Thank you for the info.
Eaten by the luggage?!!! Shock, horror!! I thought he'd done one of those changing places, transmutation spells!!
I finished Snuff the other day. Very enjoyable.
However, did certain parts feel a bit "off" to anyone else? I though the Wilikins bits especially didn't match the tone of the rest of the book, or the more recent Terry Pratchett books in general.
Thanks to you, I am.Bumped as the new Pratchett/Baxter book The Long Earth is out. Anyone else reading it?
but ... but ... but but it appeared in the room where Trymon was watching Galder doing the spell and GW disappeared.and I thought that the luggage was impervious to magic
![]()
Except possibly as a plot device. But as it's constructed of Sapient Pearwood it's certainly immune to most magic.and I thought that the luggage was impervious to magic
![]()
2. I have just finished reading 'The Colour of Magic' and 'The Light Fantastic' - the first time I've read them since first doing so in the early 1980s! Can anyone tell me if Galder Weatherwax ever got back to the Unseen University, because when he changes places with the luggage, he isn't mentioned again in the book.
Yeah, he didn't change places with the luggage, he got eaten. He was casting a spell to bring Rincewind to him, got the Luggage instead, and:
"There was a thunderclap, an implosion of light and a moment of complete physical uncertainty during which even the walls seemed to turn in on themselves. Trymon heard a sharp intake of breath [Galder's, in surprise at seeing the Luggage] and then a dull, solid thump [The luggage's lid closing over him].
The room was suddenly silent.
...The Luggage squatted in the centre of the circle and opened its lid."
Agreed, his earlier Discworld books were amusing but rather generic.Of course, if you go back and re-read some of the early books, you may also realize just how much he grew as a writer over the years. Honestly, I think Men at Arms marked his breakthrough into being a good writer as well as a good humorist. It was the first one that really made me care about the characters, as opposed to merely being amused by their antics. It was also the book that finally converted my mother, who'd previously been dismissive of his work, into a fan.
Re: swearing/"bad" words. If you go back and re-read some of the early books, I think you'll find it's far from unprecedented in the series, though it had been a while since he'd challenged those particular taboos.
Of course, if you go back and re-read some of the early books, you may also realize just how much he grew as a writer over the years. Honestly, I think Men at Arms marked his breakthrough into being a good writer as well as a good humorist. It was the first one that really made me care about the characters, as opposed to merely being amused by their antics. It was also the book that finally converted my mother, who'd previously been dismissive of his work, into a fan.
Curiously I am reading it at the moment, and I have exactely the same impression, and it is jarring terribly at time.
I think I'm right in thinking that later on Twoflower writes a letter or something to say that the 'eaten' people turn up in the Agatean Empire and decide to settle there?
Given his much publicised diagnosis of Alzheimer's, it's extremely hard to avoid looking for signs that it might be affecting his work, and I'm probably over-analysing this. However, the use of the word didn't feel like the challenging of any taboo, it felt more like a placeholder to be replaced with a better crafted turn of phrase later, and, as I said before, out of place.
I could easily have imagined it!! However, as I gradually work my way through the Disc World series - I never read any of them twice - I'll remember to make a note o where it is if I ever find it!I don't recall that.
I had the feeling Snuff re-iterated a lot of the themes of Unseen Academicals. With some country trappings.