Pratchett, Terry: (05) Sourcery

I remembered exactly three things about Terry Pratchett’s Sourcery, which was up next in the Discworld re-read (it was a brain-rest between reads of The Sacred Band, the last Acacia book): it was a Rincewind book, it was about the eighth son of a wizard, and it was a Dungeon Dimensions plot. Which is to say, almost nothing.

Turns out, I’d even forgot that we didn’t own it; I must’ve thought so poorly of it that I didn’t pick up a UK paperback when I was building my library on a London study-abroad. (For those buying Pratchett in ebook now: the edition I bought is by Transworld Digital, is apparently a re-issue, and is definitely nicer than the HarperCollins ones that the NYPL has.)

At any rate. My memory was accurate enough as far as it went, though there wasn’t very much Dungeon Dimensions relative to the rest of the book (which is good because as mentioned before, not my thing). But there were four things I hadn’t remembered which it seems worth noting now:

First: holy cliffhanger, Batman. How did I forget that?!

Second: Lord Vetinari is named as the Patrician here, and is basically himself though not present very much.

Third: the portrait of the wizards here is kind of peculiar. On one hand, here is our introduction to Unseen University:

A kind of spring had even come to the ancient University itself. Tonight would be the Eve of Small Gods, and a new Archchancellor would be elected.

Well, not exactly elected, because wizards didn’t have any truck with all this undignified voting business, and it was well known that Archchancellors were selected by the will of the gods, and this year it was a pretty good bet that the gods would see their way clear to selecting old Virrid Wayzygoose, who was a decent old boy and had been patiently waiting his turn for years.

The Archchancellor of Unseen University was the official leader of all the wizards on the Disc. Once upon a time it had meant that he would be the most powerful in the handling of magic, but times were a lot quieter now and, to be honest, senior wizards tended to look upon actual magic as a bit beneath them. They tended to prefer administration, which was safer and nearly as much fun, and also big dinners.

And then there’s the first time we see a group of wizards:

Another reason for the general conviviality was the fact that no one was trying to kill anyone else. This is an unusual state of affairs in magical circles.

The higher levels of wizardry are a perilous place. Every wizard is trying to dislodge the wizards above him while stamping on the fingers of those below; to say that wizards are healthily competitive by nature is like saying that piranhas are naturally a little peckish. However, ever since the great Mage Wars left whole areas of the Disc uninhabitable, wizards have been forbidden to settle their differences by magical means, because it caused a lot of trouble for the population at large and in any case it was often difficult to tell which of the resultant patches of smoking fat had been the winner. So they traditionally resort to knives, subtle poisons, scorpions in shoes and hilarious booby traps involving razor-sharp pendulums.

At which point I made a “huh?” face, because while these are not strictly, literally inconsistent, well, they really sit very oddly together.

(Becca suggests, in a post with book-destroying spoilers, that this tension is deliberate, which I think is plausible yet poorly-managed if so.)

Fourth: the narrative travels to Klatch, which at this point is fantasy cliche Arabia (caliphs, evil viziers, magic carpets, slave markets, etc. etc.). It didn’t strike me as awful as opposed to eyebrow-raising, but this is an area where my antennae for problematic things here are not as finely tuned. In any event, I look forward to Jingo, which has to be an improvement.

Anyway. Has some good bits, but very minor Discworld.

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Durham, David Anthony: (01) Acacia (re-read); (02) The Other Lands

In preparation for the conclusion of David Anthony Durham’s Acacia trilogy, I re-read the first two books, Acacia and The Other Lands. I previously reviewed Acacia at some length over at Tor.com, and don’t have much to add now except that it does start a little slow and obvious, which makes the time-jump of several years after the first section all the more welcome.

I read The Other Lands not too long after it came out and then stalled badly on a review. I’ve just finished a re-read and will again try to do it some justice, especially since I’ve promised myself I can’t start the third (now out) until I wrote this one up.

