Showing posts with label Terry Pratchett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Terry Pratchett. Show all posts

Thursday, 3 March 2016

Naming Characters: The Discworld

I am currently writing a fantasy fiction story, and have run face first into a wall. This wall is naming my characters. I want to find the delicate balance of names that have depth, meaning... and that do not sound fantastically ridiculous! There have been one or two occasions when reading a book where a name has shaken me out of its suspended reality, and I don't want to make that mistake.

So to help with this I started to look into what made a good name. I personally like ones that:
  • If I research them they have interesting back stories.
  • That I have not heard of before.
  • That sound good when you sound them out.

Now on a fair day in the month of February conversation with a friend turned naturally to the Discworld. Thinking about the 'name game' I was currently playing with my own story, we started to talk about Discworld names. Let's look at some:

Rincewind
Rincewind. Rince. Wind.
Yes that is a strange little number! Now I am not sure about the original intentions behind the name, but once you get to know this hapless wizard his name makes sense. It just...fits. To rince, to wind, is to Rincewind. It doesn't shout too much meaning at you when you first read it, which gives room for the character develop his own definition.

Death
Let's get straight to the point, we are talking about the anthropomorphic manifestation of death. Call a spade a spade.

Esmerelda Weatherwax
Esmerelda is misleading, she is not a natural Esmeralda so the name has to warp to fit her. She is most commonly known as Granny or Mistress Weatherwax. This element of her name gives her gravitas. It gives her age. You simply cannot attach any pre-conceived notions about the rather pretty name Esmerelda to her, which makes you respect her even more!

Moist Von Lipwig
Are you laughing? I laughed. I doff my proverbial cap to Sir Terry Pratchett because this name is brilliant. How can you get away with naming a central protagonist Moist! Pratchett managed to get pages worth of back story into just three words! The bullying Moist would have received at a name like that, the fact no one would expect great things from him, the way you are instantly willing for the story to make this character brilliant to take the joke to greater levels. Well done sir, well done.




So how does Pratchett get away with this naming madness? My friend hit the nail on the head. The Discworld is a fantasy realm so believable, so solid, that his chosen names genuinely 'feel' like they belong there. Pratchett is funny, and he likes to play around with names that either work for or against your own preconceptions. Albert sounds like a nice solid sort of name, Albert is a nice solid sort of character. Susan sounds like a nice solid sort of name. Susan is not at all what she seems.

So after writing this I have realised that what I need to do. I should concentrate on making my little world first, colour it and craft it...and then the names I am using will either fit or turn into different ones! But either way they need to work with the mechanics of the world, instead of matching my sensibilities when not immersed in fiction. I had better get typing!



A thank you to Justyna Mordas for letting me use their Discworld art on this post, check them out on Deviant Art here, username Yenefer: http://yenefer.deviantart.com/

Also I recently played a little round of Mind Master, with the Discworld as my specialist topic! Check it out here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QsU7FeXD20k 
Disclaimer: please excuse my fringe, it appears it wasn't my friend that night!


My next post will be about a highland folk story!

Sunday, 31 January 2016

Sabrina: Goddess of the River Severn

The topic of this week's post is Sabrina, the fabled goddess of the River Severn. Now the River Severn is a very important to us Telfordians, if only to confuse generations of children with how to spell the number seven.

When I tell people where I am from I ordinarily get met with one of two responses:

  1. "Where's Telford?" which elicits the reply, "It's near Shrewsbury...no?...Wolverhampton?....Okay Birminghamish!"
or
  1. "Oh really, I've been to your bridge!"... Yes I am from a town that is known for a bridge, it's a very nice bridge mind (see below!) and I would highly recommend visiting it. And that infamous Iron Bridge crosses the beautiful River Severn.
(I have recently been informed the Ironbridge isn't exactly in Telford, but it is in our borough so we are keeping it!)


I digress. Now from a bit of research I have have found that Sabrina gets her name from a girl called Hafren (Sabrina in Latin). Hafren's mother had a love affair with an early King of England. When eventually cast aside for his mistress the King's wife raised an army in Cornwall to exact her revenge which I believe went something like:

"Darling I'm afraid I'm divorcing you"
"Oh really? Well say that to my ARMY!"

