The Last Continent
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Book details
- Print length292 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarperPrism
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 1998
- Dimensions6.5 x 1 x 9.5 inches
- ISBN-100061050482
- ISBN-13978-0061050480
Book overview
Amazon.com Review
If you're baffled by all this, no worries, mate. You needn't have read Pratchett before--not even the five previous Discworld novels starring Rincewind (The Colour of Magic, The Light Fantastic, Sourcery, Eric, and Interesting Times)--to enjoy this latest romp. Nor to have visited Australia. When you finish, however, you'll likely want to rush out and do both. --Nona Vero
Review
"If I were making my list of Best Books of the Twentieth Century, Terry Pratchett's would be ost of them" -- -- Elizabeth Peters
"Superb popular entertainment" -- -- Washingtom Post Book World
"Unadulterated fun... witty, frequently hilarious.... Pratchett parodies everything in sight." -- -- San Francisco Chronicle
"Consistently, inventively mad...wild and wonderful!" -- -- Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine
"Simply the best humorous writer of the twentieth century." -- -- Oxford Times
"Terry Pratchett is fast, funny and going places. Try him!" -- -- Piers Anthony
"The funniest parodist working in the field today, period." -- -- New York Review of Science Fiction
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Against the stars a turtle passes, carrying four elephants on its shell.
Both turtle and elephants are bigger than people might expect, but out between the stars the difference between huge and tiny is, comparatively speaking, very small.
But this turtle and these elephants are, by turtle and elephant standards, big. They carry the Discworld, with its vast lands, cloudscapes, and oceans.
People don't live on the Disc any more than, in less hand-crafted parts of the multiverse, they live on balls. Oh, planets may be the place where their body eats its tea, but they live elsewhere, in worlds of their own which orbit very handily around the center of their heads.
When gods get together they tell the story of one particular planet whose inhabitants watched, with mild interest, huge continent-wrecking slabs of ice slap into another world which was in astronomical terms, right next door--and then did nothing about it because that sort of thing only happens in Outer Space. An intelligent species would at least have found someone to complain to. Anyway, no one seriously believes in that story, because a race quite that stupid would never even have discovered slood.*
People believe in all sorts of other things, though. For example, there are some people who have a legend that the whole universe is carried in a leather bag by an old man.
They're right, too.
Other people say: hold on, if he's carrying the entire universe in a sack, right, that means he's carrying himself and the sack inside the sack, because the universe contains everything. Including him. And the sack, of course. Which contains him and the sack already. As it were.
To which the reply is: well?
All tribal myths are true, for a given value of "true."
It is a general test of the omnipotence of a god that they can see the fall of a tiny bird. But only one god makes notes, and a few adjustments, so that next time it can fall faster and further.
We may find out why.
We might find out why mankind is here, although that is more complicated and begs the question "Where else should we be?" It would be terrible to think that some impatient deity might part the clouds and say, "Damn, are you lot still here? I thought you discovered slood ten thousand years ago! I've got ten trillion tons of ice arriving on Monday!"
We may even find out why the duck-billed platypus.*
Snow, thick and wet, tumbled on to the lawns and roofs of Unseen University, the Discworld's premier college of magic.
It was sticky snow, which made the place look like some sort of expensive yet tasteless ornament, and it caked around the boots of McAbre, the Head Bledlow, as he trudged through the cold, wild night.
Two other bledlows stepped out of the lee of a buttress and fell in behind him on a solemn march towards the main gates.
It was an old custom, centuries old, and in the summer a few tourists would hang around to watch it, but the Ceremony of the Keys went on every night in every season. Mere ice, wind and snow had never stopped it. Bledlows in times gone past had clam-bered over tentacled monstrosities to do the Ceremony; they'd waded through floodwater, flailed with their bowler hats at errant pigeons, harpies and dragons, and ignored mere faculty members who'd thrown open their bedroom windows and screamed imprecations on the lines of "Stop that damn racket, will you? What's the point?" They'd never stopped, or even thought of stopping. You couldn't stop Tradition. You could only add to it.
The three men reached the shadows by the main gate, almost blotted out in the whirling snow. The bledlow on duty was waiting for them.
"Halt! Who Goes There?" he shouted.
McAbre saluted. "The Archchancellor's Keys!"
"Pass, The Archchancellor's Keys!"
The Head Bledlow took a step forward, extended both arms in front of him with his palms bent back towards him, and patted his chest at the place where some bledlow long buried had once had two breast pockets. Pat, pat. Then he extended his arms by his sides and stiffly patted the sides of his jacket. Pat, pat.
"Damn! Could Have Sworn I Had Them A Moment Ago!" he bellowed, enunciating each word with a sort of bulldog carefulness.
The gatekeeper saluted. McAbre saluted.
"Have You Looked In All Your Pockets?"
