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  woensdag 29 september 2010 @ 19:57:50 #241
66444 Lord_Vetinari
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pi_86993537
Terry was recently interviewed by the BBC for their Meet the Author
series to talk about I Shall Wear Midnight.

You can see the interview at:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-11170374

============

Terry's daughter Rhianna is set to write the screenplay for her
first feature film, a London-based drama about a group of female
vigilantes, to be produced by Simple Productions.

http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=SCREEN162

=============

Terry recently recorded a radio interview with Radio New Zealand
where he talks about PCA.

http://podcast.radionz.co(...)ry_Pratchett-048.mp3

==============

Terry was also interviewed by the BBC 5live about being Britain's
biggest niche author.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/5live/2010/09/terry-practchett.shtml

================

In an open letter to The Guardian, Terry is one of many celebrities
that felt that the recent visit of the Pope to the UK should not be
funded by UK tax payer:

We, the undersigned, share the view that Pope Ratzinger should not be given the honour of a state visit to this country. We believe that the pope, as a citizen of Europe and the leader of a religion with many adherents in the UK, is of course free to enter and tour our country. However, as well as a religious leader, the pope is a head of state, and the state and organisation of which he is head has been responsible for:

Opposing the distribution of condoms and so increasing large families in poor countries and the spread of Aids.

Promoting segregated education.

Denying abortion to even the most vulnerable women.

Opposing equal rights for lesbians, gay, bisexual and transgender people.

Failing to address the many cases of abuse of children within its own organisation.

The state of which the pope is head has also resisted signing many major human rights treaties and has formed its own treaties ("concordats") with many states which negatively affect the human rights of citizens of those states. In any case, we reject the masquerading of the Holy See as a state and the pope as a head of state as merely a convenient fiction to amplify the international influence of the Vatican.

Stephen Fry, Professor Richard Dawkins, Professor Susan Blackmore, Terry Pratchett, Philip Pullman, Ed Byrne, Baroness Blackstone, Ken Follett, Professor AC Grayling, Stewart Lee, Baroness Massey, Claire Rayner, Adele Anderson, John Austin MP, Lord Avebury, Sian Berry, Professor Simon Blackburn, Sir David Blatherwick, Sir Tom Blundell, Dr Helena Cronin, Dylan Evans, Hermione Eyre, Lord Foulkes, Professor Chris French, Natalie Haynes, Johann Hari, Jon Holmes, Lord Hughes, Robin Ince, Dr Michael Irwin, Professor Steve Jones, Sir Harold Kroto, Professor John Lee, Zoe Margolis, Jonathan Meades, Sir Jonathan Miller, Diane Munday, Maryam Namazie, David Nobbs, Professor Richard Norman, Lord O'Neill, Simon Price, Paul Rose, Martin Rowson, Michael Rubenstein, Joan Smith, Dr Harry Stopes-Roe, Professor Raymond Tallis, Lord Taverne, Peter Tatchell, Baroness Turner, Professor Lord Wedderburn of Charlton QC FBA, Ann Marie Waters, Professor Wolpert, Jane Wynne Willson

[ Bericht 36% gewijzigd door Lord_Vetinari op 29-09-2010 20:12:51 ]
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  woensdag 29 september 2010 @ 20:00:01 #242
66444 Lord_Vetinari
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pi_86993640
Diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, bestselling fantasy novelist Terry Pratchett reserves the right to choose his time of death before the disease can kill his mind – and to go out writing.

Sir Terry Pratchett has just forged a sword. He has also just slain a dragon. The “life imitates art” principle can yield odd results when you write fantasy.

At 62, Pratchett is in his third decade as a top-tier bestselling writer – I am using “top-tier” as shorthand for “sales sufficiently high in the millions that the precise figure matters only if Stephen King wants to keep score” – and early-career comparisons to PG Wodehouse have given way to ones to Charles Dickens. He was knighted in 2009. And as well as the sword he made himself, there are two others in his life: the one hanging over his head, and the one he believes he should be allowed to throw himself on some day.

Pratchett made his Alzheimer’s diagnosis public not long after he learnt of it himself in 2007. Earlier this year, he was invited to give the BBC’s annual Richard Dimbleby lecture; he used the occasion to announce his desire to be allowed to die before the disease can kill his mind and leave his body an empty husk. These are the subjects I most want to discuss with him, and he is demonstrably willing to discuss them, but the first three times I open my mouth to initiate that conversation the duck-for-cover reflex takes over. I ask about the sword he made instead. Was there anything … symbolic about his decision to go out into a local farmer’s fields, find some ore, dig it up, smelt it into high-grade iron in a kiln made from the clay in his own garden, and hammer out an edged weapon?

Of course there wasn’t. “If you need to ask why I did it, you wouldn’t understand the answer. I just thought, ‘Okay, I’m a knight now. I want to make a sword!’”

Which you might imagine would be significantly more easily said than done; but in fact it was just a matter of finding the necessary loonies.

Pratchett is very fond of loonies. “The right kind of loony, by which I mean the kind of people who are open to life, the people who will pick up an idea and run with it. People who are squeezing the last drop out of the fun of being human.”

In this case, a brief chat with an artisan friend turned up the names of a swordsmith and an international expert in iron-age smelting methods, who enthusiastically launched themselves into the project. “I said, ‘Look, there’s no way you can teach me to be a swordsmith, but I would like to help you sufficiently that I can say I was involved in every part of this.’ No individual part was particularly difficult; most of what we were doing was just belting things very hard with a hammer … the trick is to do it in the right place.”

The end product is sufficiently authentic that Pratchett can’t legally wear it in public. It has a gleaming blade and a gorgeous hilt made of black horn and silver, which was the only part Pratchett couldn’t work on himself. “That’s serious high-end craftsman stuff. I used to work very well with gold when I was younger, but with PCA I don’t think I’d have trusted myself even with silver.”


PCA: posterior cortical atrophy, Pratchett’s rare form of early-onset Alzheimer’s. “And let’s cut to the chase here, because sooner or later you’re going to ask me about it. It bugs me when people get bashful about this; I mean, for heaven’s sake, I stood there and told people I’ve got it. Which itself was a pretty good way of fighting it.”

All forms of Alzheimer’s ultimately end the same way, but PCA – which Pratchett describes dryly as “one of the better ones to get, lucky me” – initially manifests as a disruption of complex visual processing. “Anything to do with topology becomes problematic. If I took off my shirt and tossed it on the floor like most men do, it would take me a bit of studying to get the sleeves right again before I could put it on. And I might need someone to tell me whereabouts on the floor it was, even if I was looking right at it.”

His short-term memory is shot to pieces. “I’ve already forgotten your name.” He can’t drive. “Because my eyes are fine, but I could be coming up to a zebra crossing and the PCA would give a little flutter, and my brain wouldn’t post up the message ‘there is a girl on the crossing’.” Public toilets are a hazard, because the only difference between the door to the men’s and the door to extreme embarrassment tends to be a picture. “To make certain, and I’ve never done it yet, that I never go into the wrong one, I have a mnemonic, which is Always Go into the One Which Shows the Woman in the Slacks, Not the Scotsman in the Kilt. Because that’s so stupid, I remember it.”

http://www.listener.co.nz(...)die_another_day.html
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  woensdag 29 september 2010 @ 20:06:38 #243
66444 Lord_Vetinari
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pi_86994010
Terry was recently interviewed by SFX magazine in the UK. Some of
the questions that didn't make it into the magazine were published
on their website including one where Terry had to teach a swearword
to his dictation software:

The Discworld author chats to SFX on many other topics including how to teach the word “arsehole” to a computer

SFX is on sale now for just one more week. In it you’ll find an interview with the hugely popular novelist – and one-time guest editor of SFX - Terry Pratchett, in which we put your questions to him. But we spent a lot of time with Sir Terry this summer, and here are some of the other fantastic things we talked about:


Sir Terry Pratchett

‘My head is full of so much stuff I read as a kid! Remember all the names it would be unthinkable to leave out of any list of greats. Asimov, Clarke, Heinlein, Philip K Dick. And then there are people like Jack Vance who used to move backwards and forwards between science fiction and fantasy, although it was all written in the same tone of voice. The Dying Earth was very, very influential because he kind of invented a lot of the language that fantasy was written with subsequently. I read JRR Tolkien aged about 13 I think, but I had read many other things before him!’

‘Stories are based on other stories, that’s what we all do. And if everybody is stealing off everybody else then it all works quite well. Because what happens is that stuff is bouncing around and getting better, as people explore how to do things! Even Dungeons & Dragons changed the language of fantasy because they wanted to do certain things – and then writers were influenced by D&D. Everybody influences everyone else – it’s better to say that than “stealing”…’

On dictating his novels

‘At the moment it’s a wee bit difficult to listen to music when I work because I have to dictate to the computer, my typing is so bad now. I use Talking Point, which goes on top of Dragon Naturally Speaking.’

‘It learns you – not the other way round. I spent 45 minutes reading from a book. Arthur C Clarke as it happens, probably a bad choice in the circumstances! Uncle Arthur is difficult to read aloud. He’ll put in equations! The software knows what all those words in that piece should sound like. It knows that’s how you pronounce the syllables. I’ve got a voice like David Bellamy with his hand stuck in an electric fire, but it knows how I pronounce particular syllables. Then we dumped all my Discworld books into the computer over night and it chewed them up and it has algorithms which enable it to work out broadly what most of the words would sound like. Simply because it knows how certain letter formations are supposed to sound. The upshot is that seldom do I have to introduce it to a new word. I had to teach the computer the word “arsehole”. Typed it in, highlighted it, and repeated “arsehole” about three times.’

