Discworld Monthly - Issue 117: January 2007
Table of Contents:
1. Editorial
2. News
3. Readers' Letters
4. DiscTrivia
5. Review: Wincanton - Hogswatch Big Bash
6. Competitions
7. Review: Hogfather - SkyONE Adaptation.
8. The End

Welcome to issue 117 and the first issue of 2007. In only a few
month's we will be 10 years old. I would like to thank you all for
sticking with us for all these years - you've been great company.
Have a wonderful 2007.
Wow! What a way to end the year at least those of us lucky enough
to live in the UK and have Sky TV.
The Mob have done a fantastic job of filming the first ever live
action adaptation of a Discworld novel. Hogfather has now been
shown on Sky television. Read all about it in section 7.
According to a post on The Collectors' Gifts forum Hogfather will be
repeated on Sky2 on 27th and 28th at 1:00pm.
Also being repeated on 26th at 15:00 is Making of Hogfather - The
Whole Hog.
It appears that last month's fixes to our mailing server have proved
effective. Issue 116 was the first issue, for a few months, that
was successfully delivered to all addresses in the mailing list. I
would therefore like to thank Marie at Sonnet UK for all her hard
work in sorting out the problems.
--
Jason Anthony (Editor)
William Barnett (Deputy Editor)
Richard Massey (Old Man Trouble)

The south west branch of the Fools Guild will be holding their April
Fools Day dinner on 10th March at 7:30pm in the Bear, Wincanton.
You should book direct with Jo on 0196332581.
There will be activities (games) during the day.
More information can be obtained from Sarah Finnerty on 01963 32914
or Divina on 01752 342818.
There are plans to have a joke competition and enter all the jokes
in to the British Heritage Joke Foundation. There will also be an
auction to raise money for Comic Relief.
I have agreed to host a PDF of Trevor Truran's Da Quirm lecture that
he performed at the Discworld Convention on our website. Apparently
there has been a great deal of interest about being able to read the
lecture and Trevor thought he would make it available for free
download.
To view the 19 page PDF lecture visit:
http://www.discworldmonthly.co.uk/daquirm.pdf
Barrie Wakeford the official Discworld Jeweller is selling pendants
and earrings made from teeth from the Hogfather movie. 1 GBP for
each set sold will be donated to the Discworld Convention charities.
Visit
http://www.jewellerybybarrie.co.uk and search for Teeth to
find the available sets. Please mention Discworld Monthly on any
orders you place.
The Wincantonbury Tales is a small magazine written by Discworld
fans. The previous issue raised 275 GBP for the Wincanton event
charity.
The magazine includes a vast mixture of articles that relate to
Discworld.
The current issue costs 2.50 GBP plus 1 GBP postage and can be
obtained from
Subject Wincantonbury Tales. Stocks
of this issue are very limited but pre-orders can be taken now for
the spring edition.
News from Colin Smythe:
I see from Broadcastnow.co.uk that the viewing figure for the first
half of HOGFATHER shown on Sunday night was 2.6 million. This I
believe is very much more than the people at SkyOne ever expected
Hogfather has beaten Torchwood "as the number one rated
multichannel commission in UK TV history."
http://www.broadcastnow.co.uk/broadcastnowHome.aspx?Category=46
Discworld Dates...
This section will contain events that you need to keep in your
diary. Entries will remain until they go out of date. New entries
will include the word [New] next to them. If this section gets too
large we will start pruning entries.
[NE, UPDATED] Wyrd Sisters will be performed in Rotterdam by ToKiJo1
on December 20, 23, 27 and 29. This is believed to be the
first-ever Dutch adaptation of Wyrd Sisters.
The troupe are planning to tour The Netherlands and Belgium as well
and are in negotiations for that. The first location outside of
Rotterdam will be Delft, at the Delft synagogue, January 7, 2007, 2
pm and 7:30 pm. Free parking space all Sunday long at Koornmarkt 8,
just 2 buildings away from the synagogue! Tickets 10 EUR each and 6
EUR for children 8-12 yrs old and 65+ . Outside of Sprookjesstad
we're not subsidized, so if you come to Delft you would support us
greatly!
