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Cannonball Read III: The Wee Free Men by Terry Pratchett

By crabtree | Posted Under Book Reviews | Comments (10)



wee_free.jpg

I was raised on fairy tales, specifically Irish fairy tales, where the fairies are out to get you. It’s not that they’re evil, per se, but they want what they want and they don’t have the same understanding of consequences. They don’t understand that humans need their friends and family, and that being tossed out of fairyland 100 years after you were taken, does you absolutely no favors. I always knew that if the fairies took me then I’d better not eat a thing they offered me, unless they could offer me salt, and having some iron on your person is always helpful. Also, (though not as relevant to this book) be kind to people in general, and not just strangers. The people you know really well are more likely to be the ones who run into Fairyland to save you (usually on a horse that only ate clover, or was never shod, or some other crazy detail) so maybe you should be kind to them so that they won’t abandon you.

Pratchett wrote the Tiffany Aching books for younger readers who might also like the magic and weirdness of Discworld. I have the incredibly bad habit of just reading whatever book in a series I can get my hand on, so I’ve already read A Hat Full of Sky, which I thought was just all right. I enjoyed this book far more because I got to understand Tiffany. However, I do love Pratchett’s footnotes, and once again there was only one.

She’s been the youngest child in her family for close to nine years, and then all of a sudden she has a baby brother, Wentworth, who she has to take care of all of the time. She’s intensely practical so when she notices that there’s a Jenny Green-Teeth with eyes as big as soup plates (the kind that are eight inches across) in her river, she tempts it with her brother and then clobbers it with an iron frying pan. This causes the Wee Free Men , the toughest, tiniest fairies who love to drink and fight, to realize that she’s a hag or witch, and ask her for her help. The Queen of Fairies is on her way and she will try to enslave them once again. As well, she has already captured some humans who might want to escape her version of happiness. Oh, and she just kidnapped Wentworth.

This novel is funny and sweet and possibly a bit scary for younger readers. Like a lot of Pratchett’s works there are a few morals including: question conventional wisdom, don’t assume that people you don’t understand are evil and my personal favorite.

‘Now… If you trust in yourself…’
‘Yes?’
‘… and believe in your dreams…”
‘Yes?’
‘… and follow your star…’
‘Yes?’
‘… you’ll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren’t so lazy. Goodbye’

Good advice for all of us.


For more of crabtree’s reviews, check out her blog, Wacky Hijinks Ensue.

This review is part of Cannonball Read III. For more information, click here.









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Comments

I love this series unabashedly. I don't care that it's written for kids. Tiffany Aching is one of the all-time great heroines, and I prefer her storyline to any of the other Discworld characters. Although the Night Watch is a close second.

I spent yesterday afternoon reading I Shall Wear Midnight and consider it time well-spent.

Posted by: Wednesday at April 4, 2011 10:46 AM

I don't think Terry Pratchett has ever written a bad book, but the Tiffany Aching series are some of my favourites.

Ach! Crivens!

Posted by: Wintermute at April 4, 2011 10:51 AM

nice review! excellent closing quote

Posted by: idleprimate at April 4, 2011 10:53 AM

I love the Tiffany Aching books hard. When my husband and I went to a Terry Pratchett book signing, the two books we brought with us for him to sign were Wee Free Men and Thief of Time. My sons love them, too, and ran around talking Feeglespeak for ages. They still refer to me as Kelda sometimes.

Posted by: lorent at April 4, 2011 2:47 PM

That's a great quote.

And WHAT got hit in the head with a frying pan?

Posted by: DeistBrawler at April 4, 2011 2:50 PM

Apparently in English folklore a Jenny Green-Teeth's a hag that tempts children to the river and drowns them, and Pratchett's version just had incredibly large eyes.

Posted by: crabtree at April 4, 2011 4:41 PM

I'm an utter slut for the audio versions of these books.

Posted by: idiosynchronic at April 4, 2011 5:03 PM

The thing I like about his Discworld novels for younger readers is that he doesn't write down for them. "The Amazing Maurice and his Educated Rodents" went to some really dark places.

Posted by: Craig at April 4, 2011 6:57 PM

I get so excited when there's some Pratchett love on here - he's my favourite author. The Tiffany Aching series is just fantastic (although I do agree that I kind of miss the footnotes).

Posted by: squeeziee at April 4, 2011 8:27 PM

Excellent book! I love all of them, ya kin.

Listening to Small Gods right now. I think my favorite so far has been Monstrous Regiment. It was hilarious. Ach! Crivens!

Posted by: MRod at April 4, 2011 8:28 PM