‘It has it’s funny little ways. I try not to go too fast for it, because if it gets something wrong going all the way back to change something can be a bit of a pain. I speak in long thoughtful sentences. It’s fine, it feels natural, you learn to play it.’

On looking after his famous hats

‘I did a signing once in a little town where you might not normally sign. It was a self-sufficient little place. And the bookshop had been a haberdashery and gents outfitters initially and it still had, in the manager’s office, the hat stretching machine! And I just had a new hat and it was slightly tight. I offered to buy the machine off him but he didn’t want to sell it – but he did bring it down, and while I was signing I got the hat on it, and every now again I gave it a little twist. You don’t want to burst it! Just a little turn. I told the local paper’s photographer that seeing all these people was making me so swollen-headed that I’d better make my hat larger!’

On book tours of America

‘My first US publisher gave me bad covers, bad printing, my name spelt wrong on every other page… you couldn’t give my books away in the US! I’d be going to conventions and I’d have huge queues… with people having their British hardcovers signed. Things started to change when I got Ralph Vicinanza as my agent.’

‘Early American tours worked like this: you go from one city to another by yourself, and you’re picked up by a minder when you arrive at the city. And the minder knows the bookshops and places where you’re going to do your signing, and at the end of the day they just decant you back onto the plane. Once you’ve got through check-in you’re by yourself! I always thought, “This is ridiculous. It means if anything goes wrong after that, if the plane’s delayed, I’m stuffed.” About 1996 I did a signing tour from hell, absolutely nothing to eat, most of the time flying from hub to hub, getting into hotels late and finding no help.’

‘But later, with a new agent, new editor and new publisher and new covers, the books began to move. In 2000 they invited me to come over for another book tour, and that worked incredibly well. The worst leg of the 2000 signing tour was better than the best leg of my previous 1996 experience. Seattle has always been a great gig for me. Always. I always get the most people there, more than New York! The bookshop that does it, run by Tall Dwayne, always just draws the customers in from the whole of the state. Microsoft people from Redmond perhaps! The US generally is now very good for me. I was WorldCon guest of honour a couple of years ago in America and the fans were superb.’

On the inspiration for standalone book Nation

‘I came up with the idea about six months before the first big Asian tsunami. And that’s on record because I have a witness! Sarah LeFanu (who wrote a book on how to write science fiction and fantasy) introduced me when I did a signing in Waterstone’s one time. And it was on the day that I said, “I’ve got to write this book!” and she said, “Sounds great, hope you do it.” And she’s my witness that I didn’t base Nation on the terrible 2004 tsunami. It’s all based on Krakatoa of course – there are certain similarities. After the tsunami I put it on one side for a while because I didn’t want people to think I was taking advantage. And then that lasted for about a year or so and I thought, “To hell with this I’ve got to get it down.” I just identified with it in some way! I don’t quite know why. Mau is such a good character, you spend all the time in his head, and you know that this kid is one step away from actually going insane – that’s good material to work with.’

Thank you Terry!

http://www.sfx.co.uk/2010(...)nd-swearing-at-a-pc/
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  woensdag 29 september 2010 @ 20:09:00 #244
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_86994132
Sir Terry Pratchett is one of the world's most successful authors. He talks to John Gilbey about auto-didacticism, the tyranny of higher education and whether writers are born, not made

Terry Pratchett - Sir Terry Pratchett, creator of one of fiction's premier higher education establishments - didn't go to university.

"University would have been an absolute tragedy for me," he confides. "I would have found out about beer far too early."

He is the architect and author of the immensely popular Discworld novels (38 titles to date) and has sold more than 65 million books. Discworld is a complex, surreal and yet intriguingly familiar environment where few things reliably are what they seem. A central setting in the series is that venerable academic institution, Unseen University, whose wizard- infested precincts are to be found - or, occasionally, not to be found - in the twin city of Ankh-Morpork.

"UU", as it is known to its myriad fans, appeared in the first Discworld novel, The Colour of Magic, in 1983.

"Why did I write it? Because I thought fantasy was getting silly," Sir Terry says. "So since it was getting silly, somebody who was silly should start to write fantasy - because I got fed up with the post-Tolkien stuff. You know: 'Ho, landlord! A pint of your finest ale!' No one ever says that who is not on drugs ... And so I said, let's write fantasy as if the people are actually real - even if the situations are not."

Since UU first appeared, it has got through an embarrassing number of arch-chancellors, often in distinctly messy and deeply terminal ways, but now it has gained a level of stability under the firm hand of crossbow-toting Mustrum Ridcully.

"It started off as your basic wizarding thing, but you simply know, as a given, that the head wizard has got to be a man with some punch - they are such a rowdy lot. The reason Ridcully has been there so long, and not been knocked off like they used to be in the early days, is that I like him because he is big and brusque, a kind of James Robertson Justice character, but maxed ... ".

But if Sir Terry never went to university, where does he get these memorable - and utterly believable - academic characters and scenarios?

"I worked for the Central Electricity Generating Board - so I know how committees work, and I know how committees can be manipulated - generally around the time the chocolate biscuits turn up.

"Probably these days", he adds with regret, "there are no more chocolate biscuits - because we are all 'tightening our belts'."

The wrangling that goes on in academic committees certainly forms a strong thread through the novels - and once even appeared in the pages of Times Higher Education ("A collegiate casting-out of devilish devices", 13 May 2005), when UU was threatened with the implementation of a quality assurance process.

Another painfully familiar line of narrative is the rather strained relationship between UU and the upstart Brazeneck College in the city of Pseudopolis. This tension came dramatically to a head in the last few pages of his recent novel, Unseen Academicals (2009).

"I liked writing the end where, of course, Brazeneck - I'm very pleased with Brazeneck - has poached people and is trying to muscle in, but it hasn't quite understood everything that it has picked up and now it has this giant chicken running around the place," he says. The chicken is 70ft tall and lays eggs 9ft high.

This flock-up was probably caused by a lack of experience among the staff of the Higher Energy Magic Building at Brazeneck - and provides the arch-chancellor of UU with an excellent platform to demonstrate the preeminence of his staff.

Sir Terry assumes the voice of Ridcully: "We are going to help a fellow university, of course, as we would obviously do - but we are going to let them get a little further in the cacky before doing so ... ".

So does Sir Terry have any views on the current state of higher education in the non-fantasy world?

"Yes, I think we should cut away at it a bit," he says. "I think that when we lost the secondary moderns, we lost our way in dealing with students - first of all, they were thought of as 'students' - and now we seem to believe that everyone will benefit from a university education. They don't, a lot of them - it's a waste of bloody time.

"I think, if a kid in his teens would like to be a fireman, you don't say to him: 'Ah, but you could be an opera singer.' Well, if he hasn't found that out by then, let him go and be a fireman - for heaven's sake, we know we need firemen. And if this kid is good at going up ladders and stuff, well, he is doing a job he wants to do - and that means he will be a happy person and that is going to add to the gaiety of nations."

Inevitably, the reverse is also true.

"We now have lots of people with university degrees who don't think they are doing the jobs they should be doing - because they have got a degree. They haven't quite realised that, tough shit, this was just a way of fiddling the employment figures: 'Did you think that you were going to come out with a career?'"

Sir Terry is keen to remind us that there are other models.

"One of the happiest guys I've ever known was a brickie. One day, he said he wouldn't be in for two weeks as he was going on holiday. I said: 'Where are you going?' He said: 'Oh, I'm going to Egypt. I like scuba diving among the sunken temples in the Red Sea - I've been doing a lot of mapping and that.' It's great! This is a happy man - he had his choices, and I don't think the kids are offered choices now."

To Pratchett, the "choice" facing teenagers is a binary one.

"You either get into university or you don't - and I don't know how you don't get into university - probably by just hanging on to a stanchion and yelling: 'I don't want to go!' We seem to think that 'one size fits all'."

He appears slightly bemused by some of the effects this thinking has had.

"Near where I live is an area with a lot of coppices - old hazel coppices. And just as there were when I first started going there, there are hurdle makers. The only difference is that the hurdle makers in the old days were elderly men with moleskin trousers and their lunch in a pail; these days they are men who have gone through tertiary education. I have a suspicion that they probably tried teaching - and ran away very fast ... ".

Sir Terry's own education was based largely on his passion for reading. "Somehow I kind of shut school out of my mind - but I read absolutely every damn bloody book I could get my hands on."

He has fond memories of one of his first sources of science fiction books.

"It was an old shed, with just a window that you couldn't really see through, where a nice old lady dispensed tea and conversation - and sold eye-watering pornography ... ".

Her sideline was second-hand science fiction, which is what she supplied to the young Pratchett - possibly her one legitimate customer. Many leading science fiction authors have since confirmed to him that "the science fiction bookshop in any town is next to the porno bookshop, or somewhere where ladies of negotiable affection hang out".

When he was 17, Sir Terry left school for a writing job on the local newspaper.

"I think I probably would always have gravitated towards arranging words in order, but I never took any writing courses or anything like that - because working on a newspaper is itself a writing course. In fact, one of the best things any writer can do is work for a while on a local paper. All human life - and death - is here. It is a great shame that there are fewer and fewer local papers."