Reservations: Sara 06-480 45 441 or Niek 06-4289 1190.
Telephone: 00-31-(0)636107476
Email:
[UK, NEW] The Broken Drummers is a London Discworld Group that meets
once a month on a Monday evening. Membership is free - just come
along. New members and visitors to London are both welcome and
encouraged. January's meeting is on Monday 15th January at the Olde
Shades, Whitehall from 7.00pm onwards. For more information go to
http://www.brokendrummers.co.uk or e-mail
[AU, UPDATED] Nullus Anxietas: The Australian Discworld Convention
Melbourne, February 9-11 2007
Guest of Honour: Terry Pratchett
Virtual Guests of Honour: Stephen Briggs, Bernard Pearson, Colin
Smythe, Ian Stewart, Jack Cohen
SPECIAL HOGSWATCH OFFER: As an extra incentive to sign up for
memberships (perhaps as a Hogswatch gift for your Discworld-adoring
friends, or yourself), there's 20 AUD off full and concession
memberships from 12:00am December 24th 2006 to 11:59pm December 31st
2006 AEDT.
With two new virtual guests - the wonderful co-authors of the
Science of Discworld books - our programme is being finessed to
something approaching a finished product. The latest version can be
found at
http://www.ausdwcon.org/detail/show/programme
Day rates have also been announced, for those of you who can't make
it to the whole convention. If signing up before Feb 2nd, Friday is
45 AUD, and Saturday and Sunday are 90 AUD each. If you're
interested in these, get in touch with our Membership Co-ordinator
Suzie (
).
Don't forget - you can also sign up on our mailing list for updates
at
http://www.ausdwcon.org/mailing-list
More details, as always, are out our website:
http://www.ausdwcon.org
[DE] The first German Discworld Convention "Scheibenwelt-Fest 2007"
will take place at a real castle near Siegen in Germany from
February the 23rd till the 25th.
The organisers will try to entertain you with a broad range of
different workshops, shows, guests of honour and other events at
this Uberwald-themed festival.
Tickets cost only 47.50 GBP for both days including accommodation in
the castle, breakfast and dinner.
You can find the registration and further information at:
http://www.discworld-convention.de
[US] Terry will be guest of honour at the MidSouthCon from March
23-25. The Convention takes place in Memphis, TN.
http://www.midsouthcon.org/
Small Ads...
Please note, DWM has no way of checking the veracity or validity of
any of the items in our small ads section. As always, exercise
caution when giving out your details over the Internet. We
*strongly* recommend parental supervision for younger readers who
follow up any of these contacts.
Birgit Ablinger
writes: I would love to
stage one of Pratchett's play with my school's drama group. Problem:
is there a German translation of the plays available? If so, where?

If you have any letters or comments, please email them to
We assume any correspondence is eligible for use in the newsletter
unless otherwise stated, including the sender's email address. We
may also edit your letters and use them as fire lighters.
It is vitally important that you don't pass off other people's work
as your own. If you use information from other resources please let
us know so we can give proper credit.
The best letter of the month will receive a Kiss the Cook print
supplied by Bonsai Trading. Bonsai Trading is the Discworld store
that brings you Clarecraft figurines, diaries & calendars, Thud and
much more.
http://bonsai.discworldmonthly.org
*
* From: "Stuart Dollin"
*
I wonder if anyone has wondered where Terry's idea for the Clacks
system came from. I think I've found the answer.
Anyone watching the Holyhead to Liverpool programme in the BBC's
recent Coast series will have been amazed to see that an Optical
Telegraph system was actually built to send messages between
Holyhead and Liverpool. It used signalling arms to send messages and
apparently could send a message over 100 miles in less than 27
seconds. From the images and description of how it worked it just
has to be Terry's model.... or an incredible coincidence.
If you go to
http://www.bbc.co.uk/coast/programmes2/02-holyhead-liverpool.shtml
you can find out a lot more and there's even a picture.
DWM replies: Stuart gets this month's Letter Of The Month.
*
* From: "Covell, Ian"
*
Last month Yvonne Duffy asked a about a copy of Men at Arms she had
been given.
