Wednesday, July 27, 2011

NADWCON 2011: Meeting with Terry Pratchett! (Part 2)

These are just some stray thoughts and recollections about the Kids Klatch with Terry, and mebbe a couple other things.

Kids Klatch

Terry recommended seeing a movie from the early 1960's called The Mouse on the Moon. This is the sequel to The Mouse that Roared.  We managed to track down a copy on Amazon, and we all enjoyed this family-friendly, funny, and sometimes cheesy picture. It's definitely worth the $10.00 or so that it cost us. (One of my favorite scenes involves offering pudding on the moon.) Beware: There are no mice in this movie.

My son loved when Terry used the phrase, "Mad as a hat full of spoons" while whirling his head around. (NOTE: He did *not* whirl his head around ala Linda Blair in The Exorcist.)

Mr. Pratchett did not say so, but Alex and I assume that Terry's daughter is at least in part a model for Tiffany Aching.

This tidbit came from the Kids Klatch, but also from the panel about "Publishing PTerry" with two of his American editors, Jennifer Brehl and Anne Hoppe, and his agent Colin Smythe: Terry uses speech to text software called Talking Point. What's fun is that he has taught it Nac Mac Feegle! Crivens! Dinna fash yersel', ya wee daftie.

Speaking of the above panel. Writers, editors, and others in publishing are familiar with a phenomenon called becoming "editor proof". This is when a BIG NAME writer gets so big that he/she believes her prose don't stink. That is, he/she either intimidates editors into silence, or has enough power to ignore them. We've all seen the 5th or 6th or 7th book in a popular series become immoveable, indigestable bricks running nearly 1,000 pages. Or even single novels that stink to high heaven, but the BIG NAME writer can publish anything he wants.

Well, I'm here to tell you that all the members of the panel confirm that Terry Pratchett is just the opposite. Even for work of his that has been through a few drafts with his Brit agent and editors, Terry is open to suggestions from his American cousins. He really is as nice and down to earth as he seems.

Spencer

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