Tue 19 Jan 2010 @ 08:59 PM
Host: It is my great pleasure to introduce Terry Pratchett, who, in case you didn’t know, is the unbelievably best-selling author of the Discworld series –
Terry (in exaggerated, loud whisper): I think they know that.
Terry Pratchett is awesome.
In point form, because I’m all fluey and keep making typoes and can’t make coherent paragraphs:
- I think the only other author I’ve met before is Neil Gaiman. Terry had a very different sort of feeling from Neil – while Neil is like a rockstar, Terry’s like your uncle. He was very warm and fuzzy. Interestingly, I think this also sums up the difference between their writing.
- When asked about the translation of Nation from novel to play, his pithy answer was that it was of course incomparable because "a playwright has a whole orchestra of people and things to play with – including an actual orchestra (gestures vaguely to orchestral pit) – and all I have is one lousy alphabet!"
- It was heartwarmingly evident how much he loves Nation. He speaks about it with a great deal of affection. And during the Q&A, when people kept asking Discworld questions, he said at one point that it would be nice to have a Nation one (only for the very next question to begin "In the Discworld books…")
- My absolute favourite part was when someone asked him why he chose to set Nation in a parallel universe instead of our world, and his first response was exactly what had popped into my fledgling-writer mind immediately: "Because it’s a get-out-of-jail-free card!" (elaboration: "If I had set it in our world, someone somewhere would have triangulated the location of the cannibal island and it would have been inconvenient if it had turned out to be, oh, New Zealand or something")
- He did go on to give a much more detailed and thought-provoking answer about how parallel worlds, more so than purely made-up worlds, have the power to invoke elements of our own while allowing you to change things enough to turn it upside down – which is what G. K. Chesterton defined fantasy as: looking at our world in a different way. It reminded me of my dissertation work on fantasy and made me a bit wistful for academia…
- His favourite Discworld character is Tiffany Aching (which elicited some cheers from a Tiffany Aching contingent in the circle), because he is writing her right now, and, says Terry, he tends to get under the skin of whoever he’s writing right now – but second after Tiffany is, of course, Vimes (which elicited significant cheers from all over the theatre).
- Response to "which Discworld character is most like you in personality?": "Oh, god, my wife is in the audience, I can’t answer that. Ermmmm. Commander Vimes on a good day."
There’s something to be said for sitting in a theatre with one of your favourite authors and a horde of his fans :) the book geek in me is thoroughly happyfied. And just this afternoon I found out by email that I’d managed to score a ticket for a Jasper Fforde talk hosted by the Lewis Carroll Society, about Carroll’s influence on his work! Could that combination possibly get any more jaw-droppingly amazing? No, I thought not.
Awwww…. That sounds amazing~! I can only compare it to when I met Neil Gaiman when he was over here for the writer’s fest. You’re very right, he IS like a rockstar of sorts.
*rifles through memory* I HAVE met Liza Dalby before though, and I’m a fan of her works (whereas for Gaiman it was very much a touch-and-go-and-I-read-your-books-in-secondary-school-but-I-love-Good-Omens) but again, different authors different feelings. Liza Dalby is predominantly an anthropologist so she felt like academia.
Reply to Liliah it must have been amazing to meet liza dalby! i’ve never read her work (though i know about it) but i know the feeling of meeting an author you are a huge fan of – definitely had it with neil – ♥
i always think that part of the reason neil is like a rockstar is because he never smiles in photos :P
Reply to cuiJASPER FFORDE!!! *beamz* yes, jaw-droppingly amazing is right. That must complete a hat-trick of sorts. hmmm… do you think Fforde’s book tour includes Singapore?
Get well soon! Boo flu!
Reply to Shirlenei could have sworn i replied your comment!! i think my replies have been eaten. anyway, you can check jasper fforde’s appearances page obsessively, as i do around the time of a new book :P http://www.jasperfforde.com/appearances.html (it doesn’t look like singapore is on the cards for now though)
i am currently debating whether or not to go for the fforde ffiesta in swindon this year!
thank you for the well-wishes ♥ much better now :)
Reply to cuiTiffany Aching! I didn’t know she appears in Discworld. To me she’s just the vehicle for the appearance of the Wee Free Men.
Reply to Christieterry said he was planning to move her into the adult discworld novels as she grows up! i’m not sure when this will happen though… i suspect soon. he also said that although he thinks Nation is the best book he has ever written or will write, he really, really likes Wintersmith. :)
Reply to cui