The
appreciative Discworld and YA reader has read with delight, humor, and head-nodding
understanding the adventures of Tiffany Aching and her erstwhile protectors,
the Nac Mac Feegle, as they live and learn on the Disc. Rescuing her brother from the Queen of the
Fairies in The Wee Free Men to her
ill-advised first kiss in Wintersmith,
we have grown alongside the girl from the Chalk as she becomes a witch.
Now
aged sixteen, I Shall Wear Midnight
finds Tiffany as the Chalk’s only practicing witch. Dealing with all problems—physical, domestic,
and farm-related—she must also deal with her neighbors’ developing prejudices
toward witches. Trouble brews when the
Baron dies under Tiffany’ care. His
staff accusative, Tiffany is forced to go to Ankh-Morpork to inform Roland of
his father’s death and attempt to remain on the right side of justice. Running into all sorts of witches she’d never
met before in the big city, she likewise makes a new enemy, the soulless
Cunning Man. The Nac Mac Feegle tagging
along, chaos erupts when Tiffany finds herself in jail, forcing the teen witch
to the extent of her wits to be true to herself.
Tackling
the fairy tale stereotype that witches are evil, Pratchett, with his consummate
skill, manages to make his deconstruction likewise personal and
productive. I Shall Wear Midnight, on top of bearing his characteristic wit and
charm, re-visions the female magic-worker to positive shine, and for this
deserves mention alongside writers like Ursula Le Guin, Diana Wynne Jones,
Daniel Abraham, Vonda McIntyre, and Tanith Lee who have taken their own routes
toward this same goal. One of the
scenarios illustrating Tiffany’s performance in this arena is her handling of
an abusive man living in the Chalk. Where
the villagers would have killed him for the treatment of his daughter, Tiffany
finds her own solution. Informative without using a heavy hand, moral without
proselytizing, and above all, practical without going through step by step
instructions: the message is embedded in Tiffany’s actions as much as her
words, making for quality reading.
The
Nac Mac Feegle return—and with a a bit of fresh wind. In Wintersmith
their presence seemed a bit perfunctory, like sideshow clowns that spouted
tried and true one liners and were up to colorful antics but who also
distracted from the novel’s main thrust, or at least were not always wholly
congruous. In I Shall Wear Midnight Pratchett returns to old form. Organic to the
story, he finds interesting nooks and crannies for the fighting and drinking
little blue guys to occupy with significance but without taking over. In short, they once again become a
delightful, complementary addition to Tiffany’s plight. Out of the country and into the big city,
their interaction with Ankh-Morpork is glorious fun.
Pratchett
having a larff with Ankh-Morpork, he also takes advantage of Tiffany’s trip to
include characters from other Discworld sub-series. Sometimes natural to plot (e.g. Vimes, Carrot
and the City Watch’s arrival on scene at one point) and sometimes not (e.g.
Esk’s appearances for bits of exposition), it will be up to the reader to
decide how successful the integration is, how old characters are fairing, but
in the least interesting to see the interaction of the various sub-series.
There
were many who thought that I Shall Wear
Midnight would be the last Tiffany Aching novel. And indeed there are some subtle clues
scattered throughout the story that would seem to indicate this. Tiffany being sixteen years old is close to
the end point of YA fiction. Certain
story threads passed on from the previous novels arrive at closure. And there is an overall vibe of: there could
always be more but this might be it, particularly in the epilogue. But as Sir Terry’s curtain call, The Shepherd’s Crown was released,
meaning there is at one last chapter in Tiffany’s story.
No comments:
Post a Comment