Showing posts with label Comical Novel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comical Novel. Show all posts

Writer Event - Terry Pratchett (Chiswick Book Festival)

Hey everyone!

Last week I went to an event organised by the Chiswick Book Festival (link here) in honour of the release of I Shall Wear Midnight (Sept. 2010) written by Sir Terry Pratchett.

I was first introduced to the work of Terry Pratchett when I was at University. I was working on the school's satirical newspaper (the one and only Breadcrumb and Democracy) and one of the other editors of the newspaper was a huge fan. He used to quote him in most of his essays and it became a practical joke. I knew a lot about Pratchett without having read any of his books. Then I read Good Omens and was introduced to the awesomeness of both Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman.

I was really excited to hear him talk and get a book signed (for my friend and myself!) but I have to admit that the talk was rather short (well you would like to hear him talk for hours, wouldn't you!) and the Church where it was taking place was so packed that I could hardly hear anything. So here is a tiny report of what I could manage to hear and some pictures!


There are more than 30 novels in the Discworld series and the Tiffany Aching storyline has, for now, four books:
- The Wee Free Men (2003)
- A Hat Full of Sky (2004)
- Wintersmith (2006)
- I Shall Wear Midnight (2010)


Writing Children's Books for Adults:
Terry Pratchett started writing the story of Tiffany Aching seven years ago and has now made his character age and become an adult. I Shall Wear Midnight is what you would call a children's book for adults since there are adult/tough themes inside.
When he explained his concern to his editor, he/she answered that if he took a look at the YA books published recently, he'd see that the large majority of them are full of serious issues and themes and that basically, youngsters nowadays can take it.
The only difference between writing for adults and writing for children, Terry Pratchett was told, is red hot sex. And he's really bad at writing these things (so he claims - jokingly saying that people blame his wife!). Now when anyone asks him the difference between writing for adults and writing for children, he answers "red hot sex".
He says that for him there are absolutely no differences in the writing process between his books because fantasy is uni-age. Anyone can read fantasy from very young to very old and even though they might not read exactly the same thing, they will certainly enjoy it just as much.
Many journalists pointed out that there were a lot of real things and serious issues in I Shall Wear Midnight. "Why, yes of course" answered Terry Pratchett. He said that the presence of serious themes didn't take out the comical aspect of the novel since the contrary of serious is not serious and the contrary of funny is not funny, so you can write about a serious subject and still be funny (it sounds way funnier when he says it :) ).


How He Writes:
Terry Pratchett has no idea how he writes. He feels that a blank page is perfect because nothing has come to spoil it yet.
For Nation, for instance, the story felt like a disease. He had had the idea years before but he considered it bad timing to write it at that moment because the Tsunami had just happened and he felt uneasy about the whole thing. He said that it was a disease because it took all of him for more than six months. He had had the idea for a long time and had even researched the subject and it all suddenly came back to him. He said he had never put so much in a book.
Some parts of I Shall Wear Midnight also mean a lot.
There were a few questions on writing from the public, and Terry Pratchett explained that it was very important to understand characters and know where they come from to write. He also talks about the importance of increasing one's own experience of the world (travelling in places and also figuratively in history/future, people, economic/social circumstances...) but also make a place where "the ideas are light".


How He Started:
He said that school never taught him to like reading and education (I have to agree on this one, I only became a consistent reader only after I left school). Schools should teach children to become adults, but that's hardly what they do according to Terry Pratchett. He has no faith in the education system.

When he was younger he found a small job in a library and started reading all the comedy authors of all styles. He read Punch magazine with all the different kinds of humour, satire in English language. He was inspired by all of them.
By reading, he 'caught' vocabulary and started asking himself the good questions like "What kind of sound does blue make?" and wrote The Colour of Magic (first Discworld book) which is mainly a gag book.


On Humour:
There was a question from someone in the public (I am going to put the person's intervention because I was highly shocked and it will explain Terry's answer: the young woman asked how he managed to write funny lines because (wait for it) when she wrote it was a sort of Lord of The Rings for girls and it wasn't funny at all - I am not even kidding). He stressed the difference between wit and humour where humour comes from interaction or a misunderstanding in the book. You don't need to think about it, humour comes naturally.
Humour is also about understanding different circumstances (youth, working classes, poor people, etc...). He said that a great book to understand these different circumstances was Henry Mayhew's London Labour and the London Poor (1851). The book is set in roughly the same time as Charles Dickens books and presents a world so incredible that you wouldn't even imagine it, almost like a fantasy world.



That's it I'm afraid! It was an amazing event and Terry Pratchett is very funny and dedicated to reading, writing and sharing with people. He wanted to spend more time with us so it really was a pleasure to see someone so viscerally passionate about his work.

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies - Jane Austen and Seth Graham-Smith

How can you resist the temptation to read a book that is half (ok way more than half) Jane Austen and half zombie ?

The plot is very similar to the one in the original Pride and Prejudice, since Seth Graham-Smith used the Austen book and added to it zombie fiction. In a parallel period as Regency-era England, a plague has made life completely ruled by the existence of the undead. They roam the countryside and people in villages and cities live secluded. Men know how to fight but women are expected to stay at home. Mr Bennet, having had only daughters, disagrees with this vision and teaches his daughters martial arts. 


~~~~~~~~~~~~


This book is entirely awesome !

I understand if some people feel uneasy thinking that books like these (since others have arisen ever since like Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters) are ruining the original masterpieces. And since you simply don't touch Jane Austen. 

But this book doesn't ruin the original story as much as it emphasizes it. Seriously. I feel that Elizabeth's badass attitude in the zombie version gives justice to her character in a way that Jane Austen could have never written in the 1800.
And I will say something for which all Jane Austen fans will instantly behead me as part of an atrocious ceremony: it totally makes sense ! And if you have read a few of my reviews you'll know that no matter how crazy a plot is, as long as it makes sense, I'm a fan. Seth Graham-Smith has taken Pride and Prejudice and added the zombies and it makes sense. It is as if the book was made to receive the zombie treatment (ok I'm officially on the Jane Austen fan club hitlist now). Or maybe I just have a very personal sense of humor...

There are so many hilarious sentences in this book, twisted from their original sense, that I can't even quote anything, you'll just discover it while reading. Plus there are some very cool illustrations in the book. But that's just because I think zombie is the new trendy.

So I would definitely advise this book to people with a sense of humour (zombie in particular), with a zombie passion and with a liking for strong heroines. But also to the fans of Jane Austen since  it gives you the opportunity to reread the book in a new light. *dodging a bullet* No seriously, you'll love it ! *dodging a hammer* Okay okay, Jane Austen can choose not to read it !

Funny Fact: at the end of my edition, there is a Reader's Discussion Guide, and I feel obliged to share with you the last question because it made me laugh so much:
Some scholars believe that the zombies were a last-minute addition to the novel, requested by the publisher in a shameless attempt to boost sales. Others argue that the hordes of living dead are integral to Jane Austen's plot and social commentary. What do you think? Can you imagine what this novel might be like without the violent zombie mayhem?

*grinning* I LOVE this book !


Cheers guys, have a good Friday !