![]() Really… I shouldn’t have to say anything about this author apart from the following: Michael Logan made Terry Pratchett himself ‘snort with laughter’. Well Logan’s world does not have flying pigs, it does have rabid, horny, zombie pigs and the consequences are just as evident (if, by necessity, a little more dramatic) as stout umbrellas. Meaning… it’s all very well and good to make the impossible possible but without ramifications, it’s meaningless. Terry Pratchett once said that when making fantasy worlds and alternate realities, ‘you can have flying pigs, but you have to be aware that people are going to need really stout umbrellas’. Like Pratchett’s, Logan’s books will have you laughing on one page, then nodding thoughtfully, then recoiling in horror at the human race. The titles of his books ( Apocalypse Cow, World War Moo) may give away the fact that Logan is not averse to using the odd pun, though he’s fairly restrained within the novels. Michael Logan was one of the co-winners of Terry Pratchett’s Anywhere but Here and Anywhen but Now First Novel Prize (the other winner was the equally excellent but slightly more serious David Logan – no relation). Any longer than that and their passionate, insane ramblings start to make sense, and then you’re in trouble! Michael Logan When out in public they are locked in boxed-up sedan chairs and only allowed to talk with a 5-minute hourglass marking the time. Even better than that, their madness is contagious. The only way these mapmakers can fully comprehend their landscape so as to do their job is to be mad, and so they are. This world is as well-realised as Discworld ever was! My favourite and probably the most Pratchett-like invention are the Cartographers who are tasked with mapping Caverna – a place that goes up and down and twists around and meets itself going the other way. The world of the story is set deep inside a mountain, in a place called Caverna. The Pratchett influence shows in her razor-sharp wit, in her inability to write anything other than strong, kick-ass girls and in her intricate world-building. The first Frances Hardinge book I read was A Face Like Glass and the day after I finished it, I ordered every other book she’s ever written. ![]() In an attempt to cheer myself up and make myself feel a little better since my literary hero Sir Terry Pratchett passed away, I thought I’d list a few authors whose work Terry has influenced, or who simply remind me of him in their work. ![]()
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