The Light Fantastic
is an interesting novel if you are coming to the Discworld with no prior
experience to the series like I am. It
is first and foremost a direct sequel to The
Color of Magic, but it demonstrates a real improvement in the writing style
as Pratchett, while not doing a satire on anything more than fantasy tropes as
was with The Color of Magic, has
improved at telling a story and sticking to that story. The format of The Color of Magic as four short stories which allows for Pratchett
to tell two great ones and two average ones, but The Light Fantastic is first and foremost a character piece. This character piece is based on that of our
incompetent wizard Rincewind, who only knows one spell from the Octavo which
jumped into his head and has been waiting for the right moment to jump
out. The problem with this one is that
Rincewind isn’t exactly a deep character.
Sure he’s extremely enjoyable to follow, but he doesn’t really have much
growth or development beyond being a coward and being manipulated into doing
the Octavo’s bidding.
The more interesting
character of this novel is Trymon, the kniving wizard who becomes the
Archchancellor of the Unseen University after an accident with the Luggage
kills the old one who was trying to summon the final spell of the Octavo. Trymon is one of those villains with one
character trait and a lust for power, coming straight out of a hammy B-movie,
he invites the audience into his thoughts in a series of schemes before his
eventual defeat. There’s a reason that
Tim Curry plays him in the television adaptation of the novel as there’s nobody
else who could really play Trymon. He
could do without the tentacles at the end though.
While the format of the
novel was indeed improved upon, there is still a very episodic nature to the
events. The plot is tied together with a
shooting star signaling the time that all eight spells of the Octavo are to be
read before the end of the world. Of
course it is up to Rincewind and Twoflower to stop this, even if they end up reading
the spells and the Disc continues to be except the Great A’Tuin gives birth to
eight baby space turtles. The plot is
tied up very loosely and Terry Pratchett has gone on record saying he didn’t
really know where he wanted the book to go at points and it shows. There are some amazing scenes: Cohen the Barbarian
and Bethan have a great relationship, the eating of the gingerbread house
abandoned by a witch because of those horrible children, Twoflower teaching the
Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse how to play bridge and Death becoming addicted
to it, and Death’s daughter Ysabell are all highlights of the novel, but the
whole is still not the sum of its parts.
The book is extremely enjoyable overall, but feels like it’s a first draft
with no endgoal in mind. 7/10.
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