He recalls his first editor with affectionate amusement: he was apparently "the last person on God's Earth ever to utter the words 'I like the cut of your jib, young man' without being arrested".

Much of his reading over the past few decades has been non-fiction, a great deal of it very old - long-forgotten tomes with titles such as Anecdotes of the Great Financiers - but he has also found time to read every edition of Punch published between 1860 and 1960, a true labour of love. "It amazes me how many words I know - and occasionally use - which are now totally archaic," he says.

His intensely pragmatic approach to learning is graphically demonstrated by a project he recently undertook. Being newly knighted, he felt that he ought to be suitably equipped.

"At the end of last year I made my own sword. I dug out the iron ore from a field about 10 miles away - I was helped by interested friends. We lugged 80 kilos of iron ore, used clay from the garden and straw to make a kiln, and lit the kiln with wildfire by making it with a bow."

Colin Smythe, his long-term friend and agent, donated some pieces of meteoric iron - "thunderbolt iron has a special place in magic and we put that in the smelt, and I remember when we sawed the iron apart it looked like silver. Everything about it I touched, handled and so forth ... And everything was as it should have been, it seemed to me."

As I wrestle with glorious mental pictures of Sir Terry Pratchett ambling through the fields of Wiltshire, sword at his side, we turn to the vexed question of whether creative writing can truly be taught.

"Throughout my career I've pondered on that," he says. "Sometimes I've thought: 'Huh! Creative writing: how can you teach that?' But now, as I get older, I think I'm less certain. There are some people who find out in their late 70s that they are actually good at it - it is finding out what you can do.

"I think you can help someone with the makings of a writer get better. I don't know if you can get someone who isn't in their bones a writer and turn them into one. I would stand to be corrected because I don't want to be dogmatic on this. Where can these theories be tested?"

The profession of writing itself has an almost timeless quality about it, he says.

"I've always thought that the Bible, for example, was written by people like me: smart enough to get a good job in the warm with no heavy lifting."

Once again, images start to crowd into my mind - this time with Sir Terry inserted into an oil painting of the Council of Nicaea, animatedly editing screeds of text on sheets of vellum.

Before any further mental visions can take hold, I ask Sir Terry what the future holds for UU.

"Well, Unseen University is like a jewel - and so you bring it out only rarely. The whole bunch of hoary old wizards arguing with one another - you can't keep that going. It's the same as not using Death too often as a major character."

Until it is needed then, UU will quietly go about its business - until it is taken out again and polished.

"Unseen University, you see, is more or less self-financing - and Unseen University will never die!"

Referring for the first time during our conversation to his very public battle with Alzheimer's disease, he concludes: "Everything now is hinged on my own personal run-time, but I'm pretty certain I shall finish the book I've now started."

He mentions, almost in passing, that he is also writing his autobiography - "because it is always a good idea to get the lies down in print before your enemies actually print the truth". Somehow, I think that it will be well worth reading.

http://www.timeshigheredu(...)storycode=413455&c=1
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  woensdag 29 september 2010 @ 20:14:30 #245
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_86994422
The first Dutch Discworld Convention takes place at Hotel NH
Atlanta in Rotterdam on 28th - 29th May 2011.

Contact details: www.dutchdwcon.nl

For further information contact: info@dutchdwcon.nl
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  woensdag 29 september 2010 @ 20:16:18 #246
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_86994530
Meditations upon the arrival of a new Discworld book

By Helen Nicholls

I was expecting it, of course. I'd been told that my limited
slipcase edition of I Shall Wear Midnight had been despatched.
However, it was still a surprise to see the innocuous Amazon package
waiting on the doorstep. The postman, unable to fit it through the
letterbox, had deemed it unnecessary to ring the doorbell. Just a
book after all. Nothing a passing delinquent might consider worth
stealing.

I opened the package and examined its contents. It's a beautiful
thing: green, with a smaller version of Paul Kidby's delightful
cover art placed discreetly on the front. The additional bit on
folklore by Jaqueline Simpson is contained in the main volume.
Perhaps I'll ask her to sign it as well as Terry. If Terry's still
signing.

I flick through it, wondering where I can find the additional
illustration but stop, fearing I'll happen upon a spoiler. I glance
at the folklore bit instead, but that may also contain clues. I want
to read it but there are things I should do. More to the point, once
I start I will struggle to put it down and that will not do.

I should be looking for jobs, or working on my dissertation. I need
to finish repainting the kitchen units too. None of those things are
urgent and they are mere excuses not to read. The real reason for my
procrastination is that once I start, it will consume me until I
finish. As a good book should. But I will finish quickly, it's a
kids' book after all. Then it will be gone. Oh, I'll re-read it,
more slowly and carefully but without the thrill that comes with the
first reading.

It's sitting on the sofa now. I'll pick it up in a minute, really I
will. There is only one thing for it; I'll open the book.

I sometimes enjoy books more on second reading anyway.
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  woensdag 29 september 2010 @ 23:57:59 #247
64670 Dagonet
Radicaal compromist
pi_87006043
Thanks L_V
Op woensdag 24 sept. 2008 schreef Danny het volgende:
Dagonet doet onaardig tegen iedereen. Je bent dus helemaal niet zo bijzonder als je denkt...
Mijn grootste bijdrage aan de FP.
pi_87058963
quote:
Op woensdag 29 september 2010 20:09 schreef Lord_Vetinari het volgende:
"because it is always a good idea to get the lies down in print before your enemies actually print the truth".
http://www.timeshigheredu(...)storycode=413455&c=1
Prachtig ^O^.
  donderdag 4 november 2010 @ 06:14:40 #249
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_88314382
Trinity College Dublin has recently announced the appointment of Sir
Terry Pratchett as an Adjunct Professor in their School of English
and Oscar Wilde Centre and are offering tickets to see Terry's
inaugural speech on 4th November 2010.

See http://pjsmprints.com/news/ for all the details.

Routledge journals recently recorded a podcast at the Discworld
Convention in Birmingham of Sir Terry in discussion with Jacqueline
Simpson (who co-authored his book "The Folklore of Discworld"). In
the podcast (which is of some length!) Sir Terry and Jacqueline
discuss Folklore, history and the impact this has had on his life
and writing.

To listen to the first part of the podcast visit:
http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=PODCAST163

----------

Terry's coat of arms and description can be found in The College of
Arms newsletter number 26 at:
http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=ARMS163

The description reads:

The Arms are blazoned: Sable an ankh between four Roundels in
saltire each issuing Argent.

The Crest is Upon a Helm with a Wreath Argent and Sable On Water
Barry wavy Sable Argent and Sable an Owl affronty wings displayed
and inverted Or supporting thereby two closed Books erect Gules.

----------

Terry has been awarded one of the three World Fantasy Lifetime
Achievement Awards for 2010 (the other recipients being Brian Lumley
and Peter Straub). The award was presented on 31 October at the
World Fantasy Con in Columbus, Ohio.

Further details about the Awards can be found at
http://www.worldfantasy.org/awards/

----------

Stephen King's agent, Ralph Vicinanza, recently died at the age of
60. Ralph was also involved in getting Terry published in the US.

http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=RALPH163

----------

The US military are trying to make million to one shots happen nine
times out of ten with their investment into One Shot Technology.

In an article titled 'Terry Pratchett computer sniper-scope deal
inked', The Register describes the new sniper technology.

http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=1SHOT163

----------

There is an interesting review of I Shall Wear Midnight at:
http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=MIDNIGHT163

----------

Hot off the rumour mill is the news that Disney may be looking to
adapt MORT in a couple of years time. According to Latino Review
the adaptation could be coming from directors Ron Clements and John
Musker who last released The Princess and the Frog and are about to
release Pooh in 2011.

More details at: http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=MORT163
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
pi_88328027
Bijna door Unseen Acadamicals heen. Altijd weer een strijd, ik kan hem niet neerleggen en lees elke vrije minuut van de dag een stukje, maar ik baal ook altijd als een stekker als ik weer bijna door een boek heen ben. Volgens mij is dit de op een na laatste Discworld die ik nog niet had gelezen, ;(.

Het valt me overigens wel op dat hij inderdaad een stuk vrijer over seks is gaan schrijven. Ik kan er goed om lachen, maar het is wel echt minder preuts dan eerdere boeken.
  donderdag 4 november 2010 @ 15:20:10 #251
73232 De_Hertog
Aut bibat, aut abeat
pi_88328128
quote:
Op donderdag 4 november 2010 06:14 schreef Lord_Vetinari het volgende:
Hot off the rumour mill is the news that Disney may be looking to
adapt MORT in a couple of years time. According to Latino Review
the adaptation could be coming from directors Ron Clements and John
Musker who last released The Princess and the Frog and are about to
release Pooh in 2011.
Tenzij ze radicaal van stijl veranderen vind ik dit niet echt goed nieuws.. :P
Mary had a little lamb
Then Mary had dessert
pi_88328268
Ben nu bijna door Night Watch heen :P , nouja ben nu bij dat stuk waar ze barricades maken en verplaatsen. Verder heb ik dus Mort gelezen, en de Colour of Magic, en die waren echt zo veel anders dan dit :o

Maar dat maakt me wel weer benieuwd naar alle andere boeken :P
pi_88328537
In de loop van de jaren is mijn voorkeur uitgegaan naar de Watch boeken. Veel Vimes, veel Vetinari. Angua is ook geweldig.