As much as I liked Acacia, I think I like The Other Lands more, except insofar as it’s not nearly as standalone. Instead, it ends on the pause when everything’s been set up and is about to come crashing down: by my count, we are now poised on the verge of two world-spanning conflicts and one at-least-continent-spanning one. And yet the book still strikes me as faster-paced and more full of the fantastic than the first, so the happenings on the way are not static exposition.

(The prose style still tends somewhat toward exposition, and I’m not sure it’s best suited for some of the more delicate character work that’s being attempted. This is mostly an issue with regard to Corinn, regarding whose characterization I remain very nervous. Also, I’m not sure if I was supposed to find Melio as much as a jerk as I did.)

It’s also broader than the first book, not just in visiting the Other Lands (which are of course not Other to those who live there) but the characters we’re introduced to: more women, non-elites, queer people (not that they would self-identify as such). Also, SFF writers, take note: if you have already shown the full range of human skin colors in your story, then you may introduce beast-people without making your readers worry that you are taking the massively problematic step of substituting beast-people for humans of darker skin color.

If the theme of the first was stories and history, the theme of this one is children: existing, expected, unexpected, hoped-for, lost, prohibited. It is so universal that, I admit, on the re-read I occasionally felt like I was being hit over the head with it. (A very important note: Mena’s method of birth control does not work for humans in our world. But then, the attentive reader realized in Chapter One that human physiology is not the same there, when Corinn is said to have given birth after more than a year of pregnancy.)

Anyway, if you remotely liked the first, you should like The Other Lands. And it ends on such an amazing last couple of pages that it’s taken a real effort to wait to write this post before starting the next one. Now, it’s time to see if I think the series sticks the landing. Watch this space.

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Chabon, Michael: Gentlemen of the Road (audio)

I was halfway through the audiobook of Michael Chabon’s Gentlemen of the Road, narrated by Andre Braugher, when I just stopped listening for no specific reason that I can remember now. It’s not particularly long and I had a good bit of driving over the last couple of days, so I went back to the start and finished it this morning.

This is known as a fun historical adventure tale in the pulp tradition (it was originally published in serialized form). It certainly has a great setting, 10th century Khazaria (now southwest Russia), and plenty of the classic swashbuckling elements (well, okay, I have no idea if elephants are part of that tradition, but if not, they should be).

However, unlike apparently everyone else in the world, I found this ultimately a bittersweet, somewhat melancholy experience. The narrative is keenly aware of the constraints that its characters live under, and while its ending is as happy as it could be—or perhaps even a bit more so, really—somewhat perversely, that had the effect of highlighting just how the narrow the scope of that ending was, and how much I would have liked it to be different.

I was also disappointed in Braugher’s reading on this listen, finding it faster and flatter than I would have liked. However, when someone gets to deliver dramatic dialogue, he unsurprisingly does very well.

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Pratchett, Terry: (03) Equal Rites (re-read), (04) Mort

Continuing the Discworld re-read; I missed posting about Equal Rites in time for Becca’s post, but I am ahead on Mort!

I don’t have much to say about Equal Rites, having re-read it moderately recently. In relation to the first two books, Cutangle feels way more like Ridcully than I’d remembered; Unseen University isn’t anywhere near the complex institution it will be yet, but in this and the next book, there are hints of its direction. (Institutions are a big thing in later Discworld books, and it’s interesting to see the starts toward that.) But, basically, my reaction to Equal Rites: Dungeon Dimensions plots still not my thing, and I desperately want more Esk than we have had to date.

Mort surprised me because I’d forgotten that we start “Death goes human” plots this early; as much as I love Hogfather, I wouldn’t have thought the series could sustain so many of those stories. (Maybe it can’t! I guess I’ll find out.) It feels very Discworld in its characters, but its ending strikes me as remarkably weak and unsatisfying—not just the blatant plot handwave but Death’s reaction that sets up the final confrontation. I liked it pretty well until then, though.

Finally, this is the first major-character romance in Discworld and it is as non-emotional to me as every other one until Unseen Academicals. (I originally wrote “unconvincing,” which this one is, but later ones I don’t find implausible, they just don’t create any emotional reactions in me.)

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