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I liked this book. I know many people disliked it because they think the quality of Pratchett's writing declined, but I don't share that opinion. I will concede that parts of the book were not as fleshed out as I'd have liked (Mrs. Earwig's sudden usefulness and backbone, for one), and I found one continuity error where Tiffany hangs a necklace around her neck and does so again a paragraph later. Other than that, everyone was in character, and the plot was compelling.
I know that another reason people disliked the book is because Granny Weatherwax dies. Obviously I didn't want her to die, but I think her death was a fitting ending (or beginning) to Tiffany's arc. From the very beginning, Tiffany's been groomed as Granny's replacement, and I liked getting to see her fulfill that role. Her struggles to live up to Granny's reputation, her grief at Granny's loss, and her ultimate realization that she needs to be a witch in her own way rather than modeling herself entirely after Granny were really moving.
I also think that in writing about Granny's death, Pratchett was writing about his own in a way. Clearly I am speculating here, but Pratchett knew he was dying, and I think this book is about the acceptance of death and the celebration of a life well lived, a life that was spent in worthwhile pursuits. Like all witches, Granny knows she's going to die beforehand. She ties up all her loose ends, and then she steps into the next world with dignity and grace. She lives in a world where she knows that something exists after death; there's at least one more journey across those sands to be made. And when she meets Death, he meets her as an equal. He respects her. He believes that a world without Granny Weatherwax is a world diminished. And then Pratchett widens the scope of Tiffany's arc to include characters from other corners of Discworld. So all these other characters get to mourn Granny Weatherwax, and the reader gets to say goodbye to Discworld at large rather than just the characters in Tiffany's purview.
I can completely understand why her death would be unpalatable to some readers, but I found it extremely satisfying on a narrative and emotional level.
In terms of the actual story, I liked that the thesis was once again that one witch alone can't handle the stresses of the job and that the work has to be shared. I was afraid Tiffany would choose to stay at Granny's cottage (which doesn't make a lot of narrative sense given that a witch's power is drawn from the land), and I was so relieved that she chose to stay on the Chalk.
I think another thesis of this series has been controverting expectations (Tiffany's the most powerful witch of her age who spends her life fighting against forces of darkness instead of settling down and having babies, Letitia is a queen and a baroness, and so on), and Geoffrey is a wonderful example. I love that he wants to be a witch, and that he's good at it. I love the plot of him allowing the old men with their deadly toenails to feel vital and useful again.
Finally, I think the romance between Preston and Tiffany was very well done. They both clearly care about each other, but they also are married to their jobs. Tiffany very naturally wonders if she even wants to get married and if she does whether she and Preston would ever be able to make it work given their careers. I think you can read the end of I Shall Wear Midnight in a couple ways. Either she and Preston make it work, and the necklace is proof of their relationship, or they don't, and the necklace is proof that she continues to feel affection for him even though they never ended up together. I choose to believe the former.
I loved The Martian. Hard. I loved that it was optimistic and ended well. I always thought Mark would survive but I was genuinely afraid that one of his former crewmates would die in his rescue.
I thought Mark was a really compelling and interesting protagonist. I thought he and the whole movie in general were really funny while also being very emotionally intense and gripping.
The movie was visually stunning. Like, wow.
My one mild criticism is that I wanted more of Mark's reunion with his shipmates; lots of movie for very little payoff in that regard. I also kinda wanted to see them all disembarking the spacecraft to a crowd of people cheering that panned out to all those venues around the world where people were avidly watching his story.
Overall, excellent watch.
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Date: 2015-10-16 03:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-10-16 03:39 am (UTC)I like that it showed us everyone was okay and with their families and that the military people clearly weren't thrown in jail for mutiny.
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Date: 2015-10-16 03:51 am (UTC)now I want to write crack crossover fic where Astronaut Chris Evans from Sunshine meets Astronaut Seb Stan from The Martian, I AM the cancer that is killing fandomno subject
Date: 2015-10-16 03:58 am (UTC)I approve this crossover idea. I love that kind of crossover. What's Sunshine? I don't know that movie.
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Date: 2015-10-16 04:06 am (UTC)Sunshine is a beautiful movie! It's kinda artsy. I love it. It's gorgeous. Chris Evans plays a super sulky astronaut. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YZ2-xR54UDU https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DHTVQPstwR4 It's got a nice int'l cast, too.
Chris talking about his character https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=slXJ_YZDCCI
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Date: 2015-10-17 01:51 am (UTC)