Ik ben ook erg benieuwd naar Mort. Ik vond Hogfather prima te doen maar The Colour of Magic heb ik afgezet, die was echt te kut.
pi_88329909
quote:
14s.gif Op donderdag 4 november 2010 15:31 schreef picodealion het volgende:
In de loop van de jaren is mijn voorkeur uitgegaan naar de Watch boeken. Veel Vimes, veel Vetinari. Angua is ook geweldig.

Ik ben ook erg benieuwd naar Mort. Ik vond Hogfather prima te doen maar The Colour of Magic heb ik afgezet, die was echt te kut.
Heb je Going Postal al gezien, die vond ik stukken beter dan CoM, Hogfather heb ik nog niet gezien, want ik wil eerst het boek lezen.
Want ik heb destijds besloten, dat ik de harde weg ontwijk.
Dus blijf ik lopen door de sloten, het liefst in zeven tegelijk.
BZB - Zeven Sloten
pi_88332317
quote:
1s.gif Op donderdag 4 november 2010 16:13 schreef FrankRicard het volgende:

[..]


Heb je Going Postal al gezien, die vond ik stukken beter dan CoM, Hogfather heb ik nog niet gezien, want ik wil eerst het boek lezen.
Ik wist niet dat daar een film van was. Boek was geweldig in elk geval, die ga ik eens checken.
  donderdag 4 november 2010 @ 20:40:58 #256
272858 suikertaartje
strikingly unconventional
pi_88340242
quote:
11s.gif Op donderdag 4 november 2010 17:11 schreef picodealion het volgende:

Ik wist niet dat daar een film van was. Boek was geweldig in elk geval, die ga ik eens checken.
Ik vond hem echt geweldig :@ :Y
ils qui sont décédés
ne sont pas partis
ils sont seulement invisibles
  donderdag 4 november 2010 @ 21:33:26 #257
1135 Neelix
Fok!fossiel
pi_88342850
quote:
Op donderdag 4 november 2010 15:17 schreef picodealion het volgende:
Bijna door Unseen Acadamicals heen. Altijd weer een strijd, ik kan hem niet neerleggen en lees elke vrije minuut van de dag een stukje, maar ik baal ook altijd als een stekker als ik weer bijna door een boek heen ben. Volgens mij is dit de op een na laatste Discworld die ik nog niet had gelezen, ;(.

Dat heb ik ook ja. Ik ben nu de laatste Tiffany aan het lezen en het is zo genieten om die te lezen...maar ook weer zo ontzettend jammer als ik hem dan straks uit heb... :)
  donderdag 4 november 2010 @ 21:42:13 #258
272858 suikertaartje
strikingly unconventional
pi_88343270
quote:
1s.gif Op donderdag 4 november 2010 16:13 schreef FrankRicard het volgende:

Heb je Going Postal al gezien, die vond ik stukken beter dan CoM, Hogfather heb ik nog niet gezien, want ik wil eerst het boek lezen.
Vond je die beter of ook echt goed?
Ik heb hem nog liggen maar ik durf niet zo goed..altijd bang dat de film niet klopt bij de beelden in mijn hoofd :@
ils qui sont décédés
ne sont pas partis
ils sont seulement invisibles
pi_88343812
quote:
5s.gif Op donderdag 4 november 2010 21:42 schreef suikertaartje het volgende:

[..]



Vond je die beter of ook echt goed?
Ik heb hem nog liggen maar ik durf niet zo goed..altijd bang dat de film niet klopt bij de beelden in mijn hoofd :@
Ik vond hem heel goed. Bijna exact zoals ik het verhaal voor mij zag.
  donderdag 4 november 2010 @ 21:53:40 #260
272858 suikertaartje
strikingly unconventional
pi_88343946
quote:
1s.gif Op donderdag 4 november 2010 21:51 schreef Xessive het volgende:

Ik vond hem heel goed. Bijna exact zoals ik het verhaal voor mij zag.
Oh, dan durf ik wel, dankje!
Had je dat toevallig ook bij Hogfather?
ils qui sont décédés
ne sont pas partis
ils sont seulement invisibles
pi_88344413
quote:
1s.gif Op donderdag 4 november 2010 21:53 schreef suikertaartje het volgende:

[..]



Oh, dan durf ik wel, dankje!
Had je dat toevallig ook bij Hogfather?
Hogfather was een slap aftreksel van het boek.
  donderdag 4 november 2010 @ 22:02:59 #262
272858 suikertaartje
strikingly unconventional
pi_88344439
quote:
1s.gif Op donderdag 4 november 2010 22:02 schreef Xessive het volgende:

Hogfather was een slap aftreksel van het boek.
Dan durf ik helemaal :D
ils qui sont décédés
ne sont pas partis
ils sont seulement invisibles
  vrijdag 5 november 2010 @ 17:03:48 #263
165164 Tha_Bartman
And so it goes.
pi_88370560
Vorige week op het station the colour of magic gekocht, na een hoop goede dingen over Pratchett te hebben gehoord.

Ben benieuwd of ik het lezen zelf ook leuk ga vinden.
Rich Hall:Everybody says that the wheel is the greatest invention ever but i think it was the 2nd wheel.... have you ever seen a guy on a unicycle, what an asshole." _O_
  vrijdag 5 november 2010 @ 17:47:00 #264
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_88371877
Maar weer eens de waarschuwing dan:

COM is niet echt representatief. Pratchett moet daar zijn stijl nog vinden. Pas vanaf Mort! (mijn mening :P ) komt Discworld goed op gang.
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
pi_88373569
Mort is ook prima los te lezen. Allemaal uiteindelijk wel, maar met name de Watch en Rincewind verhalen vind ik leuker om in volgorde te lezen omdat je dan veel meer meekrijgt van de grappen en de algehele verhaallijn.
  vrijdag 5 november 2010 @ 21:52:30 #266
165164 Tha_Bartman
And so it goes.
pi_88381598
quote:
Op vrijdag 5 november 2010 17:47 schreef Lord_Vetinari het volgende:
Maar weer eens de waarschuwing dan:

COM is niet echt representatief. Pratchett moet daar zijn stijl nog vinden. Pas vanaf Mort! (mijn mening :P ) komt Discworld goed op gang.
Mijn excuses dat het wederom gezegd moet worden dan :P

In dat geval ga ik Mort ook maar eens een kans geven, nadat ik deze gelezen heb :) Kan ik daar dan zo in beginnen zonder de anderen te lezen?
Rich Hall:Everybody says that the wheel is the greatest invention ever but i think it was the 2nd wheel.... have you ever seen a guy on a unicycle, what an asshole." _O_
pi_88384770
quote:
1s.gif Op vrijdag 5 november 2010 21:52 schreef Tha_Bartman het volgende:

[..]

Mijn excuses dat het wederom gezegd moet worden dan :P

In dat geval ga ik Mort ook maar eens een kans geven, nadat ik deze gelezen heb :) Kan ik daar dan zo in beginnen zonder de anderen te lezen?
Small Gods. O+
  zaterdag 6 november 2010 @ 09:12:51 #268
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_88393852
quote:
1s.gif Op vrijdag 5 november 2010 22:52 schreef Xessive het volgende:

[..]



Small Gods. O+
Mijn absolute bottom-favoriet. Ik vond er niks aan, heb deze ook, als enige, hoogstens een keer of 4 gelezen.
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
pi_88413658
quote:
1s.gif Op zaterdag 6 november 2010 09:12 schreef Lord_Vetinari het volgende:

[..]



Mijn absolute bottom-favoriet. Ik vond er niks aan, heb deze ook, als enige, hoogstens een keer of 4 gelezen.
Smaken verschillen. Deze staat voor mij op een gedeelde eerste plaats met The Thief of Time.
pi_88414515
Ik heb het al vaker gezegd in deze reeks, maar ik raad dus altijd Guards! Guards! aan om mee te beginnen.
Want ik heb destijds besloten, dat ik de harde weg ontwijk.
Dus blijf ik lopen door de sloten, het liefst in zeven tegelijk.
BZB - Zeven Sloten
pi_88423815
quote:
1s.gif Op zaterdag 6 november 2010 21:34 schreef FrankRicard het volgende:
Ik heb het al vaker gezegd in deze reeks, maar ik raad dus altijd Guards! Guards! aan om mee te beginnen.
Is dat die met Carrot? Dan weet ik het niet hoor! Maar ik heb er ook nog niet veel gelezen :D
pi_88454486
quote:
1s.gif Op zaterdag 6 november 2010 21:04 schreef Xessive het volgende:

[..]
Smaken verschillen. Deze staat voor mij op een gedeelde eerste plaats met The Thief of Time.
Ja, dat vind ik ook, deze twee.

Ik lees ze eerst in het engels, maar zou daar te veel voor moeten opzoeken (door dyslexie moeite met het woordbeeld dat telkens uit elkaar valt), dus met de nodige hummmmms ertussendoor. Na een tijdje heeft de bieb ze in het nederlands en dan lees ik een iets ander verhaal.

Een van de boeken van de dood, vermoedelijk Maaierstijd, heb ik aan iemand opgedrongen die erg bang was voor de dood, een soort bang zijn om het bang zijn. Het heeft geholpen, daarna kon ze beter onderscheiden waar ze echt bang voor was.

