Have you ever heard of elves?
“Yeah of course, who hasn't?” You said, “Check out The Lord of the Rings, the Elves are beautiful and lovely; the elves are so much better than us and they are like... Lords and Ladies”.
“Yeah of course, who hasn't?” You said, “Check out The Lord of the Rings, the Elves are beautiful and lovely; the elves are so much better than us and they are like... Lords and Ladies”.
But how do you know the elves are
lovely? Have you met them? What if the elves are evil, sadistic
bastards?
Ah ha, I see questions in your eyes.
There is a book called Lords and Ladies, it is written by
Terry Pratchett and it is also the 14th installment in the
Discworld series. What is this book about? On a hot Midsummer
Night, the elves broke the barriers of imagination and stepped into
the reality. Everyone thought the elves would be nice, but they
turned out to be evil, sadistic bastards who like to torture people
for fun. After the elves showed up, things quickly went pear-shaped and spooky. Luckily, Granny Weatherwax, Nanny Ogg, and Margrat Garlick, three
witches who met every Tuesday night, they stood up and took on the
elves. But I won't tell you anymore of the story lest I spoil it.
You said, “But Daniel, both The
Lord of the Rings and this book are fictions. Elves are fictions.
So, what is the point?”
Elves are fictitious, you got that
right! Look, aside from the fact that Lords and Ladies is well
written, witty, and humorous, but I also think Sir Terry was trying
to tell us a thing or two about the danger of myth and the attraction
to the unreal. After I read it, I thought the book is trying to tell
us that we ought to be more earthy, like Granny Weatherwax, who
always plants her foot on earth, then we will discover what appears
to be the mundane and the normal in the everyday life are in fact,
miracles already and they are worth celebrating; life won't become
more fulfilling from chasing the unseen stuff, when we chase air we
only end up with more air.
Does this book sound good to you? I
think Lords and Ladies is both entertaining and interesting.
Read, think, and form your own conclusions. I recommend this book to
those who like novels but also looking for something more than just
the stories. By the way, Lords and Ladies is also a parody to
the Shakespeare’s A Midsummer's Night's Dream. Before
you read Lords and Ladies though, you should read the three
books preceding it; Equal Rites, Wyrd Sisters, and
Witches Abroad. Enjoy!