Somewhat ambiguous -- presumably we are talking an undated print
after the first printing? [So it shows, say "3 5 7 6 4" on the
copyright page?]
It's likely that all printings of such hardcovers would have the
same ISBN, and if the price is the same from the start, the only
possibility for knowing "a rough date" for the printing is whether
the list of Terry's books includes something published after MEN AT
ARMS.. or some time-specific extra comment ["Terry has recently won
the award for being the best writer on the planet"] which might pin
it down to a year or month.
The publishers themselves might also give an answer.. and Colin
Smythe's brilliant site might give more pointers... (eg, 1993 ISBN
was 0-575-05503-0, and the 1998 reissue was 0-575-06577-X {but check
out the comment about re jacketing)
http://www.colinsmythe.co.uk/discworldpages/dwindex.htm
*
* From: "Jon Price"
*
Ref the Bosnian cabbage monument. I served in Bosnia in 1997-98 and
remember those cabbages very well. There is a valley near Banja Luka
that is entirely given over to the growing and cultivation of
cabbages...as far as the eye can see it's cabbage, cabbage, cabbage.
Along the roadside that cuts through, are the inevitable
cabbage-sellers, each selling sacks of cabbages. There is no
apparent difference between each vendor (spaced a hundred yards or
so between each one over a distance of say 10 miles) other than the
colour of the sack holding the cabbages!
Good luck to them!
Oh - in the other season, they grow watermelons and pumpkins...and
sell them too.
*
* From: "Mike Harrington"
*
Sto Plains in Bosnia? Great news but for me they evoke another
image a bit nearer home. I used to drive over them,. through
endless fields of cabbages and sprouts, when I worked in Liverpool.
They lie roughly between Formby and Maghull in totally flat country.
You can find the village that I think of as Scrote on OS Landranger
Sheet 108 (Liverpool) at Grid Ref 347020.
Gabriella's translation of Cave et aude is right: 'Be careful and
dare.' 'Watch and listen' would be Cave et audi.
*
* From: "Matthia Lariviere"
*
I've noticed a time or two people wondering about book valuing, so I
thought I'd put my two cents in. I work at a used book store that
has a fairly extensive antiquarian and speciality stock
(www.russellbooks.com, if anyone's interested) so I've got a bit of
experience at pricing books.
The best and easiest way to price a book is to visit as many
speciality and antiquarian on-line listings and compare your title
with the ones listed. Be very aware of condition, edition,
publication dates, dust jackets, inscriptions/signatures and the
like, which will all affect value. Some good sites are
www.abebooks.com or www.bookfinder.com, but those are just a few.
The more listings you can find the more reliable the price is. After
all that, it really is up to you to settle at an educated
guess--usually based on an overall average. I would suggest, though,
that if you think you've stumbled across something special that you
get it properly valued by a reliable antiquarian or speciality
bookseller, if it's really important to you.
This is really only worth the time if you think you have a
reasonably valuable book. If you try looking for your "color of
magic" pb, even if it's a first printing, you probably wont find it
listed for more than a few bucks. Any ways, I hope this has helped
any frustrated bibliophiles out there who think they may have gold
sitting on their bookshelf!
*
* From: "Stephen Parsons"
*
I was at the second screening [of the Hogfather premiere] and Terry
and the director gave a 15 min Q&A before our screening in which
they told us that they "were not making a Rincewind book into a
program and so couldn't talk about how well its going" which looks
very promising. I also got my invite signed by Terry, Sir David
Jason, Tony Robinson, Neil Planner, Michelle Dockery and Stephen
Marcus which is a real keeper.
A brilliant adaptation over all and didn't disappoint in any way
*
* From: "Tessa Ghost"
*
Ever since discovering the Discworld books, I have maintained links
for acquiring the Josh Kirby covers. If anyone in the US is still
looking for them, and happens to live in a city with a major Sci-Fi
convention, check to see if Zane Melder of Edge Books will be in the
dealer's room. He has almost single-handedly enabled me to acquire
the artwork covers, even to the point of sending them to me via
other people who are attending conventions in those cities!
