Secrets of the Wee Free Men and Discworld

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Secrets of the Wee Free Men and Discworld Page 23

by Linda Washington


  religious wars

  Return of the King (film)

  Rhysson, Rhys (the Low King)

  Rice, Anne

  Ridcully, Mustrum

  Riftwar Saga (Feist)

  “Rikki-Tikki-Tavi” (Kipling)

  Rincewind

  Ring Cycle (Wagner)

  Ringworld (Niven)

  Rinpo, chief acolyte

  Rippke, Dale

  Roddenberry, Gene

  Rogers, Stephen P.

  Roman mythology

  Romero, George

  Rothfuss, Patrick

  Rowan, Charles

  Rowling, J. K.

  Rust, Lord

  Rybczynski, Witold

  St. Nobbs, Corporal C. W. (Nobby)

  Salem’s Lot (King)

  Salzella the Opera Ghost

  Sandman

  Sandman graphic novels (Gaiman)

  Saruman

  Saturday

  Scarpetta, Kay

  Schleppel, Mr.

  Schmendrick

  Scissor Man

  Scolpini

  Scudder, Matthew

  Seamstresses Guild

  Selachii, Lord

  Seventh Seal, The (film)

  Shakespeare, William

  Hwel plays referring to

  plays of

  Shannara series (Brooks)

  Shelley, Mary

  Shine, Mr.

  Shlimazel

  Shlitzen

  Shmaltzberg

  Shoe, Reg

  Sideney, Mr.

  Silicon Anti-Defamation League

  silent movies

  Silmarillion, The (Tolkien)

  Silver Horde

  Silverfish, Thomas

  Silverlock (Meyers)

  Simenon, Georges

  Singer, Isaac Bashevis

  Skimmer, Inigo

  Slant, Mr.

  Slime

  Small Gods (Pratchett)

  Smince, Lord

  Smith of Wooton Major (Tolkien)

  snakes

  Snapcase, Lord

  Soak, Ronnie (Kaos)

  Sorcerer’s Apprentice, The (Dukas)

  Soul Cake Duck

  Soul Duck Tuesday

  Soul Music (Pratchett)

  Sourcery (Pratchett)

  Spade, Sam

  speaking tubes

  Spelter

  Spencer

  Spencer, Edmund

  Spencer-Churchill, John

  Spider (rat king)

  Spider-Man (film)

  Spindle’s End (McKinley)

  stags

  Stanley, Apprentice Postman

  Star Trek series

  Star Wars films

  Stephanie Plum series (Evanovich)

  Stibbons, Ponder

  Sto Helit, Susan

  See also Binky; Death; Mort; Ysabell

  Stoker, Bram

  stooges and thugs

  “Stuffed Alligator, The,” (Baum)

  Strange, Jonathan

  Strata (Pratchett)

  Streets of Ankh-Morpork, The (Briggs/Pratchett)

  Stroud, Jonathan

  Summer Lady

  Summoning Dark

  suspense (mystery genre)

  Swing, Captain Findthee

  Swires, Buggy

  Sword of Truth series (Goodkind)

  Tacticus, General

  Tailor “the other weaver”

  Tawneee

  Teatime, Jonathan

  technomancy

  10th Kingdom, The (TV miniseries)

  Tepes, Vlad (Vlad the Impaler)

  Teppic/Pteppic

  Thatcher, Margaret

  Thatcher the carter

  Them

  Theogony (Hesiod)

  thermodynamics, second law of

  Thief of Time (Pratchett)

  Thieves Guild

  those that died out

  “Three Billy Goat Gruff, The,”

  thrillers (mystery genre)

  Thud! (Pratchett)

  Tick, Miss Perspicacia

  tick of the universe

  Time Machine, The (Wells)

  time travel

  timepieces

  Tinker Bell

  Tinker the tinker

  Toad (The Free Wee Men)

  Tolkien, J.R.R.

  Tomjon

  Tonker

  Tooth Fairy

  Travers, P. L.

