Guards! Guards!
Aug. 30th, 2008 09:52 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Today I finished listening to Guards! Guards! by Terry Pratchett, while doing exercises. Then I listened to a good part of it again, while cooking. Then I listened to it as an audio-play, thanks to a tip by
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Loved it - Pratchett just gets better and better as I continue. I hadn't read any of the City Guard books before, but I knew from friends that Vimes was worth reading about.
Observations:
- It made me cry several times, but the best time was near the end, when Carrot was writing home to his mother, and said, "I think this is like happiness."
- Loved the scene where Vimes faces the attacking mob with Errol: "Do you feel lucky?"
- I was sure either Carrot or Vimes was the real heir of the kings.
- Loved the Patrician and the Librarian. How is it that Pratchett's best characters are the most ruthless ones?
- On the other hand, I loved Lady Sybil too, and she wasn't ruthless. She was sweet. I used to know a woman just like her. (Only without the dragons.)
- I thought there was something weird about the scenes with the Dragon who became King. It wasn't till I got to the end, I realized it was because Pratchett was avoiding using a pronoun in reference to the King. I think. Don't have the written text to check.
- I loved it whenever Vimes said, "Not in my city."
- The story, and the character of Vimes, is exactly what I most love in a story: the down-and-outer who becomes heroic, but who never considers himself a hero. The sense of team- and family-building is a good part of it, too. (Other examples: Captain Jack Harkness, Francis Crawford, Sydney Carton. In a skewed sort of way, the Doctor fits the pattern, too.)
- But the best thing, the very best thing of all, was a bit of word-play that encapsulated the whole plot and theme. When we first meet drunken Vimes, he's thinking, "The city is a woman." When we get to the end of the story, he looks at Lady Sybil and thinks, "This woman is a city." Brilliant, absolutely brilliant, bringing it all to a sort of inverted full circle, thematically and emotionally for Vimes.
Eager now for the next book. Bring 'em on.
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Date: 2008-09-03 03:27 am (UTC)Your observations are very insightful & making me want to go reread some Pratchett. :)
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Date: 2008-09-03 11:16 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-03 03:17 pm (UTC)