More Pratchett is good for the soul
Mar. 28th, 2006 11:55 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I just finished Thief of Time. Gah. So good! The Procrastinators (*giggles*) in Night Watch make a lot more sense now, for one. And oh, Death! And Susan! How she's grown! I'll have to get my hands on Hogfather now.
All the Discworld books are profound in their own way – I just love how the Death books deal with the cosmic scheme and philosophies and ultimately are a celebration of life, of human beings with all their faults and their stupidities. Death has always treated life with awe and wonder, and the Auditors are a wonderful addition to this theme, because they can actually *be* human and feel in a way Death never can. Especially Lady LeJean – her *wonder* at being alive:
How did humans survive this?
She'd been fascinated by the art galleries. It was clear that some humans could present reality in a way that made it even more real, that spoke to the viewer, that seared the mind… but what could possibly transcend the knowledge that the genius of an artist had to poke alien substances into his face? Could it be that humans had got used to it? And that was only the start…
Life is too beautiful for her to bear. *sobs*
Also, death by chocolate? I could die like that. *hearts Pterry*
Susan and Death break my heart:
WOULD A LITTLE SMALL TALK HURT?
Susan sighed. She knew what was behind that, and it wasn't a happy thought. It was a small, sad and wobbly little thought, and it ran: each of them had no-one else but the other. There. It was a thought that sobbed into its own handkerchief, but it was true.
And I love how Susan is only mostly logical. Yes, I have much love for Susan. *adds her to the People to Slash Angua With list*
Susan/Lobsang. Time/Wen. How does he do it? Just how does Pterry do it? How do *all* his pairings manage to melt my heart? I mean, the ending? Gah.
Nanny Ogg! *squee* I've missed the witches. I really do need to read Lords and Ladies.
I also have with me Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, by Susanna Clarke. I've heard good things about it (apparently, her footnotes are as good as Pterry's. we'll see), so I'm really looking forward to reading it. As soon as I have time, that is – it's a very fat book. *g*
All the Discworld books are profound in their own way – I just love how the Death books deal with the cosmic scheme and philosophies and ultimately are a celebration of life, of human beings with all their faults and their stupidities. Death has always treated life with awe and wonder, and the Auditors are a wonderful addition to this theme, because they can actually *be* human and feel in a way Death never can. Especially Lady LeJean – her *wonder* at being alive:
How did humans survive this?
She'd been fascinated by the art galleries. It was clear that some humans could present reality in a way that made it even more real, that spoke to the viewer, that seared the mind… but what could possibly transcend the knowledge that the genius of an artist had to poke alien substances into his face? Could it be that humans had got used to it? And that was only the start…
Life is too beautiful for her to bear. *sobs*
Also, death by chocolate? I could die like that. *hearts Pterry*
Susan and Death break my heart:
WOULD A LITTLE SMALL TALK HURT?
Susan sighed. She knew what was behind that, and it wasn't a happy thought. It was a small, sad and wobbly little thought, and it ran: each of them had no-one else but the other. There. It was a thought that sobbed into its own handkerchief, but it was true.
And I love how Susan is only mostly logical. Yes, I have much love for Susan. *adds her to the People to Slash Angua With list*
Susan/Lobsang. Time/Wen. How does he do it? Just how does Pterry do it? How do *all* his pairings manage to melt my heart? I mean, the ending? Gah.
Nanny Ogg! *squee* I've missed the witches. I really do need to read Lords and Ladies.
I also have with me Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, by Susanna Clarke. I've heard good things about it (apparently, her footnotes are as good as Pterry's. we'll see), so I'm really looking forward to reading it. As soon as I have time, that is – it's a very fat book. *g*
no subject
Date: 2006-03-29 10:20 pm (UTC)I shall refrain from commenting on Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell until you finish it, but do have a few things to say, so let us know when you get to it :). (It took me three weeks to read - gaah! Most books take three to five days for me.)
no subject
Date: 2006-03-30 05:31 am (UTC)Recommended, then? *g* I want to start it, I want to - but I have a very busy schedule right now, and I have absolutely NO self-control once I start a book. *sigh*
no subject
Date: 2006-03-31 12:24 am (UTC)