  Treason, Eumenides

  Treebeard

  Trilby (du Maurier)

  trolls

  Silicon Anti-Defamation League

  in Tolkien

  Truckers (Pratchett)

  Truth, The (Pratchett)

  Tsort

  Tsortean Wars

  Tubelcek, Father

  Tugelbend, Victor

  Tulip, Mr.

  turtles and tortoises

  as gods

  Great A’Tuin

  Two Towers, The (Tolkien)

  Twoflower

  Twyla

  U.S.-China relations

  Uberwald

  Unadulterated Cats, The (Pratchett)

  undead. See banshees; vampires; werewolves; zombies

  Underworld

  Underworld movies

  Unicorn Tapestries

  unicorns

  Unity (Lady Myria LeJean)

  Unseen University

  Library

  See also Librarian; wizards

  Valkyries

  Vampire Chronicles (Rice)

  vampires

  “Vampyre, The” (Polidori)

  Vena the Raven-Haired

  Verence, King

  Verence II (the Fool)

  Vetinari, Lord Havelock

  villains, stooges, and thugs

  Vimes, Commander Samuel

  Vimes, Lady Sybil Ramkin

  Virgil

  Vitoller

  Vogler, Christopher

  Voldemort, Lord

  von Humpeding, Sally

  von Lipwig, Moist

  von Uberwald, Sergeant Angua (Delphine)

  von Uberwald, Baron and Baroness

  von Uberwald, Lady Margolotta

  von Uberwald, Wolfgang

  Vorbis, Deacon

  Vulcan

  Wagner, RichardSee also Ring Cycle

  War

  Warbeck, Lucy

  Warriors series (Hunter)

  Warshawski, V. I.

  weapons

  canons

  gonne

  gunpowder

  swords

  See also Burleigh and Stronginthearm; Leonard of Quirm; Leonardo da Vinci

  Weasley, Ron

  Weatherwax, Esmeralda (Granny)

  Weatherwax, Galder

  Weatherwax, Lily (Lilith de Tempscire)

  Weaver the thatcher

  Webber, Andrew Lloyd

  Wee Free Men, The (Pratchett)

  Wee Mad Arthur

  Wells, H. G.

  Wen the Eternally Surprised

  werewolves

  werewolves vs. vampires vs. humans

  Wexford, Reginald

  Wheedle, Ly Tin

  Wheel of Time series (Jordan)

  Where’s My Cow? (Pratchett)

  Whiplash, Snidley

  White, T. H.

  White Witch

  Whitlow, Mrs. (housekeeper)

  Whittington, Richard

  whodunits (mystery genre)

  Wicked (Maguire)

  Williamson, John

  Wimsey, Peter

  Wings

  Winkings, Doreen (Countess Notfaroutoe)

  Wintersmith (personification)

  Wintersmith (Pratchett)

  Wise Woman, The (MacDonald)

  witches

  Bene Gesserits (Dune series)

  cackling

  and cats

  fairy godmothers

  in literature, films, and TV

  rule of three

  Salem Witch Hunt

  witch’s hat

  wise wom
en

  See also Aching, Sarah; Aching, Tiffany; Baba Yaga; Cake, Evadne; Dunlop, Bessie; Earwig, Letice; Garlick, Magrat; Glinda the Good; Granger, Hermione; Gristle, Petulia; Hawkin, Annagramma; Hubbub, Dimity; Level, Miss; McGonagall, Professor; Nitt, Agnes; Nutter, Agnes; Ogg, Gytha; Treason, Eumenides; Warbeck, Lucy; Weatherwax, Esmeralda

  Witches Abroad (Pratchett)

  Wizard of Oz, The (Baum)

  wizards

  appearance of

  contest between

  in literature and films

  Mage Wars

  wizarding levels

  See also Abrim; al’Thor, Rand; Billet, Drum; Brom; Chair of Indefinite Studies; Coin the sourcerer; Cutwell, Igneous; Darrow; Dean of Pentacles; Dean, the; Dresden, Harry; Dumbledore, Albus; Eragon; Eskarina; Gandalf; Ged/Sparrowhawk; Ipslore the Red; Kellen the Knight-Mage; Kulgan; Lecturer in Recent Runes; Librarian; Macros the Black; Merlin; Norrell, Mr.; Ogion; Potter, Harry; Pug conDoin; Rahl, Richard; Ridcully, Mustrum; Rincewind; Saruman; Schmendrick; Sideney, Mr.; Spelter;

  Strange, Jonathan; Tugelbend,

  Victor; Voldemort, Lord; Weasley,

  Ron; Weatherwax, Galder; Wrangler,

  Senior; Zorander, Zeddicus Zu’l

  Wolf Man, The (film)

  wolves

  Woman in White, The (Collins)