I also like the Paul Kidby covers. I found it very interesting that
I could pretty much name all the characters on the cover of the
first Science book, and only Darwin gave me a problem on the third
one, since I've never paid much attention to him. I think PK did an
excellent job of fleshing out the actual descriptions of the
characters, where with some of the JK covers you just have to guess
who is which! In fact, I took the PK art book to a book club
meeting last night to show someone, and the rest of us were blabbing
about various topics all evening, while she sat there in her own
corner and very carefully studied the book page by page. I'll have
to take "The Last Hero" to another meeting and see if the same thing
happens . . . .
*
* From: "Robert Hurley"
*
Sorry, I'm gonna get a lot of stick over this, but having just
watched Hogfather, I've come away very, VERY disappointed..
Some of the casting was excellent, the visuals were fantastic, and
the plot was adhered to, along with much of the dialogue.
But the wizards were rubbish...come on, Ridcully mumbled most of
his lines. Not what I expected from someone who regularly shouts "
BUUURRSSAAARRR"!!! Ponder was ok, but did I miss something? Like a
300 pound ape? Maybe I did, because I was rapidly losing interest,
and started to decorate my Christmas tree, much to the astonishment
of my wife, who didn't expect me to surface from the Discworld until
tomorrow.
Here's the worst bit, and it's nothing to do with the story. Most
of the actors seemed to be reading from a script... especially
Susan. She might as well have had an Autocue in front of her, she
just read her lines,nothing else. Teatime was pretty good, though
the American accent was disconcerting...thinking of the U.S.
audience, eh, Mob films?
All in all, I am gutted, especially as I flew home from Spain(where
I work) EARLY, just to catch this so called Pratchett treat. I would
rather there are no more TV adaptations, thank you very much.
DWM replies: We are sorry that you came away disappointed by The
Mob's adaptation of Hogfather. The problem with any adaptation is
that it might not fit the image you have in your head. Personally I
thought Michelle was fabulous as Susan and loved every minute of it.

This month I will be asking questions about Reaper Man.
- Q1.
- Death stays on a farm, who owns it?
- Q2.
- What name does Death take on in Reaper Man?
- - Bill Gates
- - Bill Barnett
- - Bill Door
- - Bill Sky
- Q3.
- Name three of the ingredients in Wow, Wow sauce!
- Q4.
- Why did Miss Flitworth's father think taxes were worse than death?
- Q5.
- What is the last song that Bill Door and Miss Flitworth dance to?
The results, as always, appear at the end of this issue.

Reviewed by Jason Anthony.
This year's Big Bash took place over the weekend of 8-9 December
2006. Unlike previous events the local had been pressed into
service. This provided a large room for dealers but also make the
whole thing feel a bit like a car boot sale.
The Discworld Beer festival took place off the main hall and many a
happy Discworld fan could be seen staggering out from time to time.
Whilst the event official didn't start until Saturday the normal
motley crew of dedicated fans had decided to start the weekend
early. For a lot of us it started with a really nice curry before
we either headed off to the ghost walk or the local hostelries for
some liquid refreshment. I did purchase a ticket for the ghost walk
but gave my ticket away to someone that wanted to go but didn't
manage to get a ticket in time - so I was forced to go to the
Dolphin pub instead.
After a few hours of quaffing our taxi arrived to take us back to
our accommodation where we put the world to rights around the
kitchen table whilst examining some of the myriad digital photos we
had taken.
Saturday started slowly (for some reason none of us were feeling all
that bright). We headed into town, visited the show and examined
what the memorial hall had on offer.
During the day on Saturday Dave Hodges showed me the prototype of
his BSJ egg cup. This sturdy bit of engineering turns out to be a
Bar-B-Que. Made from half of a gas cylinder and with legs to keep
the base 18" off the ground (a regulation at Wadfest and other
campsites) this Bar-B-Que will last a lifetime. Once you finish
cooking the grill can be removed and the base can be filled with
wood to make a safe camp fire. Dave went on to show me the blisters
on the palms of his hands but at that point I ran away.
Whilst we were watching the Maskerade. Rod and Ian from The Mob
turned up to get ready for their showing of the Making of Hogfather.
I got involved in helping to turn the memorial hall into a cinema
for the evening. It's quite fun trying to get over 300 chairs
arrange in a hall when other people are hanging around because it's
cold outside.