McAbre saluted. The gatekeeper saluted. A small pyramid of snow was building up on his bowler hat.
"I Think I Must Have Left Them On The Dresser. It's Always The Same, Isn't It?"
"You Should Remember Where You Put Them Down!"
"Hang On, Perhaps They're In My Other Jacket!"
The young bledlow who was this week's Keeper of the Other Jacket stepped forward. Each man saluted the other two. The youngest cleared his throat and managed to say:
"No, I Looked In ... There This ... Morning!"
McAbre gave him a slight nod to acknowledge a difficult job done well, and patted his pockets again.
"Hold On, Stone The Crows, They Were In This Pocket After All! What A Muggins I Am!"
"Don't Worry, I Do The Same Myself!"
"Is My Face Red! Forget My Own Head Next!"
Somewhere in the darkness a window creaked up.
"Er, excuse me, gentlemen--"
"Here's The Keys, Then!" said McAbre, raising his voice.
"Much Obliged!"
"I wonder if you could--" the querulous voice went on, apologizing for even thinking of complaining.
"All Safe And Secure" shouted the gatekeeper, handing the keys back.
"--perhaps keep it down a little--"
"Gods Bless All Present!" screamed McAbre, veins standing out on his thick crimson neck.
"Careful Where You Put Them This Time. Ha! Ha! Ha!"
Ho! Ho! Ho!" yelled McAbre, beside himself with fury. He saluted stiffly, went About Turn with an unnecessarily large amount of foot stamping and the ancient exchange completed, marched back to the bledlows' lodge muttering under his breath.
About the author
Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.Terry Pratchett sold his first story when he was fifteen, which earned him enough money to buy a second-hand typewriter. His first novel, a humorous fantasy entitled The Carpet People, appeared in 1971 from the publisher Colin Smythe. Terry worked for many years as a journalist and press officer, writing in his spare time and publishing a number of novels, including his first Discworld novel, The Color of Magic, in 1983. In 1987 he turned to writing full time, and has not looked back since. To date there are a total of 36 books in the Discworld series, of which four (so far) are written for children. The first of these children's books, The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents, won the Carnegie Medal. A non-Discworld book, Good Omens, his 1990 collaboration with Neil Gaiman, has been a longtime bestseller, and was reissued in hardcover by William Morrow in early 2006 (it is also available as a mass market paperback (Harper Torch, 2006) and trade paperback (Harper Paperbacks, 2006). Terry's latest book, Nation, a non-Discworld standalone YA novel was published in October of 2008 and was an instant New York Times and London Times bestseller. Regarded as one of the most significant contemporary English-language satirists, Pratchett has won numerous literary awards, was named an Officer of the British Empire “for services to literature” in 1998, and has received four honorary doctorates from the Universities of Warwick, Portsmouth, Bath, and Bristol. His acclaimed novels have sold more than 55 million copies (give or take a few million) and have been translated into 36 languages. Terry Pratchett lived in England with his family, and spent too much time at his word processor. Some of Terry's accolades include: The Carnegie Medal, Locus Awards, the Mythopoetic Award, ALA Notable Books for Children, ALA Best Books for Young Adults, Book Sense 76 Pick, Prometheus Award and the British Fantasy Award.
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Product information
| Publisher | HarperPrism (January 1, 1998) |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Hardcover | 292 pages |
| ISBN-10 | 0061050482 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0061050480 |
| Item Weight | 1.2 pounds |
| Dimensions | 6.5 x 1 x 9.5 inches |
| Best Sellers Rank |
#1,725,703 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
#18,851 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction
#138,675 in Fantasy (Books)
|
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 5,464Reviews |
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Customers say
Customers find the book hilarious, entertaining, and funny. They also appreciate the clever, creative ideas and inventive setting. Readers describe the author as imaginative.
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Customers find the book hilarious, entertaining, and sarcastic. They say the author has a brilliant command of the English language.