  Wonse, Lupine

  Wrangler, Senior

  Wuffles

  Wyrd Sisters (Pratchett)

  You (kitten)

  Ysabell (Duchess of Sto Helit) See also Death; Mort; Sto Helit, Susan

  Zhou Enlai

  Zimmerman Valley

  Zlobenia

  zombies

  Fresh Starters (Dead Rights group)

  Zorander, Zeddicus Zu’l (Zedd)

  ABOUT THE AUTHORS

  Carrie Pyykkonen is anxiously waiting for a lifetimer that grants extra time while living in Wheaton, Illinois, with her husband, two children, four cats (two are visitors), and a dog named Wilfred. She has dabbled in writing due to Linda’s nagging, volunteers by wearing a long garment called an alb, and spends a lot of money on animal food. (Please buy more books so sweet little Samantha can eat.) This is her second book project that involves talking animals and fantastical creatures for which she still has no use. She plans on spending more time photographing her animals in pink dresses and parasols.

  Linda Washington is a freelance writer living in Carol Stream, Illinois, who has authored or coauthored thirty-eight books. She still mooches food from the Pyykkonens on Sundays and keeps adding to her increasingly large library of nonsense books, DVDs, and music. She became a huge fan of Terry Pratchett, thanks to (see dedication). She aspires to find the perfect cookie, own her own flying machine, and flee the newest trend of her friends, which is to acquire odd pets.

  Notes

  1 Terry Pratchett Bookcase interview at http://www.lspace.org/about-terry/interviews/book-case.html. The About Terry (and interviews) section of L-Space is maintained by Jamas Enright.

  2 Patrick Rothfuss interviewed by Akiva Cohen in “Pitch-Perfect High Fantasy,” Publishers Weekly, February 12, 2007, 68.

  3 We will be sure to forward this site to the Pratchett fans who are nuns.

  4 Glares during Pratchett reading are inevitable if they are by a non-Pratchett-reading spouse.

  5 The same year in which Mahatma Gandhi was assassinated in India and the year my parents, Donn and Kathleen Czegus, were born.

  6 This may be debated in certain parts of the world. After all, good definitions of being alive are hard to come by.

  7 The Look of Architecture by Witold Rybczynski (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001), 48. Not like “The Look of Love,” but still entertaining.

  8 According to Sir Henry Wotton, a man writing in 1642 (and he would know), discussed in The Look of Architecture, 4-5.

  9 Made you look.

  10 Quote from the 11th Duke of Marlborough in Palm Beach: An Architectural Legacy by Polly Anne Earl (New York: Rizzoli International Publications, Inc., 2002), 7. And we’re pretty sure the duke was never a “Marlborough Man.”

  11 Guards! Guards! (New York: HarperTorch, 1989), 292.

  12 Wintersmith (New York: HarperTempest, 2006), 295.

  13 Ibid., 275.

  14 The Wee Free Men (New York: HarperTrophy, 2003), 56.

  15 Ibid., 123.

  16 The Truth (New York: HarperTorch, 2000), 338.

  17 Posted at the Enlightenment Web site: http://enlightenment.supersaturated.com/johnlocke/BOOKIIChapterXXIII.html.

  18 Amos Rapoport, House Form and Culture (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, Inc., 1969), 104.

  19 Eric (New York: HarperTorch, 1990), 35.

  20 The Fifth Elephant (New York: HarperTorch, 2000), 15.

  21 From “Cult Classic” by Terry Pratchett, one of the essays in Meditations on Middle-Earth, edited by Karen Haber (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2001), 78. Worth a read.

  22 Lords and Ladies (New York: HarperTorch, 1992), 6.

  23 The Two Towers by J. R. R. Tolkien (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1954, 1965, 1966), 462.

  24 Witches Abroad (New York: HarperTorch, 1991), 66.

  25 Wintersmith, 297.

  26 The Fellowship of the Ring by J. R. R. Tolkien (New York: Ballantine Books, 1955, 1965), 238.

  27 From “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” by Washington Irving. Originally published in The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. Posted at http://www.bartleby.com/310/2/2.html. Check it out.