After arranging the chairs we headed to our designated pub for the
traditional sausage supper where I was able to have some great
conversations with very pleasant company.
Following supper, rather than having the auction we all headed back
to the memorial hall to watch the Making of Hogfather. We didn't
get to see the making of but we did get to see a sneak preview of
bits of the Hogfather adaptation.
After the presentation and a quick question and answer session a
special auction took place. The items in the auction were all props
from the Hogfather adaptation that Terry and Rob managed to salvage
from the skip! Amazingly over 4000 GBP was raised - so much for
scrap.
Sunday morning started very cold. We made our way down to the
sports ground for the football (soccer) match that would take place
between the Flatalists and the Consulate. I volunteered my (lack
of) skills as the goal keeper for the Flatalists which gave the
advantage of being the only player on the team that wasn't tied to
an opposition player.
The game was played with real Ankh-Morpork style and flair. Goals
changed shape as bits were removed to make them smaller. At one
point my goal was picked up and moved to the other end of the pitch.
And at some point I picked up the ball and recreated that famous
moment when rugby football was first invented. There were even a
couple of pitch invasions by the cheerleaders! The game ended with
a score of 10 all.
After we recovered sufficiently from the football we headed back to
the memorial hall. At the hall a number of awards were given out
and then a special present was given to Bernard and Isobel - Bernard
got a new smoking pipe made in his image and Isobel got a beautiful
glass bowl. These presents we paid for by donations from members of
the Discworld stamp forum.
After all the awards and presents were given out the normally
Saturday night auction was started. The auction raised nearly 2000
GBP bringing the weekend total to 5970 GBP.
I had a wonderful time and can't wait for the April event.
Photograph's of the event can be found on the Silver Horde website
http://www.silverhorde.co.uk
Details of future events can be found at:
http://www.artificer.co.uk

This month we have a signed copy of the Illustrated Hogfather
Screenplay up for grabs. The book has been signed by Vadim Jean
(Director), Michelle Dockery (Susan), Steven Marcus (Banjo) and
Terry Pratchett (Toy Maker) - the signatures were collected
personally by me at the London premiere.
This time instead of a competition we are going to hold a raffle for
charity.
Each entry to the raffle costs just 2 GBP and you can enter as many
times as you like. To take part in the raffle please send your
payment via paypal to
before 20th
January 2007. Please mention that it is for the raffle when you
post the money.
On January 22nd I will randomly select an entry. At that point all
money in the Discworld Monthly paypal account (currently about 1.50
GBP, but hopefully a lot higher after the raffle) will be donated to
Cancer Research UK.
I will annouce the winner of the signed screenplay and the amount
raised next month.
Last month we had three prizes to give away courtesy of Bernard
"The Cunning Artificer" Pearson. Bernard had just opened the
Octiron Forge (
http://www.octironforge.com) to provide a range of
objets d'art ranging from a Room 3b plaque to a Goddess Anoia
kitchen utensil all made in "lead free" pewter.
The prizes on offer were reproductions of the ring Tiffany has made
in Wintersmith. The first prize made from silver and the three
runners up prizes made from pewter.
In order to win one of these great prizes all you had to do was
answer to the following question.
- Q1.
- The Tiffany rings are available in four sizes. What sizes are they?
The answer we were looking for was H, J, M and P. Not Small,
Medium, Large and Extra Large as some tried to tell me!
This was one of the most popular competitions we have ever run. Over
560 people gave the correct answers and only a handful of incorrect
ones.
The randomly selected 1st prize winner is Anita Hooper of Sussex,
England and two second prize winners are Jo Haigh of Cornwall,
England and Tina Lee of California, USA.

Reviewed by Jason Anthony.
It seems like an age since we first started hearing about a live
action adaptation of a Discworld novel. In fact the initial meeting
between Terry and the Mob took place in Wincanton two years ago.
Last year a deal was struck and work began on adapting Hogfather,
the culmination of which was shown on SkyONE on Sunday 17th December
and Monday 18th December 2006.
As you know I was lucky enough to see the first part of Hogfather on
the big screen at its premiere in London back in November. Since
then I have been desperately waiting to see the second part.
