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Book:The Light Fantastic

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The Light Fantastic
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Cover [[Image:|thumb|center|200px|{{{1}}}]]
Published May 1986
Publisher Colin Smythe
ISBN 0861402030
Pages 217
Series Rincewind Series
Main characters Rincewind, Twoflower, the Luggage
Annotations Annotations for The Light Fantastic
Notes Book #02
All data relates to the UK hardback edition.

Contents

[edit] Blurb

As it moves towards a seemingly inevitable collision with a malevolent red star, the Discworld has only one possible saviour. Unfortunately, this happens to be the singularly inept and cowardly wizard called Rincewind, who was last seen falling off the edge of the world ....

[edit] Characters

[edit] Major Characters

[edit] Minor Characters

[edit] Cameos

[edit] Things/People mentioned

[edit] Locations

[edit] Series notes

  • First mention of animate Gargoyles
  • Rincewind says that talking to trees is mad (a possible reference to King George III), but he spoke extensively with dryads in The Colour of Magic. But then, talking to the spirits that live inside trees and talking to an actual tree itself are two different things. Also, Rincewind wasn't in the most stable state of mind at either point (nothing new there!).
  • "Normally informative demons summoned abruptly from the Dungeon Dimensions" implies demons come from the Dungeon Dimensions, but Eric states that demons and their Hell are quire different from the Dungeon Dimensions. Possibly two different types of demons? Or maybe just the word "demon" being used as a catch-all term to describe extra-dimensional nasties of a magical persuasion.
  • Rincewind seems shocked at the concept of a Tooth Fairy, even though they seem to be well known in Hogfather. However, they're only really believed in by children and persons of a magical nature and, technically, Rincewind could be said to be neither.
  • The description of gnomes and their lives as "nasty, brutish, short" parodies the famous quote from Thomas Hobbes's The Leviathan
  • The bursar in this book "was not a wizard" (somewhat surprisingly?), and is thus not the Bursar
  • Broomsticks have handlebars, a sophistication of design that witches encountered from Equal Rites onwards seem to do perfectly well without. Although Granny Weatherwax would no doubt look upon them as the equivalent of training wheels on a bicycle.
  • The Spells' recollection of how the Universe started is more accurately recounted in Eric
  • Twoflower states the priests "at home" go around with begging bowls and are holy men who dedicate themselves to the study of the nature of God but, in The Colour of Magic, he claims that, where he comes from, there are no Gods. However, the absence of a deity does not necessarily mean there's nobody around who worships a god anyway - some people will believe in anything.
  • "Rincewind remembered that it was said that druids used strange and terrible potions. Of course, it was often said, usually by the same people, ... if the gods had wanted men to fly they'd have given them an airline ticket". An "airline ticket"? On Discworld?
  • The game Twoflower teaches the Four Horsemen is, of course, contract bridge, which is ironically the name of a bridge in Ankh-Morpork
  • The iconograph imp, a creature of Hell, doesn't recognize Death's Domain (perhaps because imps (demons) can't die?) nor the Octavo.
  • The only fact Rincewind knows about trolls (that they turn to stone when exposed to sunlight) is incorrect: we later learn that trolls turn to stone due to heat, not light - which evolves over the series so that they get more and more stupid with heat.
  • "It is possible to stab a troll..." -- Rincewind did exactly this (with a little help from The Lady) in The Colour of Magic
  • When the Spell kills a man (through Rincewind), not even the man's smoking boots are left, violating narrativium (perhaps implying the loss of magic also resulted in a loss of this substance?)
  • Cohen runs from a mob here, but refuses to run from an army of 700,000 men in Interesting Times. Possibly he felt that there was nothing heroic about butchering his way through a load of confused citizens, whereas there's rather a lot that's heroic about standing up to an entire army.
  • The Luggage's ability to follow Twoflower extends to Death's Domain and the Octavo, but not to wandering shops. This might be because the Octavo and Death's Domain occupy definite and fixed locations in other dimensions, whereas the shop wandered, thus confusing the luggage. As Cohen says, the luggage looked "puzzled".
  • "Rincewind knew what orgasms were ... had a few in his time, sometimes even in company". Since wizards are supposed to be celibate, one wonders in what company Rincewind had orgasms. Given his less than exemplary student record (reading from the Octavo for a bet, for instance), and revelations in later books that student wizards would often slip out of the University after hours, courtesy of removeable bricks in the walls, possibly these orgasms were the result of a drunken (or paid-for) encounter on one-such night.
  • The Octavo is described as giving off "the light fantastic" (a rather disappointing purple colour), the title of the book. Wouldn't it give off the the colour of magic? Or are these the same thing?
  • Rincewind unlocks the wizards trapped by Trymon, who then see him save the world. However, in Interesting Times, Rincewind tells Mustrum Ridcully that no one from the university had ever seen him save the universe (many of the wizards Rincewind rescues are turned into statues, and maybe all of the others die before Interesting Times?)
  • The line "nothing [Twoflower] looks at is ever the same again. Including me [Rincewind], I suspect" somewhat foreshadows Interesting Times


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