Terry Pratchett, The Carpet People (Colin Smythe Ltd., 1971; Corgi, 1993) It's enough to make you want to vacuum more often.
And we're never quite sure, but readers may come to suspect that someone in the heavens above is wielding a vacuum cleaner with a ruthless lack of concern for the populations below. The Carpet People reads like someone trying to be Terry Pratchett, and indeed, someone is. The culprit is Pratchett himself, who wrote this book when he was 17. Although the slim volume went out of print eons ago, there was enough hullaballoo for its re-release that it's back on the shelves. However, don't expect to read pure teen Pratchett. As he explains in his note at the beginning, at age 43 he had a few different ideas how the story should progress. So the modern text has been revised somewhat, blending the two Pratchetts together in a package which is fun to read. If you know Pratchett's "voice" from any number of Discworld novels, I think you'll have fun picking out elements which read as young or, um, experienced. As is often the case on the Discworld, you'll find a few morals buried in the tale -- lessons about leadership and fighting and the value of things and whatnot. You'll also find a quick and easy tale which opens up a new side of the beloved British humorist. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET book review by Tom Knapp 28 December 1999 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |