Title: Thud! Author: Terry Pratchett Year: 2005 Publisher: HarperCollins Reviewer: Jake Beal Something happens to an author when they've written too many books in the same universe. The books start accreting characters, the characters start accreting histories, and the details of the world just start, well, crowding the story. There's something magical about first books, that sequels can never quite recapture, even very good sequels. The sense of wonder dampens, because you've become familiar with the world, and you don't need everything explained in careful detail. According to the Internet, which I just asked, "Thud!" is the ninth book in the Discworld City Guards series by Mr. Pratchett. I seem to have missed a few in there, and I suppose that sooner or later I'll end up going and collecting them, although I'm not much motivated. It's a fine novel. It touches on all the usual themes---racism, authority, politics or the lack thereof, magic, hate and love, etc. It's got the usual hopeful cynicism wherein everything's worn out and messy and broken down and the basic goodness of people is going to win out despite the complete lack of heroism in all involved. Mr. Pratchett's best books, to my mind, are the ones that have the smallest cast of characters. He tends to start out painting them with a broad, humorous brush and then as the book goes on they settle down and develop into real people that you give a damn about. Their humanity starts to shine: Nobby Nobbs is an inveterate disgrace and petty thief, but he also dances in his off time. Rincewind is an incompetent and a coward and sometimes ends up doing the right thing anyway. Even Cut-Me-Own-Throat-Dibbler shows cracks of value from time to time, though you've got to look pretty carefully for it. In "Thud!", there's no chance for it to happen. There's a lot of interesting stuff in the book---it's full of interesting stuff, of plot development, of neat scenes with various characters. But there's too much, and too much history behind it, and it can't quite settle down. And maybe some of it's inevitable. What does the hero do when the hero cycle is over? What do they do when they've won, and become king, and then you want to tell another story about them? About what happens next? In the first few books about the City Guards, they went from a ragtag nothing to a growing, respectable source of order in the madness of Ankh-Morpork. The stories were glorious madness in the best Pratchett style, with the little people doing their best in the face of a society that didn't notice them, let alone care. Now Samuel Vimes stares eye-to-eye with the Patrician and doesn't blink. He's got connections with global (or perhaps Disc-al?) extent and makes political decisions. And it's just not as fun. And maybe it's appropriate. The thing about Mr. Pratchett is, there's just so bloody many of his books. It's like Andre Norton or Piers Anthony or Anne McCaffrey, though I shudder to put the latter two in the same category as Mr. Pratchett. The first taste is pure magic, and after that we keep coming back to try to recreate it. The first part of the hero's journey is cloaked in wonder and terror, and we watch with bated breath as the obstacles are overcome. But once the hero's been at it for a while, the progression is clear, and when the trajectory of the ascent becomes unstoppable, it's no longer a romance, in the literary sense. That's when you have to send them off into the sunset. Otherwise, the victorious hero hangs at the top of the arc, waiting for the romance to become a tragedy. And Mr. Pratchett doesn't write tragedies. "Thud!" is a fine nth sequel. We get to visit our favorite characters again and see them continuing on their way, solving yet another mystery. We don't get to see any one of them for very long, and the mystery just kind of rots away in front of their combined resources, gathered throughout the previous books. It betrays nothing, and it doesn't need too much understanding of the previous books. If you want another dose of the Guards, this'll give it to you and you'll enjoy it---I know I certainly did. But the story of the Guards is waiting for something that will never come, and we probably wouldn't like it if it did.