Geld moet wapperen is duidelijk nieuwe stijl, hij kan niet meer zo complex schrijven. Niet meer het scherpe, zelfs de vertaler kan er maar weinig extra's in bijproppen. Het bezwaar van de nieuwe stijl is, dat Vetinari net een mens begint te worden en sommigen op gelijk niveau bejegend. Dat kan niet, hè?
pi_88454968
Geheel niet mee eens, ik vond Making Money juist erg sterk. Vetinari is inderdaad iets milder maar dat maakt hem alleen maar geweldiger vind ik.
  maandag 8 november 2010 @ 09:57:42 #274
1135 Neelix
Fok!fossiel
pi_88464105
quote:
14s.gif Op zondag 7 november 2010 22:36 schreef picodealion het volgende:
Geheel niet mee eens, ik vond Making Money juist erg sterk. Vetinari is inderdaad iets milder maar dat maakt hem alleen maar geweldiger vind ik.
Dat vind ik ook. Vetinari wordt alleen maar slimmer en gehaaider neergezet, maar ook menselijker en dat maakt hem een veel interessanter personage.

Overigens vind ik "I shall wear midnight" echt briljant tot nu toe. Dat scherpe zit er helemaal in, en Tiffany wordt duidelijk ouder en volwassener.
Maar misschien komt dat ook omdat ik echt fan ben van de Nac Mac Feegles ;)
pi_88494778
Het wordt steeds gewoner. Er wordt erg veel gestroomlijnd, wat een interessant proces is, en zo krijg je stap voor stap een bijna gewone stad/gemeenschap. Een menselijke Vetinari klopt niet in het zeer riskante Disc World-ratjetoe
pi_88694944
Going Postal is echt een leuke film! Ik vond Reacher Gilt niet helemaal zo gecast als ik me had voorgesteld, Vetinari eigenlijk ook niet echt, maar voor de rest was de cast echt voortreffelijk. Heel erg jammer dat Angua ( O+ ) maar zo'n klein rolletje had.
pi_88695030
quote:
1s.gif Op vrijdag 5 november 2010 21:52 schreef Tha_Bartman het volgende:

In dat geval ga ik Mort ook maar eens een kans geven, nadat ik deze gelezen heb :) Kan ik daar dan zo in beginnen zonder de anderen te lezen?
pi_88769398
Netjes. Meestal beschrijven ze de Moist von Lipwig serie als de "Ankh Morpork series" omdat ze over de ontwikkelingen in de stad gaan, maar heel vernuftig hoe ze hier Monstrous Regiment ertussen hebben kunnen krijgen door het "Industrial Revolution" te noemen, :P. Toch gaat die meer over emancipatie dan echt industriële revolutie, maar ik zal niet zeuren.
  maandag 22 november 2010 @ 09:43:49 #279
1135 Neelix
Fok!fossiel
pi_89003945
Gisteravond Postal gezien, vond hem erg goed moet ik zeggen.
Er zaten wat kleine afwijkingen van het verhaal in, maar dat is op zich niet zo gek bij een verfilming.

Enige wat me dan wel een beetje stoorde was dat de hele film een aardig budget lijkt te hebben voor van alles en nog wat, maar dat er dan flink bezuinigd is op de Golems. Er zijn er in totaal 6 verschillende te zien ofzo, maar er zijn maar 2 of 3 versies van het pak, beetje slordig vond ik dat.
  donderdag 25 november 2010 @ 09:00:09 #280
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_89125796
Last month we mentioned rumours that Disney will be making an
animated version of Mort in a couple of years time. This month I
have heard as yet unconfirmed reports that a live action version of
Good Omens may be on the cards. This however would be a new
adaptation and wouldn't have anything to do with the production
previously associated with Terry Gilliam, Robin Williams and Johnny
Depp.

============

Last month we mentioned that Terry had become an adjunct Professor
at Trinity College Dublin University. Terry's inaugural lecture was
recorded and can now been seen on YouTube at


============

The organisers of the 2011 North American Discworld Convention have
created a new Flash game called Feegle Frenzy which you can play
from their website. It is based around a scene in I Shall Wear
Midnight.

You can give it a go at: http://www.nadwcon.org/feeglefrenzy.html

=============

Going Postal has been nominated in the 2010 Royal Television Society
Craft and Design Awards. The awards take place on Wednesday 24th
November.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-11716447

(L_V: Ik zal kijken of ik ergens de uitslag kan vinden :P )

=============

Terry was awarded a lifetime achievement award at the inaugural
Galaxy National Book Awards on 10th November. Terry is quoted as
saying: "I'm amazed, you find something that you like doing and do
well and keep on doing it and suddenly they give you an award, when
all I was really doing was having a lot of fun."

http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=GALAXY164

=============

Has NASA found the Discworld? The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope
has imaged a striking galaxy called NGC 4452, which appears to lie
exactly edge-on as seen from Earth. The result is an extraordinary
picture of billions of stars observed from an unusual angle. The
bright nucleus can be seen at the centre, along with the very thin
disc that looks like a straight line from our unusual viewing
position. To complete the picture, a hazy halo of stars on the
periphery of the galaxy makes it seem to glow.

http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=DISCWORLD164

===============

En zowaar iets wat voor NL-fans wel aardig is:

[NL, New] Mort is being performed at Het Fijnhout Theatre, Amsterdam
on the 2nd - 4th and 8th - 11th December at 20.00. It will be
performed by the In Players, Amsterdam's oldest English-speaking
amateur theatre company.

Tickets are 12 Euro / 10 Euro (students, CJP, Stadspas) and can be
reserved by email to reserveren.fijnhouttheater@combiwel.nl or via
filling in a reservation form on: http://www.hetfijnhout.nl

http://www.inplayers.org

================

En een reminder:

[NL] The first Dutch Discworld Convention takes place at Hotel NH
Atlanta in Rotterdam on 28th - 29th May 2011.

Contact details: www.dutchdwcon.nl

For further information contact: info@dutchdwcon.nl

Iemand van plan hierheen te gaan? Iets voor een FOK-Pratchett-meet?
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  donderdag 25 november 2010 @ 09:00:43 #281
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_89125802
Hogswatch komt eraan, dus tijd voor een Hogswatch taart:

Hogswatch cake

Recipe by Freya Anduin, Denmark

Ingredients:

* 250 grams ordinary raisins
* 150 grams currants
* 200 grams candied orange peel (like Dr. Oetker's)
* 200 grams chopped, dried apricot
* 100 grams chopped dark chocolate pref. 70-80%
* 1 teaspoon cinnamon
* 1 tsp ground ginger
* 1 tsp ground allspice
* 1 tsp ground cloves
* 100 grams chopped, peeled almonds
* 100 grams chopped hazelnut
* 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
* 1 decilitre whisky plus extra
* 250 grams soft butter (leave out overnight, let fall out of
package and use the paper to grease the pan)
* 200 grams dark muscovado sugar (mush it with your fingers to be
sure there are no rock hard clumps to take out granny's teeth)
* 4 medium sized egg
* 200 grams wheat flour (not self-raising or anything)
* Icing from 400 grams icing sugar and pure lemon juice (no water)

Day one:

Cut up the apricot and put this and the peel, currants and raisins
in a container with the whisky, close tightly and put in the fridge
overnight.

Day two:

Mix butter and sugar very well. Add one egg at a time and mix well
between (yes, it does go sort of grainy). This can be done with a
mixer.

Add the dry bits and mix well. Discard the mixer and find a very
strong spoon. Mix in the wet bits. (Your mixer will not survive
having a go at this).

Put the mix in a pan - maybe a 22x30 cm foil one, well greased. It
can go to the rim as it will not rise. (If you use a foil pan take
it out with the grille as it will collapse under the weight of the
cake if you try to take it out by holding the corners or something.)

Bake at 175 degrees centigrade in the middle of the oven for 45
minutes, using top and bottom heat and no fan.

When out, wait 5 minutes and then splash it generously with some
more whisky - it will absorb immediately. Leave to cool.

When hand temperature tip out on something by holding it over the
pan and turning it over leaving the cake bottom up. Give it another
good helping of whisky. Watch it absorb, it will tell you how much
it can take.

Leave to go cold. Put on the icing and be careful to spread evenly
without damaging the cake.

When the icing is almost set cut it in squares. Big enough to not
crumble but not big ones. (Here you might want to make sure you are
alone - you will not want to share the spoils on the board with
anybody).

Prepare containers with tight fitting lids by pouring in some 2 mm
of whisky in the bottom and put the cake in there and close lids.
Put in fridge till you want to eat them. Take out of fridge in time
to go room temperature before eating.

This is my version of the Christmas Pudding - but being a Dane all
this suet and boiling stuff is not my thing so I made up this baked
version.

And by the way - this cake is not for the kiddies (or AA-members)
and believe me - when you had your first bite, you are in no mood to
share with anyone.

It should keep well in fridge - in theory at least - but I take no
responsibility for how long you will be able to leave it there.

Oh - and go easy on the stuff, ok? There are enough calories in
this to keep an extended family going for about a week. And it costs
just about that much too.

