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The
Truth by Terry Pratchett (25th Discworld novel)
Pub: Corgi Books. 444 page paperback. Price £ 5.99 (UK) ISBN 0 552
14768 0
Check out website: www.booksattransworld.co.uk
No doubt Discworld fans will have already
read ‘The Truth’, which came out in hardcover 2000.
This
review is for anyone who has not been tempted to paddle in the kaleidoscopic
pool of Terry Pratchett's bizarre invention. I have encountered
some of that number who claim to dislike fantasy but Terry Pratchett's
novels are much more than dragons, dungeons and bloodthirsty warlords.
There are also trolls, dwarfs, vampires, golems, talking dogs,
pigeon eating gargoyles, DEATH, werewolves, zombies, witches, wizards,
luggage - with legs and some seriously heroic and maladjusted humans.
No writer could get away with this rarefied mix without being an
accomplished satirist. Terry Pratchett has moved more and more from
the belly laugh at the fantastic to a parody of the human situation.
It is difficult to tell when this evolution began. There has always
been acute analogy amongst the catalogue of jokes. Now it is set
in a recognisable universe that more sharply equates with human
history.
The humour in ‘The Truth’ is triggered by the contentious issue
of the modern tabloid and how news can be easily manufactured to
blur, sometimes erase, the boundary between truth and puerile invention.
A lot can be said through a zombie lawyer and reformed vampire
without losing credibility. If Buffy was let loose amongst these
characters she would soon need counselling. Otto, the vampire
photographer, is one of those brilliant ideas that seed the author's
work.
Whenever the reformed vampire triggers his camera's flash he is
reduced to a pile of ashes which have to be reconstituted by a drop
of blood. The photograph in Discworld is actually created by a frantically
painting imp inside the camera. (This for those who have not read
the novels, of course.) There isn't enough space here to describe
how the equivalent of a cassette recorder works.
The eponymous Truth revolves around who framed Lord Vetinari, the
Machiavellian patrician of Ank Morpork and newspaper editor William
de Worde's efforts to root out what actually happened. Two comic
and Pulp Fiction, without the wit, hit men engage in thuggish ploys
to stop ‘The Truth’ getting out.
This includes tossing two sacks containing small dogs into the
River Ank. Fortunately the water is so polluted they are rescued
before they can sink There is an uncluttered neatness to the novel.
Instead of including a kitchen sink of Discworld peculiarities,
the author has created a virtually linear tale that is a joy to
follow, even when alluding to the despicable Mr. Tulip and Mr. Pin.
Knowing that in Terry Pratchett's multiverse they will get their
just desserts does help.
He can make a valid point about the absurdity of human foibles
without the stultifying moralising that alienates. In fact, the
way arguments are reasoned out is mostly pure entertainment and
when something valid is being said it is not platformed as though
common sense was a new discovery. After 26 Discworld novels the
formula still works.
Nevertheless, given the author's huge capacity for wit and invention,
it is difficult not to wonder what he could achieve in a dimension
other than Discworld. He is obviously capable of much more.
Even in the confines of his invented world supported by a great
turtle swimming through space, his writing can be profound enough
to match literary categories with more pretension. Because there
is a levity to his style, it does not make it any less valid.
It may be sacrilegious to why ask whether, while Terry Pratchett's
following is so huge, a change of scene might trigger another classic
to equal ‘The Light Fantastic’.
But then, the loss of Douglas Adams' satirical acuity has left
expectations that few other authors could match. Unlike ‘Cold
Comfort Farm’, where Stella Gibbons could not achieve the genius
of her novel again, Terry Pratchett has proved that he can hit the
humorous nail on the head time and time again, albeit with varying
degrees of accuracy.
So much so, it is now not only expected but also an imperative.
Casting out on the ocean that spills over the edge of Discworld
might seem suicidal.
With Terry Pratchett's capacity for invention, however, he could
easily row out into a dimension of new possibilities before predictability
insinuates its way, Vetinari like, into the Discworld pantheon.
Jane Palmer
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