1. Do you think the books eventually felt the strain (I yield to no-one in suggesting that, unusually in a long loosely-connected roman-fleuve, they held up pretty damn well pretty damn late, but I tend to find the weakest ones are both A. Cthulhoids from the Dungeon dimensions earlier on and B. Some of the Koom Valley stuff because there's only so much I can take of the mysterious hooded figures with tiny differences between them (I think PTerry ended up being able to make other races and trolls just a bit more interesting than the grags' double-dealing).
Much more interestingly, what could he have picked up on if he had been allowed the time and space?
Who would the Patrician hand the city over to if/when he dies?
The obvious one is Carrot, by right of being the last hidden descendant of the King by secret signs.and portents. Well, everybody likes him, but 1. Commander Vimes will be very displeased! Commander Vimes will be very displeased! (Carrotesque for "Mr Vimes'd go spare!") and "I only want to be a policeman" just like.Tom-Jon only wanted to be an actor in Wyrd Sisters. Perhaps a Triumvirate of Vimes (burning passion for justice going all the way to the top, accepts being generally disliked), Carrot (for likeability in all contexts), and Lady Sybil for kindness and knowing the toffs. But Vimes' great weakness is that (having had the longest and most thorough redemption arc in the books) he is vulnerable through his family: Lady Sybil would have no idea of how to balance the guilds...in fact they would need to train up another Patrician who is "disinterested" (in the proper sense) by being clever, Machiavellian, and having few or no close personal ties (an aunt in Genua and a possible romance with Lady Margoletta in Ubervald), and an obsession with making the city work. Given that an attempt to resume hereditary monarchy with Carrot might lead to parts of the family tree literally barking, it's no wonder that we're left with a holding operation remarkably similar to British constitutional democracy, with the Patrician as something like the Queen, somebody who can keep an eye on everything and advise the rumbunctious Commons (like the Ankh-Morpork Guilds) and Lords.
I'd like to see more of the Witches--the Shakespeare and opera take-offs and the way ostensibly non-hierarchical practical hierarchies work with women who do some of the most important work in the least-regarded corners (like the NHS). I'd also like more cats like Greebo and You, but I am a mad cat- lady.
Much more interestingly, what could he have picked up on if he had been allowed the time and space?
Who would the Patrician hand the city over to if/when he dies?
The obvious one is Carrot, by right of being the last hidden descendant of the King by secret signs.and portents. Well, everybody likes him, but 1. Commander Vimes will be very displeased! Commander Vimes will be very displeased! (Carrotesque for "Mr Vimes'd go spare!") and "I only want to be a policeman" just like.Tom-Jon only wanted to be an actor in Wyrd Sisters. Perhaps a Triumvirate of Vimes (burning passion for justice going all the way to the top, accepts being generally disliked), Carrot (for likeability in all contexts), and Lady Sybil for kindness and knowing the toffs. But Vimes' great weakness is that (having had the longest and most thorough redemption arc in the books) he is vulnerable through his family: Lady Sybil would have no idea of how to balance the guilds...in fact they would need to train up another Patrician who is "disinterested" (in the proper sense) by being clever, Machiavellian, and having few or no close personal ties (an aunt in Genua and a possible romance with Lady Margoletta in Ubervald), and an obsession with making the city work. Given that an attempt to resume hereditary monarchy with Carrot might lead to parts of the family tree literally barking, it's no wonder that we're left with a holding operation remarkably similar to British constitutional democracy, with the Patrician as something like the Queen, somebody who can keep an eye on everything and advise the rumbunctious Commons (like the Ankh-Morpork Guilds) and Lords.
I'd like to see more of the Witches--the Shakespeare and opera take-offs and the way ostensibly non-hierarchical practical hierarchies work with women who do some of the most important work in the least-regarded corners (like the NHS). I'd also like more cats like Greebo and You, but I am a mad cat- lady.