Heroic Journeys on (and Under) Discworld

Last Hero (1)I was feeling like some Terry Pratchett recently, and elected to read The Last Hero.  This one is described as “A Discworld Fable,” and is shorter than most of the other books–and it’s beautifully illustrated!

The story centers around Cohen the Barbarian and his friends, the greatest heroes Discworld ever knew…some sixty years ago.  They’ve grown old, and are decidedly unhappy about it.  They set out on the ultimate final quest, to the mountain-top home of the Discworld gods, with enough explosives to blow the mountain up–creating a chain reaction that will destroy all of Discworld.  Meanwhile in Ankh-Morpork, the wizards of Unseen University and Lord Vetinari assemble a team to stop Cohen, relying on the technical genius of Leonard of Quirm, who devises the first ever ship designed for flying outside the Disc.

The plot is a bit convoluted, with a lot of players, but suffice to say we get lots of satire of traditional hero stories, with some space travel satire thrown in.  And the real brilliance is that we get it all with Pratchett’s wonderfully hilarious characters and wit.

My favorite part may be all the excellent plays on hero story tropes, especially as we see them through Evil Harry.  He’s a Dark Lord Cohen and company know from way back, who joins forces with them here–warning them that of course he’ll have to double-cross them eventually, because that’s how things are done.  He’s also very proud that he found the stupidest henchmen possible (because Dark Lords always have stupid henchmen…) and takes comfort from the rule that the Dark Lord always escapes mysteriously at the end.

The best part, perhaps, is that Cohen and his friends all agree that Evil Harry knows the rules, and none of them can fathom the young people these days who don’t understand how things should be handled.

This is a fun one for Discworld fans, because we get a lot of regular characters putting in appearances.  Rincewind and Carrot go with Leonard on the journey, lots of wizards feature, and even Death gets a cameo.  He’s in the middle of trying to understand Schrodinger’s Cat, and never quite grasps the metaphor–but doesn’t approve of the whole business, as he doesn’t hold with cruelty to cats.

Last Hero (2)

This is also excellent just for the gorgeous illustrations.  They’re beautifully-drawn and frequent, throughout the whole book.  I do love a beautifully-illustrated book for grown-ups every now and then!

If you’re new to Discworld, the rule is always, “jump into the series wherever you feel inclined.”  Considering this one is short, covers a lot of major characters, and has gorgeous illustrations, it wouldn’t be a bad choice…

Author’s Site: http://www.terrypratchettbooks.com/

Other reviews:
Science Fiction and Fantasy Book Reviews
Losing It
Things Mean a Lot
Anyone else?

Buy it here: The Last Hero: A Discworld Fable

Saturday Snapshot: Novel Proof!

I’ve mentioned a time or two 😉 that I have a novel coming out…and we’re getting close!  Launch Date, November 15th, is less than a week away!  The Wanderers will be available in paperback and ebook.  Ebooks aren’t so easy to photograph, so today I’m sharing pictures of the paperback.  Technically this is the final proof, but it’s what the published book will look like too…

Wanderers (3)Wanderers (4)Wanderers (1)Wanderers (2)Every writer I know agrees that the arrival of the proof is one of the most exciting parts of the process…suddenly it’s all real! 🙂

I hope you have a wonderful weekend–and you can visit West Metro Mommy for more Saturday Snapshots.

Blog Hop: Scheduling Memes and Reviews

book blogger hopThis week’s Book Blogger Hop question: When you are out of town, do you still participate in weekly memes or do you have your post scheduled to appear on your blog and perhaps check back? Or do you not participate at all?

Handling memes while out of town isn’t too challenging for me, because all the memes I regularly participate in are ones I can easily prepare ahead of time.  With only the occasional exception, I schedule all my blog posts (for instance, I’m writing this on a Monday…)  You may have noticed they all publish at the same time of day!  Scheduling ahead lets me avoid the stress of needing to do last-minute writing, which for me works much better.

Anyway, the challenge when I’m out of town isn’t putting the memes on my blog, but getting my post linked on the host blog.  Sometimes I link up very early before I leave town, or use my smart phone later.

So all that adds up to–yes, I do generally still participate while traveling.  It’s not as much fun, of course, because I usually don’t have time/opportunity to interact with the other participants…but I can still be involved a bit by posting.

Anyone else who’s run into this?  What’s your strategy on memes-while-traveling?

Addendum: So it turns out I misread the schedule, and answered last week’s question!  Meaning you’re getting a double-feature today…  This week’s question is: Do you post your book reviews as soon as you have completed the book or do you wait a few days?

As noted above, I don’t post hardly anything immediately.  The more relevant point may be whether I write the reviews as soon as I finished the book or wait, and…I don’t have a definitive answer.  Often I wait a few days until I have a convenient space to write up a review.  Sometimes I’m so inspired that I write a review immediately.  Other times books sit around for a couple of weeks before I get around to writing the review.  Oddly, it doesn’t seem to have much to do with how much I enjoyed the reading…

So–how do you schedule your writing and/or posting?

