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Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2003 5:04 pm
by bob k. mando
according to FantasticFiction pratchett's first book was actually
The Carpet People published in 1971. The Dark Side of the Sun didn't come out until 76.
[bob scratches head]
man, it looks like i've got a lot of stuff to read there...
Posted: Sat Sep 20, 2003 6:28 am
by Superenigmatix
Ah yes forgot about that one
Although the Carpet People you can get now is not the one originally published as he 'polished' it a great deal before the re-release many years later when he was famous for Discworld. That's probably why I overlooked (he says to save embarrasment!)
and yep BKM it's worth reading

Posted: Tue Sep 23, 2003 4:45 pm
by bob k. mando
and yep BKM it's worth reading
gah, as if i didn't have enough to do, what with having to work for a living again and all.....
Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2004 4:21 am
by Kvetch
I think DSotS and Strata are great, but some of his short stories are better (you can find several on the lspace web
http://www.co.uk.lspace.org/books/index.html )
If you can find a copy of the Turntables of Night or Troll Bridge you should treat them as gold dust. I have been looking for years.
The best is the sea and little fishes
Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2004 4:43 pm
by bob k. mando
The Green Man from Widdershins
since no one else has taken a shot at it i'll give it a go but if i did read this book it was when i was ~12 or so.
widdershins is a term meaning to go around something in a counter-clockwise fashion, commonly used to describe the ceremonial practises of witches.
'The Green Man', eh? i seem to remember a book that had to do with the (olde?) english countryside in which the giant figure of a man was inscribed in the side of a hill and which was brought to life (awakened) by the protagonist. what the protagonist intended or what the 'Green Man' actually did, i forget.
Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2004 9:38 pm
by KiltanneN
bob k. mando wrote:since no one else has taken a shot at it i'll give it a go but if i did read this book it was when i was ~12 or so.
widdershins is a term meaning to go around something in a counter-clockwise fashion, commonly used to describe the ceremonial practises of witches.
'The Green Man', eh? i seem to remember a book that had to do with the (olde?) english countryside in which the giant figure of a man was inscribed in the side of a hill and which was brought to life (awakened) by the protagonist. what the protagonist intended or what the 'Green Man' actually did, i forget.
I'll give a sherlock for the correct answer here - There are 2 parts to the answer - and sorry BKM you have not got either one...
kilt
Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2004 9:48 pm
by jweb
bob k. mando wrote:'The Green Man', eh? i seem to remember a book that had to do with the (olde?) english countryside in which the giant figure of a man was inscribed in the side of a hill and which was brought to life (awakened) by the protagonist. what the protagonist intended or what the 'Green Man' actually did, i forget.
That occurred in the story "A Midsummer Night's Dream" (found in
The Sandman: Dream Country, by
Neil Gaiman). He opened a doorway to Fairyland in the hillside.
Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2004 10:04 pm
by bob k. mando
no, i may not be on kilty's track but neil gaiman's 'Sandman' is definitely not what i was thinking about. the book i'm talking about was a text juvenile(?) that i read somewhere about or even before 1980.
there may well have been a 'green man' in 'dream country' that wasn't the Swamp Thing but i don't remember all of the issues. yes, i do have the entire run from the first issue to the last.
kilty
and sorry BKM you have not got either one...
yeah, if it's something written by pratchett i'm virtually certain that i've not seen it.
Posted: Fri May 14, 2004 4:42 pm
by Kvetch
wasn't the green man from widdershins the protagonist (his body had been reconstructed with green stuff, and he lived on the planet widdershins)
Or have I totally misinterpreted the question? - I'm off to read it now
Posted: Fri May 14, 2004 9:29 pm
by KiltanneN
Kvetch wrote:wasn't the green man from widdershins the protagonist (his body had been reconstructed with green stuff, and he lived on the planet widdershins)
Or have I totally misinterpreted the question? - I'm off to read it now
1 out of 2 parts here is pretty good.
The Green Man from Widdershins refers to a person from Widdershins and his body is green because it has been reconstructed in some kind of green soup stuff.
The Protagonist had this done - his body was almost totally destroyed by an artificial gravitic anomoly. [A somewhat esotoric form of assasination] However he was not from Widdershins himself - he was just lucky enough to be shot at with a black hole on the one planet which he had some chance of recovering...
At one point our hero makes a side comment to the effect that most people assume that a Green Man is from Widdershins - it's not always the case but they would mostly be right.
So - I will duly bump your Sherlock score by one
kilt
Posted: Sat May 15, 2004 6:34 am
by Kvetch
I reread it last night, and noted the passage:
Now the sinistrals of widdershins had night-black skin, no body hair, a resistance to skin cancers and UV tolerant eyes. By mere chance, too, half of them were lefthanded.
Was this what you were looking for ? I noted it because of my lefthandness list - I didn't even consider a connection untill just now.
you are wrong you know - Dom Sabalos WAS a widdershine - he was part of the ruling family.
It was widdershins that developed googoo (the green stuff)
Posted: Thu Mar 10, 2005 5:43 pm
by Jenevieve
I believe that it was the only book by Terry Pratchett that I have ever been unable to finish.
Posted: Thu Mar 10, 2005 6:34 pm
by Kvetch
I know what you mean, I think, - it gets quite metaphysical, in a way the rest of his books don't.