army, the Inquisition, the ambiguous nature of good and evil, and the uncomfortable power of narrative", a good list if not necessarily in the right order. In recent years Pratchett has had congruences with 9/11, 7/7 and now sub-rime mortgages. That's a long way from parodying dragon novels, I'm thinking.
I'm also thinking, Second Edition.
Brrrr.
And Jonathan Lethem has announced the contents of Library of America's second volume on Dick, which covers the 1960s and 1970s:
Martian Time-Slip
Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb
Now Wait For Last Year
Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said
A Scanner Darkly
No real duds there - NWFLY is perhaps not as strong, but you're talking The Penultimate Truth, The Zap Gun, A Maze of Death and We Can Build You as being on a par with it and it's a difficult choice between them. The ending of NWFLY perhaps clinches it. After that you've got Our Friends From Frolix 8, The Unteleported Man (in several versions), Counter-Clock World, Nick and the Glimmung, The Crack in Space and The Simulacra which falls apart at the end. But I think I would have gone for Clans of the Alphane Moon or Galactic Pot-Healer.
Does that leave a volume for the Divine/VALIS trilogy (which needs to include Radio Free Albemuth and/or The Transmigration of Timothy Archer, according to hiow you count the trilogy)? What about the 1950s. Eye in the Sky and Time Out of Joint are the best novels - with Solar Lottery saying more about sf at the start of the 1950s than Dick's fiction. The Cosmic Puppets holds up, and The World Jones Made - but how about Confessions of a Crap Artist and any of the half dozen or so mainstream novels? In Milton Lumky Territory gets my vote.