The Magician’s Nephew

I have been meaning for ages to reread C. S. Lewis’ Narnia series…in part because Jessica keeps reviewing them!  I have such a stack of other books, though, that I kept not getting to them, until I finally hit on the idea of audiobooks–which should have been obvious to me, considering my first Narnia experience was when my dad read them to me as a kid.  So I just listened to The Magician’s Nephew, read by Kenneth Branagh, and am very happy to say that the story was even more delightful than I remembered.

Set chronologically before The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, this installment gives the origin story for certain elements of the later novels, and provides a Narnia creation story.  That said, it’s largely stand-alone, apart from a few references at the end along the lines of “and so this led to that and much resulted, but that’s quite another story…”  This story is about Digory, his friend Polly, and his Uncle Andrew, a rather nasty man who has been dabbling in magic.  Uncle Andrew has devised magic rings which he believes will send people to another world, and tricks Polly and Digory into taking the trip.  They reach the magical Wood Between the Worlds, and venture first into dying Charn, where they meet the evil Empress Jadis, and then into Narnia, on the day of creation.

Digory and Polly fit in amongst Lewis’ collection of child heroes, imperfect but basically good, generally courageous and honorable though apt to falter at times in a very human and believable way.  They provide a solid center to the story, while the surrounding characters are in some ways more complex.

Uncle Andrew is wonderfully painted in his egotism and cowardice, so sure of his own inherent greatness but so obviously a petty, narcissistic man.  Jadis shares some of Uncle Andrew’s narcissistic tendencies, but is clearly in a class all her own for sheer cruelty and coldness.  Once Jadis arrives on the scene, Uncle Andrew shrinks dramatically as a villain, so obviously upstaged by the real villain.  Lewis does something rather brilliant in that, as soon as Uncle Andrew loses power as a villain, he’s turned into a comedic figure instead, equally effective in that role.

I madly loved the setting of this book–all the settings, actually.  I don’t know how Lewis resisted doing an entire extended series just centered around the Wood Between the Worlds.  I mean, it’s an endless forest full of pools of water, and each pool goes to another world.  And we only went through three pools, counting the one to our world.  The untapped possibilities!

And then Charn was just fascinating.  Lewis has never before reminded me of Tolkien (though I hadn’t read Tolkien before either…) but Charn with its enormous marble edifices, apparently ancient history, and epic battles, reminded me of Middle Earth (less trees, though).  It had a similar quality of existing on an unimaginably epic scale.

I loved the creation of Narnia too.  How lovely to have a world spring into being through a song!

Just when everything was getting very solemn and epic and sweeping, when it might have become a little too much–it didn’t, because there’s a wonderfully funny episode of Narnia’s newly-created animals trying to decide what ought to be done with the raving Uncle Andrew.  They aren’t quite sure if he’s an animal or a tree…

If you’re thinking about starting Narnia, you could begin here (and if you’re thinking about the audio, Branagh was excellent).  It’s listed as #1 in a lot of editions, since it is first chronologically.  However, I think you’d be better off starting with The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, for the sake of all those “and then it led to other adventures” references.  But once you’ve read Lion, I don’t see any need to go through the next several books, in their original publishing order, before reading the very delightful Magician’s Nephew.

Other reviews:
The Bookworm Chronicles
Sonya’s Cannonball Read
Stray Thoughts
Here There Be Books
Kristina Yarn
Anyone else?

Buy it here: The Magician’s Nephew

November News and RIP VIII Wrap-up

Here we are at the beginning of November…with all sorts of things happening today!

It’s the third anniversary of Tales of the Marvelous.  Thank you to all of you for making blogging so much fun for the last three years!

It’s the beginning of NaNoWriMo (that’s National Novel Writing Month).  I participated for the last two years, but I’m skipping this year, so that I can concentrate on publishing (!) and because I need to work on revising existing drafts for a while, instead of starting new ones!  Huge good luck to all the intrepid writers going on the NaNo journey this year.  Sending lots of good writing vibes!

RIP8main400And it’s time to wrap-up the Readers Imbibing Peril experience!  It’s been a fun two months of shadowy reads and especially of shadowy movies.

I read most of the books I planned on, although I never got to Doyle and Christie–but I did get a couple other spooky reads off my TBR list.

The surprise of the event was movies.  I didn’t have any plans along those lines, but I watched Sunset Boulevard on a whim near the beginning of September…which put me in a Hitchcock mood (even though it isn’t Hitchcock) and then I found myself on a Hitchcock/film noir kick!

So here’s what I wound up with:

Peril on Screen:

Did you enjoy some shadowy reading or viewing this year?  I’d love to hear about it!

And meanwhile, I’ll be starting to stack up my sci fi for January’s* Science Fiction Experience… 🙂  See you there!

*Correction: change this year, December’s!