Before the
Discworld had Tiffany Aching, there
was Eric Thursley. An ambitious teenage
boy, he wants his cake and to eat it, too.
Eric (1991), the ninth Discworld novel, sees the teen on a
journey that parodies the Faust
legend in a manner only Terry Pratchett can.
Rincewind bumbling along in tow, Eric achieves a higher plane of
understanding in most unlikely fashion—all no thanks to the ill-starred
wizard’s mix of luck.
A thirteen
year-old amateur demonologist, Eric summons the unwitting Rincewind into a hex
circle in his bedroom one evening and demands the cowardly wizard supply his
three innermost desires: the most beautiful woman, to rule the world, and to
live forever. The boy’s parrot confusing
matters, suddenly the three (the dirty-mouthed bird, included) find themselves
in the jungles of the Tezumen Empire.
Exploring what is a thin disguise for Aztec culture, they learn many
things while put in some tricky situations, but not before the Luggage with
legs makes its appearance—and not a minute too late. Their Faustian journey only beginning, the
pair proceed to embark on a jaunt through time and space that traverses the
most disparate of lands, hell just the last stop on the line.
In its
earnestness to parody Faust, Eric can
sometimes feel like one of Discworld’s
more scattered offerings. But this would
be to overlook the quality of the parody.
Though one of the early books in the series, Pratchett is nevertheless
in solid form; the commentary on religion and materialism is as humorous and
witty as ever, and as always, a firm but subtle hand guides what is a classic
plot to a contemporary conclusion. The
demons and the ultimate hell, they are just the icing on the cake (and nicely
complementing Terry Gilliam’s Brazil).
In the
end, Eric is one of the lesser
discussed Discworld novels, but
undeservingly so. Eric Thursley the ying to Tiffany Aching’s yang, it is unfortunate that Pratchett
hasn’t chosen to develop the character further for boys. The trademark humor just as slick and subtly
revelatory as other Discworld novels, while perhaps less slapstick,
nevertheless tickles the funny bone. The
duo’s time with the creator of the universe and introduction to hell are humor
of the cleverly delightful variety.
Featuring Rincewind, the Luggage, the demons, and a guest cameo by
Death, fans of the series will have difficulty going wrong.
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