Happy Hogswatch
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
pi_89125997
quote:
1s.gif Op donderdag 25 november 2010 09:00 schreef Lord_Vetinari het volgende:
Hogswatch komt eraan, dus tijd voor een Hogswatch taart:

Hogswatch cake

Recipe by Freya Anduin, Denmark

Ingredients:

* 250 grams ordinary raisins
* 150 grams currants
* 200 grams candied orange peel (like Dr. Oetker's)
* 200 grams chopped, dried apricot
* 100 grams chopped dark chocolate pref. 70-80%
* 1 teaspoon cinnamon
* 1 tsp ground ginger
* 1 tsp ground allspice
* 1 tsp ground cloves
* 100 grams chopped, peeled almonds
* 100 grams chopped hazelnut
* 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
* 1 decilitre whisky plus extra
* 250 grams soft butter (leave out overnight, let fall out of
package and use the paper to grease the pan)
* 200 grams dark muscovado sugar (mush it with your fingers to be
sure there are no rock hard clumps to take out granny's teeth)
* 4 medium sized egg
* 200 grams wheat flour (not self-raising or anything)
* Icing from 400 grams icing sugar and pure lemon juice (no water)

Day one:

Cut up the apricot and put this and the peel, currants and raisins
in a container with the whisky, close tightly and put in the fridge
overnight.

Day two:

Mix butter and sugar very well. Add one egg at a time and mix well
between (yes, it does go sort of grainy). This can be done with a
mixer.

Add the dry bits and mix well. Discard the mixer and find a very
strong spoon. Mix in the wet bits. (Your mixer will not survive
having a go at this).

Put the mix in a pan - maybe a 22x30 cm foil one, well greased. It
can go to the rim as it will not rise. (If you use a foil pan take
it out with the grille as it will collapse under the weight of the
cake if you try to take it out by holding the corners or something.)

Bake at 175 degrees centigrade in the middle of the oven for 45
minutes, using top and bottom heat and no fan.

When out, wait 5 minutes and then splash it generously with some
more whisky - it will absorb immediately. Leave to cool.

When hand temperature tip out on something by holding it over the
pan and turning it over leaving the cake bottom up. Give it another
good helping of whisky. Watch it absorb, it will tell you how much
it can take.

Leave to go cold. Put on the icing and be careful to spread evenly
without damaging the cake.

When the icing is almost set cut it in squares. Big enough to not
crumble but not big ones. (Here you might want to make sure you are
alone - you will not want to share the spoils on the board with
anybody).

Prepare containers with tight fitting lids by pouring in some 2 mm
of whisky in the bottom and put the cake in there and close lids.
Put in fridge till you want to eat them. Take out of fridge in time
to go room temperature before eating.

This is my version of the Christmas Pudding - but being a Dane all
this suet and boiling stuff is not my thing so I made up this baked
version.

And by the way - this cake is not for the kiddies (or AA-members)
and believe me - when you had your first bite, you are in no mood to
share with anyone.

It should keep well in fridge - in theory at least - but I take no
responsibility for how long you will be able to leave it there.

Oh - and go easy on the stuff, ok? There are enough calories in
this to keep an extended family going for about a week. And it costs
just about that much too.

Happy Hogswatch
^O^
PSN: Cidolfas - FFXIV: Cidolfas Windu
pi_89129981
quote:
1s.gif Op dinsdag 28 september 2010 22:42 schreef De_Hertog het volgende:

[..]

In een spoiler voor de mensen die I Shall Wear Midnight nog moeten lezen, de context is belangrijk maar geeft veel weg over het einde:

SPOILER
Om spoilers te kunnen lezen moet je zijn ingelogd. Je moet je daarvoor eerst gratis Registreren. Ook kun je spoilers niet lezen als je een ban hebt.
Het heeft even geduurd, maar ik heb hem ook uit en heb nu pas je spoiler gelezen....ik verwachtte iets veel ergers.... Zeker nadat ik had gelezen wat de Feegles eerder zeiden over wat ze met een schop zouden doen als er nog een in de buurt kwam. Dat vond ik toch veel erger dan het "scheldwoord" wat je hierboven noemde.
pi_89183166
Ik vind de verfilming van Hogfather werkelijk verschrikkelijk.

Doe mij maar gewoon de novels O+
There's no justice, there's just us.
  vrijdag 26 november 2010 @ 15:58:04 #285
151257 Odysseuzzz
U bestaat niet
pi_89183436
quote:
1s.gif Op vrijdag 26 november 2010 15:52 schreef Foals het volgende:
Ik vind de verfilming van Hogfather werkelijk verschrikkelijk.

Doe mij maar gewoon de novels O+
Vond het wel geinig het herkenbare eraan.
Maar idd lang niet zo sterk als het zou moeten zijn. Zelfs de games deden meer recht aan de boeken imo. Niet dat het goed valt te vergelijken.
pi_89760286
quote:
1s.gif Op vrijdag 26 november 2010 15:52 schreef Foals het volgende:
Ik vind de verfilming van Hogfather werkelijk verschrikkelijk.

Doe mij maar gewoon de novels O+
Nou nou, verschrikkelijk...



O+
PSN: Cidolfas - FFXIV: Cidolfas Windu
  vrijdag 10 december 2010 @ 14:34:33 #287
13250 Lod
Sapere aude!
pi_89763372
quote:
1s.gif Op vrijdag 10 december 2010 13:10 schreef Cid het volgende:

[..]

Nou nou, verschrikkelijk...

[ afbeelding ]

O+
Ik zie het probleem ook niet inderdaad :)
GNU Terry Pratchett
  vrijdag 4 februari 2011 @ 09:05:30 #288
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_92310743
Snuff

According to the writer of the best selling crime novel ever to
have been published in the city of Ankh-Morpork, it is a truth
universally acknowledged that a policeman taking a holiday would
barely have had time to open his suitcase before he finds his
first corpse.

And Commander Sam Vimes of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch is on
holiday in the pleasant and innocent countryside, but not for him
a mere body in the wardrobe, but many, many bodies and an ancient
crime more terrible than murder.

He is out of his jurisdiction, out of his depth, out of bacon
sandwiches, occasionally snookered and occasionally out of his
mind, but not out of guile. Where there is a crime there must be
a finding, there must be a chase and there must be a punishment.

They say that in the end all sins are forgiven.

But not quite all...

Published 13th October 2011

Signed copies will be available for pre-order from August 2011 from
http://www.pjsmprints.com/
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  vrijdag 4 februari 2011 @ 09:08:22 #289
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_92310798
The Mob Film Company have officially announced that they will start
filming their fourth Discworld adaptation later this year. This
time around football get the mini-series treatment in their
adaptation of Unseen Academicals.

We look forward to seeing how they cast Vimes, Carrot, Mrs Nutt and
Glenda. Especially with the recent sad news of the death of Pete
Postlethwaite, who Melvyn Grant based his drawings of Vimes on in
Where's My Cow?

----------

The newspaper The Edinburgh Evening News recently ran a story about
the huge backlog of Christmas mail due to the terrible weather
conditions Scotland has recently experienced. It seems a case of
life imitating art: maybe they should invite Moist Von Lipwig over
to help them with the backlog.

Our thanks to Thom Fish for letting us know about this.

----------

Terry was recently awarded the 2011 Margaret A. Edwards Award by The
American Library Association, which honours an author, as well as a
specific body of his or her work, for significant and lasting
contribution to young adult literature.

----------

In The Truth Lord Vetinari talks about people really wanting to read
olds - things like Dog Bites Man. In a case of truth really being
stranger than fiction how about Fox Shoots Man!

The story tells of how a wounded fox fighting for its life
accidentally pulled the trigger of a hunter's gun, wounding the
hunter in the leg.

http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=FOX166

----------

The Guardian has recently published an article about its top 100
books of 2010.

Terry gets mentioned as being at positions 63 and 84. There is a
link at the bottom of the page but it appears to link to a
completely different set of data!

http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=GUARD166
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  woensdag 9 februari 2011 @ 14:34:07 #290
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_92545813
It's time to start taking Alzheimer's more seriously says Pratchett

Dementia is being widely ignored and needs the aggressive action that was taken to tackle HIV, according to a leading Alzheimer’s charity.

Sir Terry Pratchett, who has the disease, said the world ‘still doesn’t take much notice’ of Alzheimer’s and much more funding is needed for research.

The best-selling author, who is patron of Alzheimer’s Research UK, formerly the Alzheimer’s Trust, said an immediate programme of studies into the disease needed to start – similar to that into the Aids virus in the 1980s.

His comments come as a report for the charity shows that for every UK scientist working on dementia, six work on cancer.

A national poll also found that people fear dementia more than cancer or even death.

Sir Terry said: ‘Alzheimer’s is a large number of small tragedies usually played out behind closed doors, so in spite of the numbers living with it, the world still doesn’t take much notice.

‘When the world was shocked by HIV in the 1980s we saw a crash programme of research which has helped tame it enormously. We need the same kind of aggressive action on dementia now.’

The YouGov poll of more than 2,000 people marks the re-launch of the Alzheimer’s Research Trust as Alzheimer’s Research UK.

The charity is asking the public, Government and the private sector to help end years of ‘pitifully low’ investment in research.

Asked what they feared the most, 31 per cent of people surveyed for the charity said dementia, while 27 per cent were most scared of cancer, 18 per cent said death and 7 per cent said going bankrupt.

Dementia costs the economy an estimated £23billion, more than cancer and heart disease combined, says Alzheimer’s Research UK.