The estranged wife won, and Hafren and her mother were drowned in the river. For a more in depth look at their story try this article.

Sabrina was born by naming the river after Hafren, which then over time sparked stories about a goddess! On Terry Pratchett's Discworld gods exist when we believe in them, which is a nice way of looking at it and comparable to Sabrina's beginning. By giving a female name to the Severn, the consequential anthropomorphic manifestation of the river seems like a natural step.

A lot of sources list Geoffrey of Monmouth as recording the earliest Sabrina origin story, a welsh cleric who also wrote about King Arthur! Another story I found here is that Sabrina is one of three 'sister' rivers trying to get to the sea. How are the river sisters represented? One is very direct and quick in her quest to the sea, one likes a bit of sightseeing but still wants to get to the sea reasonably quickly, and the third, Sabrina, wants to explore the land thoroughly as she travels without short cuts. It's very satisfying when you see three sisters with clear segmented characteristics don't you think? The classic witch trio of the crone, the mother and the maid. The three grecian Fates. I like it! I find this very useful to consider and shall explore further with research as I am currently writing a story about three sisters.

I first encountered Sabrina in The Dingle, in Shrewsbury park (another recommended pit-stop next time you sight-see near my home town). It's a beautiful garden, and hidden away is this statue:


Plaque reads:
Sabrina Fair,
Listen where thou art sitting,
Under the glassie, cool, translucent wave,
In twisted waves of lilies knitting,
The loose train of thy amber-dropping hair;
Listen for dear honors sake,
Goddess of the silver lake,
Listen and save.

It was delightful walking around The Dingle and finding this hidden bit of mythology. Through time Sabrina has transformed from a drowned girl into a beautiful deity that can be beseeched for help. The way I read the poem, in light of Sabrina's origin, is that the writer is calling upon Sabrina to stir from her new-found comfort underwater and to direct attention once more to the surface, perhaps to save others from the very fate that befell her.

It's been great to find out more about Sabrina, do you have any stories about this goddess to add? Have you found her hidden away somewhere like The Dingle? Let's discuss below, or with me on twitter @EMinipop!



Photography Credits: Mark Thomas. See more of his excellent photos here.

Thank you for reading. Next week's post will be about fantasy and folklore character names!


Thursday, 21 January 2016

Introducing Fantastical Folk

Good day to you, and welcome to Fantastical Folk!

On this blog I will be sharing an exploration into the world of folklore and fantasy. Writing, performance, and music are the primary media that I will be looking at.

"Why?" I hear you cry!

Firstly I love fantasy and folklore, ruddy love the stuff. And after spending many a delightful eve pouring over books of the fantasy persuasion, and more recently folklore, I have finally caved and decided to indulge in some thorough research. Dragons, magic, battles, fantastical worlds...I love them. Robert Jordan's The Wheel of Time (wow), Anne McCaffrey and her dragons (I want one please and thank you), Pratchett's Discworld (no comment even needed).I could write masses on my favourites, and with this new blog I most probably will, but let's keep it short and sweet for now!

Secondly, I am hoping to start some positive and interesting discussions about folklore and fantasy work! How does this storytelling work in the modern age? Is it just pure magical escapism or do these genres hold genuine social resonance in their roots?

And thirdly, shockingly, and completely originally….I am a writer. Primarily of plays, secretly of fiction, and also of songs. My research of late has taken me down a particularly folklorish path and I have stumbled upon the pitfall that faces everyone who says "I'm going to take a year out of projects to write"... a lack of focus. As many of you creative types out there can empathise with I am finding myself twiddling my thumbs a lot more than tapping my fingers on the keyboard. Therefore I will commit to sharing a post once a week creating a much needed kick to get a shuffle on with my independent work.

Well, there's a brief summary! My first official post will be out this weekend and is a review of a Ghost Walk I went on in my new home town of Norwich.

Over and out


Emma



Disclaimer: I have spent the majority of today figuring out how to blog in the first place, bear with me as I learn the ways of the craft!