  28 Moving Pictures (New York: HarperTorch, 1990), 156.

  29 Pyramids (New York: HarperTorch, 2001), 264-65. See also L. Frank Baum, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (New York: HarperTrophy, 1987 [afterword]; originally published in 1899), 154.

  30 The legal mystery is another subgenre. But since none of Pratchett’s City Watch stories take place in a courtroom setting, we left that subgenre off the list. However, we’re sure Pratchett would put his own spin on that one as well.

  31 Definition from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detective_fiction—Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. (Not The Wee Free Men Encyclopedia. If you come across one, let us know.)

  32 Title used at http://www.mysteryguide.com/classic-whodunit.html. (Please note: Although the site was in operation during the writing of this book, it was missing in action later on.)

  33 Posted at http://www.writing-world.com/mystery/cozy.shtml.

  34 Posted at http://www.mysteryguide.com/police-procedural.html. Obviously, we like this site.

  35 From A Study in Scarlet and the Sign of Four by Arthur Conan Doyle (New York: Berkley Books edition, 1975), 173.

  36 Bleak House by Charles Dickens (New York: Bantam Books edition, 1983. Originally published in 1852-53), 285. We first read this in college. Not that you had to know that.

  37 From Vimes’s musings in the narration of Feet of Clay (New York: HarperTorch, 1996), 174.

  38 Scarlet, 24.

  39 From Vimes’s musings in the narration of Feet, 234.

  40 Scarlet, 127-28.

  41 Men at Arms (New York: HarperTorch, 1993), 344.

  42 The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler in The Raymond Chandler Omnibus (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1939), 4.

  43 Death in a White Tie by Ngaio Marsh (New York: Jove, 1938), 314.

  44 “Vivid Villains” by Sandra Scoppettone in Writing Mystery: A Handbook by the Mystery Writers of America (Cincinnati: Writer’s Digest Books, 1992), 66.

  45 The Fellowship of the Ring by J. R. R. Tolkien (New York: Ballantine Books, 1955, 1965), 422-23. Obviously, we like this book.

  46 F. David Peat, From Certainty to Uncertainty: The Story of Science and Ideas in the Twentieth Century (Washington, D.C.: Joseph Henry Press, 2002), 134. Science nicely done.

  47 Posted at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entropy.

  48 From Book the First of Metamorphoses, “The Creation of the World,” posted at http://classics.mit.edu/Ovid/metam.1.first.html.

  49 Posted at http://www.spaceandmotion.com/Physics-Sir-Isaac-Newton.ht
m.

  50 Thief of Time (New York: HarperTorch, 2001), 19.

  51 From Certainty to Uncertainty, 119.

  52 Quotes from Interesting Times, 4.

  53 Men at Arms (New York: HarperTorch, 1993), 319.

  54 The Book of Tapestry: History and Technique by Pierre Verlet, Michael Florisoone, Adolf Hoffmeister, and François Tabard (New York: The Vendome Press, distributed by Viking Press, 1965), 13.

  55 Posted at http://www.igopogo.com/we_have_met.htm.

  56 Monstrous Regiment (New York: HarperCollins, 2003), 86.

  57 Posted at the BBC site: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/1821104.stm.

  58 Interesting Times (New York: HarperPrism, 1994), 10.

  59 Quoted at http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/m/mohandas_gandhi.html.

  60 Posted at http://www.danielpipes.org/article/990, December 31, 2002.

  61 Quoted at http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/25727.html.

  62 John Williamson, The Oak King, the Holly King, and the Unicorn (New York: Harper & Row, 1986), 7.

  63 Definition from Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable by E. Cobham Brewer (New York: Tess Press), 823.

  64 Ibid., 277.

  65 Posted at http://www.amazon.com/Wolf-Man-Claude-Rains/dp/B00001TZ6Q.

  66 Posted at http://horror.about.com/od/quotablequotes/a/qq_vampire.htm.

  67 Posted at http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/s/sarah_polley.html.

  68 Quote from The Simpsons: “Treehouse of Horror XVII” episode posted at http://www.tv.com/the-simpsons/treehouse-of-horror-xvii/episode/728361/trivia.html.

  69 Definition from Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable by E. Cobham Brewer (New York: Tess Press), 64. Pratchett recommended this book to the audience at his Naperville book signing. He contributed to a volume of Brewer’s (the millennium edition), which was much more expensive than the one we have.

 

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