Terry Pratchett and the end of the world seem to go
hand in hand. Good Omens was his
and Neil Gaiman’s humanist take on the apocalypse, but over a decade later
Pratchett published his final Discworld novel to feature Death and Susan
as major protagonists in Thief of Time.
The Auditors of Reality hire clockmaker Jeremy Clockson to build a clock
to stop time and kickstart the Discworld apocalypse, three of the four horsemen
of the Apocalypse refuse to ride out, the fifth horseman is a milkman, and
there’s an upper class Lady LeJean which is secretly one of the Auditors
gaining sentience so Pratchett can explore what it means to be alive. This latter point is the most interesting
philosophical thrust of Thief of Time, Pratchett being staunchly against
groupthink which leads to the narrow, authoritarian viewpoints of the Auditors. The novel essentially becomes a book of
characters discovering their purpose sense of individuality, often tying it to
the unique sense of identity that sets the individual apart from others while
giving them purpose to help others and society in general. What’s fascinating about Thief of Time,
is that unlike the preceding Discworld novels, this is less of a satire
on one of the evils of society (that is more of a background detail on how
society isolates the mentally ill) and more of Pratchett demanding people to pursue
what makes them happy with who they are. Lady LeJean eventually choses the name Unity
and has a heel turn despite being the one to stop time and get Jeremy Clockson isolated
and building the clock. The rest of the Auditors
to take human form also begin to take on parodies of individual identities, all
based on colors in what I believe is doing a parody of Clue.
Susan also essentially completes her arc of finding
belonging and a sense of purpose, something that has been developing since Soul
Music and Hogfather, each adding a piece to the puzzle of who Susan
is. Soul Music allowed her to strike
out on her own, Hogfather showed her ability to guide the young through her
own sensibilities, and Thief of Time pushes that further by making her a
schoolteacher and looking for someone who understands. Thief of Time subtly becomes a love
story built on mutual friendship and appreciation in only the way that Pratchett
can do, ending on the exact moment where our two characters realize they are in
love with one another on the final page but in the best way. If there was anything that does not work in Thief
of Time it is Pratchett’s handling of the monastic characters of the novel,
not in a way that is offensive, but in a way that just does not work for me
personally. Perhaps it is not having
the cultural reference point of what is being parodied, nor a knowledge of the
faiths that are being referenced, but this was one significant plotline that
just dragged what could have been another perfect Pratchett down. There is an extended cameo from Nanny Ogg who
is always a fun character and the exploration of her past in this novel while
simple is actually really fun and feels especially as if it belongs here and
not in one of the witches books. The
character and use of Time is also especially strong from Pratchett, beginning
what I assume is a series of reflections from the author on the passage of time
and his own life.
Overall, Thief of Time is another stellar entry
in the Discworld. While not quite
as strong as some of the other Death entries, it does wrap Death and Susan’s
story up quite nicely and there’s this subtle way of rewriting the inconsistencies
now that in the 21st century Pratchett has the internet to keep
continuity straight. The plot and
characters are wonderful and it’s just classic Pratchett at this point. 9/10.
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