The charity’s chief executive, Rebecca Wood, said: ‘Public concern around dementia is at an all-time high, yet dementia research is still the poor relation. We have such brilliant research talent in the UK which could make real inroads into defeating dementia with more support – our brains depend on theirs.

‘Alzheimer’s Research UK is the UK’s leading dementia research charity, and the public has helped us fund hundreds of top scientists, including a record £4.5million of grants last year. Regrettably, charity and Government spending still lags far behind efforts made against other diseases.’

Care services minister Paul Burstow said: ‘Dementia is one of the biggest challenges our society faces. As our population ages we need to better understand the disease if we are to counter its effects more successfully. Research is the key to developing new treatments, transforming care and ultimately to finding a cure for this devastating disease.

‘The Department of Health’s research budget is nearly a billion this year - I want more of that funding to be supporting dementia research. But we can only do that if the number and quality of the research proposals are of the right standard to justify the investment.

‘To help dementia sufferers and their families to benefit, we will help researchers to submit high quality proposals which advance our understanding of care, cure and cause.’

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.u(...)t.html#ixzz1DT6G6JJi
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
pi_92546104
quote:
1s.gif Op vrijdag 4 februari 2011 09:05 schreef Lord_Vetinari het volgende:
Snuff

According to the writer of the best selling crime novel ever to
have been published in the city of Ankh-Morpork, it is a truth
universally acknowledged that a policeman taking a holiday would
barely have had time to open his suitcase before he finds his
first corpse.

And Commander Sam Vimes of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch is on
holiday in the pleasant and innocent countryside, but not for him
a mere body in the wardrobe, but many, many bodies and an ancient
crime more terrible than murder.

He is out of his jurisdiction, out of his depth, out of bacon
sandwiches, occasionally snookered and occasionally out of his
mind, but not out of guile. Where there is a crime there must be
a finding, there must be a chase and there must be a punishment.

They say that in the end all sins are forgiven.

But not quite all...

Published 13th October 2011

Signed copies will be available for pre-order from August 2011 from
http://www.pjsmprints.com/
Blij dat er weer een watch-novel komt. :)

Met de heksen (en dan niet zozeer Tiffany), vind ik de wacht toch wel de tofste verhalen hebben.
Bestiality sure is a fun thing to do. But I have to say this as a warning to you:
With almost all animals you can have a ball, but the hedgehog can never be buggered at all.
  maandag 28 februari 2011 @ 08:44:37 #292
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_93429182
Discworld fans will have not one, but two new Discworld Games to
enjoy in 2011. We mentioned the Ankh-Morpork game last month, the
other is called Guards! Guards! A Discworld Boardgame and is well on
its way to hitting the shelves this summer.

Stephen Player has recently been commissioned to produce the
Illustrations for the game.

The game will be in the shops in June/July 2011.

It will be published by Z-Man Games in the US and will be
distributed by Esdevium Games in the UK & Europe.

The game sees players taking on the role of newly recruited members
of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch. With the Eight Great Spells missing
from the Unseen University the future of the city hangs in the
balance. Each player is tasked to collect and return a number of
the spells to the University before the news of their loss gets out
and chaos ensues.

You can view the artwork for the game's box at:
http://www.discworldmonthly.co.uk/gfx/guardsguardsbox.jpg

---------

Terry did rather well at the recent SFX awards (SFX is an excellent
sci-fi magazine published in the UK) winning awards for best novel
for I Shall Wear Midnight and the SFX Outstanding Contribution
Award. SFX's website includes Terry's acceptance video.

http://www.sfx.co.uk/2011/02/05/sfx-awards-winners-announced/

---------

Do you know what Amigurumi is? No neither did I - apparently it is
the Japanese art of knitting or crocheting small stuffed animals and
anthropomorphic creatures.

It appears that June Gilbank has decided to crochet Great A'Tuin,
the four elephants and the Disc itself. You can see pictures of the
rather cute looking project at:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/planetjune/2766286338/

--------

[NL] The first Dutch Discworld Convention takes place at Hotel NH
Atlanta in Rotterdam on 28th - 29th May 2011.

Program items so far are Premiere for the Netherlands of Going
Postal, a Banquet buffet, a Masquerade and Workshops.

No news about Guests of Honour yet.

Contact details: http://www.dutchdwcon.nl

For further information contact: info@dutchdwcon.nl

-------------
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
pi_93542847
Zijn er hier mensen die naar CabbageCon gaan? Ik zit er nog heel erg over te twijfelen, ik heb namelijk die zondag een cabaretmarathon (zo'n 10 uur cabaret en kleinkunst) en ik denk dat dat voor mij wat veel wordt als ik dan ook zaterdag nog naar zo'n meeting ga.
En ik heb werkelijk geen flauw idee hoe druk het zal zijn... Ergens vrees ik dat het erg rustig gaat blijven, maar ik hoop natuurlijk dat het een groot succes wordt, zodat er volgend jaar ook weer een DW-Con in Nederland komt!
Geluk is een richting,
geen punt
---Loesje---
  donderdag 3 maart 2011 @ 01:33:08 #294
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_93576650
Slaughter of the swans: Terry Pratchett helps to double reward after 31 birds are shot with high-powered air rifle

Terry Pratchett has offered £10,000 to catch swan killers who have murdered 31 of the birds in the last month - doubling the reward.

The best-selling author said he was 'incensed' by the slaughter of the birds in Somerset.

Many of them had been rescued from starving after being trapped in the winter ice and nursed to health before being released into the wild.

Eight swans were found dead in Blackford last week and it later emerged that more carcasses were found by the members of the public at Wedmore and Godney, with most of the birds killed by sniper shots to the head with an air rifle.

Wildlife workers yesterday found ten more murdered swans near Wedmore and offered £10,500 to help catch the swan killer.

But after Pratchett doubled the reward, and several more members of the public offered money, the total amount on offer stood at £26,000.

Wildlife charity Secret World described finding the dead birds as 'one of the worst incidents' it had ever attended.

Pratchett, 62, said: 'Nobody understands why this is happening. I'm at a loss, but I certainly don't think someone should be walking around shooting swans.

'I phoned up this morning and said "this is terrible", I was absolutely incensed. They are protected birds and have been for many years.

'I just don't understand the mentality. I can't see them (swans) doing much harm, and why someone would go and shoot them I have no idea.

'I will be following this case with interest and I'm sure the RSPCA will be taking it very seriously, as will I.'

The money will be offered to anyone who comes forward with information that leads to a successful prosecution.

The Queen retains the right to ownership of all unmarked mute swans in open water. Under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, anyone found guilty of attacking swans can be sentenced to six months in prison and fined £5,000.

Police said they had stepped up patrols in the area but any prosecutions would be handled by the RSPCA.

Sarah Cowen, animal care manager at Secret World, said: 'It's amazing to see that people are so enraged about the killings that they are coming forward and donating very large sums of money.

'It's always difficult with cases like this to get people to talk. If someone is carrying out this action they are not likely to be a very nice people and others might be afraid of retribution, but this might make someone more willing to come forward.'

The reward fund was started by Phil new, 53, who lives in nearby Highbridge.

He said: 'It takes a lot to put a tear in my eye but what happened here has achieved that.'

The RSPCA said it is already investigating the first incident and are able to prosecute.

An Avon and Somerset Police spokeswoman said the neighbourhood team was carrying out extra patrols.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.u(...)e.html#ixzz1FUZ3LRYx
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  zaterdag 12 maart 2011 @ 06:47:49 #295
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_93993632
"Folks,

There has been a long time between updates, mostly because since
early November life has been extremely hectic. A large part of
that month being mostly spent clearing snow. And then, for some
reason, Christmas seemed twice as long as any other Christmas, but
enjoyable nevertheless. And now, since our schedule is always
pretty full, the world in general believing that the time of an
author is expandable, we have run into a kind of gridlock with far
too many obligations and not enough days in the year.

However, Snuff, with Commander Vimes of the City Watch as the main
character, is now with the copy editor and I have finished our
next documentary with the BBC, which has also required our major
involvement since October. We have answered as much mail as we
can and as I sit here I see a huge pile of stuff that we will have
to work through over the next few weeks, while desperately trying
to make progress on my part of the Long Earth.

There has been one hell of a lot of rumours regarding a Good Omens
adaptation over the past few weeks, mostly started by me at the
SFX Weekender. So, ladies and gentleman, I can hereby exclusively
reveal that - YES - Neil and myself have shaken hands and received
groats from Rod Brown sealing a TV deal. An official announcement
from Prime Focus will follow in a couple of weeks time. However,
I can reveal right now that Terry Jones (yes, the Python) and
Gavin Scott (not a Python, but he gets it) are already on the job.
It's been a long time coming, but it's looking good.

A word about conventions; unless something reasonably disastrous
happens, Rob and I will be attending the Australian convention in
April and I will be doing other engagements in Oz and New Zealand.
I believe that an event advertised in Melbourne has already sold
out, in fact, even before we knew the details and I am still
unsure of the dates of the one in Sydney, although I do know that
it will be at the Opera House. PLEASE do not ask us for tickets!
We do not have any! We do not know what they look like! And we
wait, with bated breath, whether they will actually let us in.

Again, the second North American convention looks likely, but
again, health considerations, acts of god (okay, random
fluctuations in the space/time continuum) and Icelandic dust
clouds permitting. We intend to get around that by driving to the
convention ... don't ask, but it's going to be fun.

