For those
who missed it, the duology which opened Discworld, The Colour of Magic and The Light Fantastic respectively, was a shot across the bow of epic fantasy. Pratchett undermining familiar elements and
having a laugh at its stereotypes, the two novels, however, proved not
enough. The 8th Disc novel Guards! Guards!, on top of introducing
the City Watch sub-series and a couple of characters who would go on to achieve
Hall of Disc status (Commander Vimes and Corporal Carrot), continues to dig at
epic fantasy’s tropes, dismantling them in humor with every spadeful. The farmboy slays a dragon to become king the
stereotype targeted, the roast succeeds behind all of the humor Pratchett is
known for. Whether or not it works as a
thematic whole, well…
The
Supreme Grand Master of the appropriately named Unique and Supreme Lodge of the
Elucidated Brethren of the Ebon Night has an idea: to overthrown the Patrician
of Ankh-Morpork and install a puppet ruler, himself Geppetto. The details: find a long lost heir to the
throne, find him a dragon to slay, and install him as king. Using the magic he has acquired in a book
stolen from the Unseen University library, the Supreme Grand Master sets about
his nefarious scheme. Meanwhile, Carrot
Ironfounderson is being sent into the world of men by his dwarf parents. Given the massive sword he was found
abandoned with as a baby and a letter of recommendation to the City Watch, he
leaves the mines for a new life—all 6’-6” of him. And he certainly finds a new
life in Ankh-Morpork. With the drunk
Commander Vimes at the helm, the group stumble and bumble over one clue at a
time trying to find a stolen book before the chaos of a dragon descends on the
city.
Of course,
the Brethren of the Ebon Night’s plot fails. But this is Pratchett, after all:
one does not read his novels for the destination, rather the journey. The Brethren laugh-out-loud funny,
Pratchett’s musings on secret societies and the doggerel that defines their
rote and ritual are hilarious. And the
dragon that is conjured (of course its conjured) sets loose a turn of events
all the more funny. From the breeding
practices of swamp dragons to the book of common medical problems dragons face,
Pratchett cashes in on the classic big green scaly fire breathing lizard with
claws for full comedic effect.
But unlike
Pyramids, Equal Rites, Mort, and a
host of other novels that followed, including the City Watch novels Jingo and Monstrous Regiment, Guards!
Guards! feels more of a lark (fun deconstruction to be more precise) than
politicized examination of epic fantasy. Pratchett
seeming to realize this later, The Last Hero goes into much further depth about heroes and heroic deeds.
In the
end, Guards! Guards! is a raucous
tackling and takedown of the classic epic fantasy farmboy becomes king
trope. Introducing the City Watch to
Discworld, Vimes, Nobby, Colon, Carrot, and others must track down the thieves
who unleashed a mighty dragon on Ankh-Morpork, hilarity ensuing. While I personally enjoy Discworld titles
with more substance, Guards! Guards!
remains a lot of fun.
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