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"...It was read wonderfully and I not only listened to it once but loved it so much that I wound up listening again!..." Read more
"...It's a fun read, paced as the Discworld books usually are: painfully slow at the beginning, picking up the pace and tension about halfway through,..." Read more
"...This is the lightest, most comedic of his Discworlds. There's plenty of laughs to be had here. Here's an example:"..." Read more
"...whenever all the wizards get together is one that offers endless hours of reading fun, and I think that without them, the book would have been less..." Read more
Customers find the book clever, imaginative, and interesting. They also appreciate the great metaphor and insights from all over history.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...There were lots of creative ideas, too. But I don't want to spoil it...." Read more
"...It's certainly interesting, and I suppose the god's island is a nice echo of the real Australia, where evolution has had a long time to tinker and..." Read more
"...Terry Pratchett manage to write books that are both hilarious and profound?..." Read more
"...Riotously funny, with insights flowing from all over history and science. Madcap humor but with an intellectual overtone. What more could one ask?" Read more
Customers find the plot of the book not essential. They also say it contains unnecessary shenanigans.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...They're just not essential to the plot, is all, and if that kind of thing is important to you, then you might not enjoy this book so much...." Read more
"...storyline tends to ramble a bit more than usual and contains A LOT of unnecessary shenanigans, The Last Continent is thoroughly enjoyable and funny!..." Read more
"...What a regret. Yes, there were some jokes, but no plot whatsoever, just a series of episodes snitched together" Read more
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Sorry, there was an error
Please try again later.Top reviews from the United States
In this one Rincewind is at his best. He's once again told that HE and only he can save the Discworld but he's having none of it. Saving worlds puts you into a lot of danger! He's tired of being in danger and just wants to get home! It's funny because I do not think Rincewind would exactly call himself lucky, but there is a bit of luck on his side here. Just when he's about to die of dehydration he trips, falls, and lands face first into a pond of water. Every time! Someone is looking out for him, even if it isn't Rincewind himself!
The funny thing is, he has not learned that the harder you try to run away the faster you get to where you do not want to be. And I'm impressed with just how oblivious he is to the lives around him! Of course it does not really matter because he accepts everyone for who they are anyway, but it does add some hilarity into this one.
It's not all about Rincewind though. The Librarian has a nasty case of a cold which keeps changing his shape into various things that blend in with his environment. Because of this the wizards from Unseen University want to help him but the only wizard that knows The Librarian enough to know his real name is Rincewind. He is also the wizard that Ponder Stibbons accidentally sent to XXXX. No way to cure The Librarian and no way to get to Rincewind? That is not going to stop a bunch of wizards! They find themselves on their own little adventure, way away from UU and have to deal with Gods that are creating evolution, sharks, and a very good looking housekeeper!
It is a rare day when I do not laugh at a Terry Pratchett novel, but this one had my sides splitting! It was read wonderfully and I not only listened to it once but loved it so much that I wound up listening again! This is one that I'll listen to every year.
If you are a Rincewind fan you will definitely not want to pass this one up. Terry Pratchett at his best!
Sadly, I am ending the Rincewind series with this one. Later I'm going to go back and read The Last Hero which is a graphic novel. I'm looking forward to another Rincewind story!
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This is the lightest, most comedic of his Discworlds. There's plenty of laughs to be had here. Here's an example:
"And that jungle," said the Senior Wrangler, sniffing, "Looks pretty damn dangerous to me. Could be anything in it. Fatal. Could be tigers and gorillas and elephants and pineapples. I wouldn't go near it. I'm with you, archchancellor. Better to freeze here than look some rabid man-eater in the eye."
Ridcully's own eyes were burning bright. He stroked his beard thoughtfully. "Tigers, eh?" he said. Then his expression changed. "PINEAPPLES?"
"Deadly," said the Senior Wrangler firmly. "One of them got my aunt. We couldn't get it off her. I TOLD her that's not the way to eat them, but would she listen?"
~from "The Last Continent" page 54 by Sir Terry Pratchett
I gave this one four stars. Recommended. Enjoy.
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I suddenly find, having just looked at the clock, that I have to run off to my next thing. Thus I shall be brief.
There are certain books that children are not prepared to read. I would not suggest handing Mein Kampf to an eight year old and suggesting that they read it and 'Get back to me with you thoughts on its message.' (Yes, Virginia, monsters do exist). The difference is that as adults we have already been children, and thus retain, sometimes hidden way back in the deep recesses of our minds, the unrestrained joy of reading like a child. It's sort of like the NEWS. Of course you should read the newspaper (Sarah Palin take note) and watch Washington Week, but that does not mean you shouldn't put it all in perspective by watching the Daily Show and South Park. And this is why I love books by Terry Pratchett. Not that they are, strictly speaking, for children or young adults. But they are presented in such a way as to not make you feel that you are being crushed under the weight of Saturn. I am not yet through his entire Discworld series but I am far enough along to be merrily convince that we are all quite, utterly, stark raving mad (and quite doomed if not for the efforts of Lord Vimes, Granny Weatherwax and the like). I don't neglect my 'adult' reading (no; I don't mean dirty books - get your heads out of the gutter) but I decompress by still seeing the world through my younger, more hopeful, puckish eyes. This is something we who are adults can and should do, because while a child does not yet have the intellectual tools to deal with more mature themes, we as adults still do have the ability to get great pleasure from lighter fare.
Terry Pratchett's books do this wonderfully. I whole-heartedly recommend, at the very least, his first twenty-two Discworld books. I suspect I could go farther than this and give a blanket recommendation but one does not recommend that which one has not read. In the vernacular of his homeland 'He's bloody brilliant'.