I know there are going to be smaller conventions in Germany,
Holland, Ireland and I've even heard a rumour of one in Spain.
Fortuitously, I will be able (health blah blah blah permitting) to
attend the second Irish convention because it is just after a
professorial engagement at Trinity College Dublin. I know this
will mean an overdose of Guinness, but one has to suffer for his
art.

I cannot guarantee attendance at any of the other smaller
conventions, simply because no matter what size a convention is,
it still pretty much takes up the same amount of my time and there
are so many calls on it, least of which involves writing books,
that I can't go everywhere. Sorry! But I am not the first person
to say that I think it a good idea if people put their heads
together and organised a pan-European convention, which would
probably be a lot more fun and attract a lot more fans. As it is,
we've just returned from a whistle-stop visit to Prague to see the
final performance of Maskarada at the Dlouhe theatre. It was
absolutely superb and I am hoping that it really wasn't the last
one.

We know this doesn't work but we continue to repeat it even though
no one ever takes any notice. PLEASE we would rather you did not
send your own books for signing - as we've said time and again,
signed books are available HERE. Especially
difficult are things sent with a deadline, such as 'please sign
this for my husband, whose birthday is next Thursday' which has
been posted second class on Tuesday (you would be amazed...).
Also, Never assume the author is at home or even in the country,
although he might be wishing that he was. And PLEASE do not argue
or try to negotiate with us over this.

I have heard that Professor Roy Jones, Director of the RICE Centre
for the past twenty five years and also my Alzheimer's specialist,
is celebrating by running the Bath half marathon. RICE has been
the recipient of the goodwill of many fannish occasions and they
can always do with more. God help him, but Roy's job is to work
out if I am normal or not! Please follow us and take a look at
his JustGiving page HERE.

More from me very soon.

Terry Pratchett."

Since Terry wrote this I have received confirmation that Good Omens
will be filmed in the UK and Ireland later this year.
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  zaterdag 12 maart 2011 @ 06:52:05 #296
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_93993644
News about a new Discworld Watch TV Series

We've just received this press release hot off the press:

Terry Pratchett's 'The Watch'

11 March 2011:

Sir Terry Pratchett and Rod Brown, Managing Director of Prime Focus
Productions, announce that they have come to an agreement for the
unprecedented and exclusive worldwide television rights to create
brand new storylines for the iconic characters of Pratchett's
phenomenally successful Discworld series.

Terry's universal success has seen him create one of the leading
fantasy fiction franchises of all time, with 70 million worldwide
sales of his 38 book Discworld titles (with a 39th being published
in October 2011). Whilst there have been three successful mini
series adaptations of his Discworld books made for television in the
UK, this is the first time that Pratchett has granted a production
company the international rights to his character's and world, for
the creation of new stories exclusively for a television audience.

The main focus of the series will be set in the bustling, highly
mercantile, largely untrustworthy and always vibrant city of Ankh
Morpork and will follow the day-to-day activities of the men, women,
trolls, dwarves, vampires and several other species who daily pound
its ancient cobbles (and, of course, Igor in the forensics
department). Terry commonly refers to the City Watch police force
series "the jewels in his Discworld Crown". These richly developed
and highly compelling characters will feature in a 'crime of the
week' episodic storyline. As each weekly adventure unfolds, viewers
will be taken on a ride through Pratchett's genius imagination, with
the author overseeing the creation of the series, where wild and
exciting encounters with werewolves, dragons, dwarfs, trolls and
golems and the classic heroes and villains, are an everyday
occurrence... many of whom even make outstanding crime fighters!

Rod Brown, Managing Director of Prime Focus Productions said, "I
believe that the globally successful Discworld franchise will
readily translate to the small screen in the form of a high-end,
mass appeal weekly drama series. It will give the audience the
anticipation and excitement of brand new Discworld stories every
week through the medium of television, rather than books. It's a
huge responsibility to get this right for Terry, his legions of
Discworld fans and the new followers to his work that we will
attract along the way, but I believe they will be in for a treat
with a high calibre writing team already attached, including 'Monty
Python's' Terry Jones and Gavin Scott (Small Soldiers, The
Borrowers). We have already spoken to a number of international
broadcasters who have shown early interest and we hope to move
forward very quickly to bring this exciting project to fruition".

Sir Terry Pratchett said, "I'm very excited! I really am incredibly
happy about this because Rod was part head of the team that produced
the very successful Sky One adaptations and my message of
encouragement to him now is; don't bugger it up!"
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  zaterdag 12 maart 2011 @ 06:54:51 #297
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_93993646
Terry Jones is dus betrokken bij beide projecten. Terryis een enorme Fantasy fan, zoals zijn eerdere betrokkenheid bij The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy al aangetoond heeft. Ik ben erg benieuwd naar beide projecten, hoewel ik redelijk huiverig kijk naar de TV-serie. Non-Pratchett storylines met Pratchett-personages? Ik weet t niet, hoor...
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  vrijdag 1 april 2011 @ 08:02:02 #298
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_94890377
Terry has been spending some time in the offices of SFX Magazine in the UK discussing the new
Watch TV series. You can see a video of part of the discussion at:

http://www.sfx.co.uk/2011/03/21/pratchett-exclusive/

-----------

Neil Gaiman was recently interviewed about his and Terry's
involvement in the upcoming Good Omens adaptation at Digital Spy.

http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=GAIMAN168

-------------

More Discworld Stamps ... This time they are legal to use in the UK.
On the 8th March The Royal Mail issued Magical Realms, a set of
stamps based on classic magical characters.

The four 1st class stamps feature Rincewind and Nanny Ogg from the
Discworld and Dumbledore and Voldermort from the Harry Potter
series.

The two 60p stamps feature Merlin and Morgan Le Fay from Arthurian
legend.

The two 97p stamps feature Aslan and the White Witch from Narnia.

http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=STAMPS168

-----------

[ Bericht 0% gewijzigd door Lord_Vetinari op 01-04-2011 08:17:03 ]
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
  vrijdag 1 april 2011 @ 08:02:50 #299
66444 Lord_Vetinari
Si non confectus non reficiat
pi_94890386
quote:
1s.gif Op donderdag 3 maart 2011 01:33 schreef Lord_Vetinari het volgende:
Slaughter of the swans: Terry Pratchett helps to double reward after 31 birds are shot with high-powered air rifle

Terry Pratchett has offered £10,000 to catch swan killers who have murdered 31 of the birds in the last month - doubling the reward.

The best-selling author said he was 'incensed' by the slaughter of the birds in Somerset.

Many of them had been rescued from starving after being trapped in the winter ice and nursed to health before being released into the wild.

Eight swans were found dead in Blackford last week and it later emerged that more carcasses were found by the members of the public at Wedmore and Godney, with most of the birds killed by sniper shots to the head with an air rifle.

Wildlife workers yesterday found ten more murdered swans near Wedmore and offered £10,500 to help catch the swan killer.

But after Pratchett doubled the reward, and several more members of the public offered money, the total amount on offer stood at £26,000.

Wildlife charity Secret World described finding the dead birds as 'one of the worst incidents' it had ever attended.

Pratchett, 62, said: 'Nobody understands why this is happening. I'm at a loss, but I certainly don't think someone should be walking around shooting swans.

'I phoned up this morning and said "this is terrible", I was absolutely incensed. They are protected birds and have been for many years.

'I just don't understand the mentality. I can't see them (swans) doing much harm, and why someone would go and shoot them I have no idea.

'I will be following this case with interest and I'm sure the RSPCA will be taking it very seriously, as will I.'

The money will be offered to anyone who comes forward with information that leads to a successful prosecution.

The Queen retains the right to ownership of all unmarked mute swans in open water. Under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, anyone found guilty of attacking swans can be sentenced to six months in prison and fined £5,000.

Police said they had stepped up patrols in the area but any prosecutions would be handled by the RSPCA.

Sarah Cowen, animal care manager at Secret World, said: 'It's amazing to see that people are so enraged about the killings that they are coming forward and donating very large sums of money.

'It's always difficult with cases like this to get people to talk. If someone is carrying out this action they are not likely to be a very nice people and others might be afraid of retribution, but this might make someone more willing to come forward.'

The reward fund was started by Phil new, 53, who lives in nearby Highbridge.

He said: 'It takes a lot to put a tear in my eye but what happened here has achieved that.'

The RSPCA said it is already investigating the first incident and are able to prosecute.

An Avon and Somerset Police spokeswoman said the neighbourhood team was carrying out extra patrols.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.u(...)e.html#ixzz1FUZ3LRYx
UPDATE: It appears three men, aged 34, 37 and 45, have been arrested
and bailed in connection with the shootings.

An Avon and Somerset Police spokesman said the trio were arrested on
suspicion of criminal damage.

You can see a television interview that Terry gave for ITV here:
http://www.itv.com/westco(...)in-swan-appeal89222/
De pessimist ziet het duister in de tunnel
De optimist ziet het licht aan het eind van de tunnel
De realist ziet de trein komen
De machinist ziet drie idioten in het spoor staan....
pi_95697676
Whaa! een terry Pratchett topic! ik heb bijna alles gelezen, alleen the hogfather en eric nog niet. Zal binnenkort wel aan een tweede ronde moeten beginnen :)
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