Thief
of Time is, according to Wikipedia, Terry Pratchett’s 26th
official entry into the Discworld
series. Published roughly six months
after The Truth and six months before
The Last Hero, Thief of Time finds Pratchett in good form, extemporizing on the
scientific quest to put time in a bottle versus more transcendental ideologies
revolving around passive regard to the great clock of life (pun intended for
those who’ve read the book!).
Thief
of Time opens at a monastery where the History Monks keep
the spindles of time greased and spinning eternally. Lobsang Lud, a common monk, averts a major
disaster one day and earns himself an apprenticeship with the master,
Lu-tze. Meanwhile in Ankh-Morpork, a
down-on-his-luck clockmaker, Jeremy Clockson, is commissioned by an Auditor-in-disguise
to build the world’s first glass clock, and is not told that the giant mechanism
will in fact stop time rather than measure it.
Seeking the stoppage of time to have the time to account for all the
matter and molecules in the world, the Auditors send one of their own, Myria
Lejean, to ensure Jeremy performs his commission, little knowing the effects
and influence of mortal life will have on her.
When Lobsang and Lu-tze learn of the secret plot, they rush to
Ankh-Morpork to stop the end of time.
All hell breaking loose—literally and figuratively—when they arrive in
town, it seems everyone on the Disc is a stakeholder in the moment.
Discworld
(gratefully) lacking the linear progression of so many fantasy series, Thief of Time would be considered a
Death, Susan, Auditors, Four/Five Horseman of the Apocralypse, History Monks
novel, with its setting being both Ankh-Morpork and the unnamed monastery of
the Monks.
Discworld
being what it is, symbolism and allusion run rampant through Thief of Time. Announced in the title, time is the subject
under discussion, with the Auditors and Monks representing differing views of
how time can/should be thought of and utilized.
One a cold, definitive view, the other a warm, free-flowing perspective,
it’s obvious Pratchett’s views on the subject have more in common with Eastern
perennial philosophy than the Western desire to extract every ounce of meaning
and knowledge from the fourth dimension.
Thus, a worthwhile moral message underlies the story regarding modern
man’s proclivity for getting caught up in the machinations of the clock.
Don’t worry, the humor is all there, too. Time the source of many an idiom, expression,
and phrase in English, Pratchett picks and chooses his battles, inserting puns
and jokes in signature style. The
narrative is also not without its opportunities for quick but relevant insights
regarding time and humanity. In fact
little of our lives and language untouched by time, Pratchett has no shortage
of avenues in which to expand his theme and make it amusing in the process.
In the end, Thief
of Time is one of the best offerings in the Disc—though I suppose everyone has their favorites. My reasoning is the complementary nature of plot,
theme, and humor, facets which Pratchett usually grabs in pairs rather than threes. Trademark storytelling, symbolism, setting,
and wit from Pratchett are all on display, it not a bad entry point into the
series for the uninitiated. Readers who
enjoy the above mentioned characters will want also to check it out, while fans
of the series in general will not be disappointed.
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