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I reckon if you live in Australia, you probably know quite a lot. If you've known someone from Australia or perhaps have visited there, you might know a few things. If your experience is limited to a few "Crocodile Dundee" movies and the Crocodile Hunter, then you could probably stand to know a little more. No matter what your level of Australiana is, though, you probably know at least enough to get a lot of enjoyment out of this book, Terry Pratchett's homage to the strangest continent on Earth.
Now keep in mind, Pratchett does state quite clearly that this is not a book about Australia. "It's about somewhere entirely different which happens to be, here and there, a bit... Australian." So that's okay then.
Really, this is Pratchett's homage to Australia, a country that he clearly likes a lot. In reality, Australia is a pretty strange place. It's a giant island, most of which is barren desert. It's been disconnected from the other continents for so long that evolution has given us species unlike any others on Earth. Pretty much anything that you come across, from the lowliest spider to the cutest jellyfish to the weirdest platypus, is deadly. The country is a tribute to Nature, both in its beauty and its danger, and really deserves more attention than it gets.
In one memorable scene, Death asks his Library for a complete list of dangerous animals on the continent known as XXXX, aka Fourecks. He is immediately buried under books, including Dangerous Mammals, Reptiles, Amphibians, Birds, Fish, Jellyfish, Insects, Spiders, Crustaceans, Grasses, Trees, Mosses and Lichens of Terror Incognita, volume 29c, part three. A slight exaggeration? Perhaps. He then asks for a complete list of species that are not deadly, and gets a small leaflet on which is written, "Some of the sheep."
This book isn't about Death, though, as much fun as that may be. This is about the worst wizard on the Disc. The classic inadvertent hero, who had seen so much of the world but only as a blur while he ran from danger. The hero who truly just wants to be left alone, perhaps with a potato - Rincewind.
What you most need to know about Rincewind is that he absolutely does not want to be a hero. He craves a boring life, one in which the most he has to worry about is whether to have his potatoes baked, mashed, or deep fried. He does not want to be chased by mad highwaymen, put in prison for sheep theft, or required to completely change the climate of an entire continent. He doesn't want to time travel, be guided by strange, otherworldly kangaroos or fall in with a troupe of suspiciously masculine female performers. He just wants peace and quiet.
The universe, of course, has other ideas. And so it is up to Rincewind to once again save the day. The continent of Fourecks has never seen rain - in fact, they think the very idea of water that falls from the sky is ludicrous. But there are legends of what they call The Wet - the day when water will be found on the surface of the ground, rather than hundreds of feet below it. And while they don't know how it will happen exactly, they do know it will happen. Lucky for Rincewind, the universe has chosen him to make sure that it does.
I really can't list all of the Australia references because there are just too many. From drop bears to Vegemite, Mad Max to Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, they're pretty much all there.
This book is, like so many other Discworld, books, a lot of fun to read. One of the more interesting sections in the book is one that's not strictly necessary. Exploring a strange window in the University which, for some reason, leads to a beach, the Wizards of the Unseen University find themselves marooned thousands of miles away and thousands of years back in time. On this weird little island, they meet one of the most unusual gods on the Disc - the god of evolution.
This god isn't interested in the normal godly things - lolling about and being worshiped, occasionally smiting a few followers here and there. As Pratchett puts it, "It is a general test of the omnipotence of a god that they can see the fall of a tiny bird. But only one god makes notes, and a few adjustments, so that next time it can fall further and faster." This god of evolution is devoted to making life forms better, often one at a time, and lives on a strange little island where there's only one of everything, but everything yearns to be useful. With him, the wizards are able to explore evolution and natural selection and figure out why sex is just so darn useful.
I say that this section isn't strictly necessary because it just isn't. It's certainly interesting, and I suppose the god's island is a nice echo of the real Australia, where evolution has had a long time to tinker and come up with some really weird stuff, but in terms of the story, it's not all that important a plot point. In fact, the wizards in general don't contribute much to the story other than to make it longer and funnier. Their exploration of evolution and Rincewind's unwilling quest to bring rain to the barren land of Fourecks are almost wholly unrelated to each other, up until the very end.
This isn't to say that they're unwelcome - I love watching the wizards explore the world. The combination of personalities whenever all the wizards get together is one that offers endless hours of reading fun, and I think that without them, the book would have been less enjoyable. They're just not essential to the plot, is all, and if that kind of thing is important to you, then you might not enjoy this book so much.
Me, I love science and I love Discworld. While the actual Science of Discworld series was kind of dry and boring in the end, I love it when Pratchett explores real-world science through the eyes of his Discworld characters. By looking at science from another perspective, he is able to make it perhaps a little more understandable to people who otherwise might write science off as "too hard."
This book is a trip through time and space and Australia. It's a long, strange trip, to be sure, but an entertaining one.
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"It's not many times in your life you get the chance to die of hunger on some bleak continent some thousands of years before you're born. We should make the most of it."
- The Dean
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