Having ordered Sky just so I could see Hogfather I invited a few
friends round to watch it with me [namely the rest of the DWM
editorial panel; he hasn't got any other friends - WB]. So at 8pm
on Sunday we dimmed the lights in anticipation. I noticed that the
version shown on TV wasn't quite the same as the one I'd seen at the
premiere. This was most notable in the much shorter scene set in
the pub when the "businessmen" meet Teatime for the first time.
This didn't matter and probably made more sense for non-fans.
Before we knew it the first advert break started and then I realised
that 20 minutes had already passed - once again I was hooked.
The general consensus in the room was that the adaptation was very
well done, but Bill felt that the pacing was far too slow (an
opinion that I have heard expressed several times on various
forums). I suspect a lot of that may well be due to the long advert
breaks (30 minutes of adverts for a 90 minute programme).
My parents (who are not fans) watched it and felt that it required
quite a lot of attention to understand what was going on. Even so
they enjoyed it enough to watch the second part on the Monday.
So on to part 2. Once again my friends came back to watch the
second half (even Bill).
The second part has a much higher pace and a lot more comedy. I
thought the "Hello inner child. I'm the inner baby sitter" line
(which is straight from the book) worked so well. I felt obliged to
shout out my excitement at that point. The final section of the
part two was brilliant; the whole interaction between Death and
Susan was done magnificently. There are some really touching
moments in the adaptation. When Death gives Susan a Hogswatch Card
their interplay is amazing.
The scenes in Unseen University were also very funny. I love the
bit where Ponder decides that although he doesn't believe in the
Hogfather he feels obligated to hang up his sock on the off chance
he is real.
I have read lots of comments about the adaptation and the one thing
that upsets a lot of people is Marc Warren's voice. Far too many
people believe that he sounds too much like Johnny Depp's version of
Wonker.
Personally I didn't have a problem with it. As far as I am
concerned you are meant to get slightly uncomfortable in the company
of Teatime and that voice certainly did it for me.
Whilst I have read some quite negative reviews of the adaptation I
have to say that I thought it was brilliant. It was well acted, it
looked great and the care and attention to detail was obvious to
see. [I fell asleep during part 2 - WB]
Around 2.6 million viewers tuned in on Sunday to watch part one and
1.5 million viewers tuned in to watch the second part (quite an
achievement considering it was up against both East Enders and
Coronation Street). Only once in SkyOne's history has a program
received more viewers than Sunday's Hogfather and that was an
episode of Friends back in 2000.
Let's hope that this encourages SkyOne to commission more Pratchett
Novels as there's a Wizzard I would quite like to see come to life
on my TV screen.
Hogfather will be made available on Region 2 DVD in March. I
understand that a sample of the program was shown to a US television
company a couple of days before it aired in the UK. So hopefully
the rest of the world won't have too long to wait to see it.
As soon as we have any information about world wide releases we will
let you know.

Discworld Monthly would like to thank Sonnet UK for hosting our
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* Contact Information *
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* Latest Book Information *
Discworld hardback: Wintersmith
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0385609841/87
Discworld paperback: Thud
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0552152676/87
Discworld hardback Companion: Where's My Cow?
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/038560937X/87
Discworld Young Adult paperback: A Hat Full of Sky
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0552551449/87
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* Disc Trivia Results *
- Q1.
- Death stays on a farm, who owns it?
- A1.
- Miss Flitworth
- Q2.
- What name does Death take on in Reaper Man?
- A2.
- Bill Door.
- Q3.
- Name three of the ingredients in Wow, Wow sauce!
- A3.
- Any of: mature scumble, pickled cucumbers, capers, mustard,
mangoes, figs, grated wahooni, anchovy essence, asafetida,
sulphur and saltpetre.
- Q4.
- Why did Miss Flitworth's father think taxes were worse than death?
- A4.
- Because at least death didn't happen to you every year.
- Q5.
- What is the last song that Bill Door and Miss Flitworth dance to?
- A5.
- The Last Waltz.
* Obtaining Terry's Books *
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This page was created 27th Dec 2006. © copyright 1997 Jason Anthony,