Chris's review
The Science Of Discworld
by Terry Pratchett, Ian Stewart, Jack S. Cohen
Chris's review
The Science Of Discworld by Terry Pratchett, Ian Stewart, Jack S. Cohen
Chris's review
rating:
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bookshelves:
pratchett,
science
Back in the late 90s, there was a whole slew of "Science Of...." books. The science of Star Trek, X-Files, Star Wars, all of them did their best to explain the fantastic in terms of what we already knew about science. They weren't trying to disprove these worlds - saying that warp speed is impossible, for example, or how The Force violates any number of natural laws - but rather they tried to figure out how we could explain these things, and perhaps, someday, make them real.
This isn't that sort of book.
The Discworld, as the writers say straight out, runs on stories, on some mysterious element that we might call Narrativium. Things happen a certain way because that's how they're supposed to happen. The eighth son of an eighth son HAS to become a wizard, even if he turns out to be a daughter. And a million-to-one shot HAS to come off, because the Story demands it.
In this story, the wizards at the Unseen University at Ankh-Morpork have a little problem. Their thaumic...more
This isn't that sort of book.
The Discworld, as the writers say straight out, runs on stories, on some mysterious element that we might call Narrativium. Things happen a certain way because that's how they're supposed to happen. The eighth son of an eighth son HAS to become a wizard, even if he turns out to be a daughter. And a million-to-one shot HAS to come off, because the Story demands it.
In this story, the wizards at the Unseen University at Ankh-Morpork have a little problem. Their thaumic...more
