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hunting for a property with ‘many special features’ in an area
full of character and local colour?
Try Ankh-Morpork.
But be careful to bring a sense of irony. Discworld
is not a safe place without it. Much of Terry Pratchett’s humour
derives from metaphor made solid and subversive parallels with
the human condition. This creates a relatively uncontentious platform
from which to snipe.

A politician making such observations about the
voting masses usually willing to tolerate any amount of criticism,
as long as it is not directed at them, would destroy their career.
Most of us are druids at heart, with immolation of people with
a different opinion being a useful way of settling an argument.
Terry Pratchett is the only author, totally free
of gravitas or apology, to take a stab at a convincing (pseudo)
scientific explanation for magic. If black holes do exist, a tachyon
might not be so preposterous after all. Discworld works on the
Tinkerbell premise: belief can bring into being an entity while
denial of something real, ie Gaspode, Foul Ole Ron’s talking dog,
goes unnoticed because it is generally known that dogs are unable
to talk.
They’re all here. From DEATH to the Electric Drill
Chuck Key Fairy.
Lines not to be missed: On food; ‘Ephebians make
wine out of anything they can put in a bucket and eat anything
that can’t climb out of one.’ Febrius on physics; ‘He proved that
light travels at about the same speed as sound, in his famous
"Give us a shout when you see it, OK?"’ Nanny Ogg’s Carrot and
Oyster Pie; ‘Carrots so you can see in the dark, oysters so you’ve
got something to look at.’ Also find out about the perils of drinking
Klatchian coffee or the Puzuma, fastest (and flattest) animal
on the Disc.
Rationality does not enter here to spoil the view.
The wit of this dimension is condensed into the literary equivalent
of Dr. Dinwiddie’s frog pills which stop him losing his sanity
by making him hallucinate he is sane. ‘The New Discworld Companion’
has an unerring logic to its absurdities that persuades you that
this prolific author really does have a return ticket to an orbit
about the Great A’Tuin. Terry Pratchett and Stephen Briggs account
for all with impeccable and sideways cod science.
They are a two-man conspiracy to commit to posterity
the pomposity deflating humour of a place that at least deserves
a postcode.
If by some fluke the Discworld books become unavailable,
their essence will live on in the bones of this volume of concentrated
humour of fantasy’s best known planet. (Though I am somewhat relieved
that Terry Pratchett’s career as an apologist for the nuclear
industry never branched out into research.)
If you are unable to keep up with the Discworld
torrent, this is a brilliant way of finding clues to what you’ve
missed.
Jane Palmer