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Terry Pratchett Knighted

ackthpt writes "Headlines have been popping up on Google News: 'Terry Pratchett declared himself "flabbergasted" to receive a knighthood as he led a group of writers, actors and performers honoured today.' The Discworld author and stalwart adversary of Alzheimers Disease has been a member of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for Services to Literature since 1998. He will be entering the new year as Knight Commander. Well done and Oook, Sir Terry."

9 of 366 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Services to literature since 1998? by Kinky+Bass+Junk · · Score: 4, Informative

    Last time I checked, J.K. Rowling had a vagina.

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    Anonymous Coward
  2. Re:Congratulations by poena.dare · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.paulkidby.com/news/index.html

    Folks,

    There are times when the phrase "Absolutely, totally, gobsmackingly, mindbogglingly amazed" just doesn't cover it, but I find that in the Queen's New Year Honours list I am now a Knight, for services to literature. This means that fans, while not calling me Sir, must now refrain from throwing things. Regrettably, no sword is included in the box :)

    What more can a modest Knight say?

    Happy New Year, which on Discworld is the Year of the Pensive Hare.

    PS - We have had about twenty film crews through the office today and so you should be able to catch some footage on one channel or another.

  3. Re:Who? by retyurecvb · · Score: 5, Informative

    He's a fantasy author who is best known as the author of the Discworld series.

  4. Re:Real honor by arth1 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I wish I were royalty for the sole purpose of being the one person who could abolish it.

    The king doesn't have power to abolish his seat. The most you could do was abdicate, after which a successor would be found according to a well-defined modified primogeniture succession order. No approval from you would be needed for the coronation -- in fact, you would be in no position to approve or disapprove, having abdicated.

  5. Re:Services to literature since 1998? by VJ42 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Hmmm.. That should make her a Damsel me thinks, for a Dame is a lady Lord. Now I'm gender confused for what a Lady knight should be termed.

    No, a Dame is the female equivalent to knight. The female equivalent to a Lord is Lady.

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    If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
  6. Re:flabbergasted?! by dunkelfalke · · Score: 4, Informative

    it was actually a reference to witches abroad

    "'Der flabberghast,' muttered Nanny. 'What's that?' said Magrat. 'It's foreign for bat.'"

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    "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
  7. Re:Their ingratitude? by RodgerDodger · · Score: 4, Informative

    You mean, that Iraq war which was started to find weapons of mass destruction that never existed, and were known by the US government not to exist?

    Got to point out that the French supported the invasion of Afghanistan, which was a legitimate response to 9/11. Invading Iraq was merely Bush and Cheney's way of beating their chest.

    I personally think that the French only tried to claim the moral middle ground; it just looked high from where the US was looking.

    As for 600,000 people: I call bullshit. The US lost 416,800 total in WWII, of which 183,588 were in the European theatre. By contrast the Soviet Union - who were responsible for the fall of the Third Reich - lost over 10 million, nearly all in Europe. The US/British invasion was timed to take advantage of weakened defences due to the fighting in the Eastern front, and had the goal, not of freeing Europe, but of stopping Russia. Without the US, the French would be speaking, well, French (the USSR never forced their satellite nations to adopt Russian), but would have been aligned with the USSR. Wait, that's how they spent the 70s anyway!

    Want to bring World War I into the picture as well? Then add another 116,708 - more than half of which died from the flu due to poor sanitation in US training camps (both in the US and in Europe). Total number of US deaths that could be attributed to "saving France": 300,296 - about half the figure you named. I'm sorry about your grandfather and all; my own grandfather flew with the Australian volunteers in the RAF. But get your figures straight. By contrast, the Commonwealth nations (Great Britain and related countries) lost over 1.7 million between WWI and WWI, most in the European conflict.

    Excluding the US civil war, the US military has claimed 447,137 combat deaths since the start of the War of Independence - well short of your 600,000 total.

    (figures sourced from wikipedia)

    --
    "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
  8. Not a Knight Commander, a Knight Bachelor by BlaisePascal · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sir Pterry isn't a Knight Commander (which is a title within various British Orders), but a Knight Bachelor (which is a title outside the Order system). Formally, there are no initials he can add to his name as a Knight Bachelor, but many add Kt. So he could be styled "Sir Terry Pratchett, OBE" (Officer of the Order of the British Empire), but not "Sir Terry Pratchet, KBE" (Knight Commander...).

  9. Trollope,Proust and Powell by Kupfernigk · · Score: 4, Informative
    Pratchett is in the tradition of what the Victorians called "triple-decker novelists". Examples are Trollope, who wrote a series of fat books about the corruption of the clergy in 19th century England, based on one imaginary town (OK, Salisbury) Powell wrote a 12-volume sequence in which he traced the gradual social changes in upper class England from WW1 to the 1960s through the eyes of a single set of characters and their children, and Proust did the same for an earlier phase of French society. I won't bore you with the details because this sort of thing is obviously not for you, but Pratchett's world idea is so closely modelled on Powell and Proust that I am sure he is familar with the canon. For Pratchett readers, a lot of the interest is the way that his imaginary society evolves with time. It starts out in an imagined near-Medieval environment, and within 30 years it is early Victorian. This affects all his imagined social groups from the urban (Ankh-Morpork) through the rural world of Lancre and the complex, unevolved shifting allegiances of Uberwald. There is even a back story of an accelerated version of Christianity which goes from theocracy to Jehovah's Witnesses in about 120 years.

    Someone above has written about a world of literature out there. I've read (more than once) Trollope, Powell, Proust, along with all the usual stuff including the Russians in translation and the easier French and German classics, and I find it possible to appreciate them all. On the other hand, I couldn't get into Rowling.

    DNA, there I agree with you. I read the books with pleasure but they are comparatively froth. Good froth, but not arise sir Douglas froth even had he not died young.

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    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."