I Shall Wear Midnight
2010 • 349 pages

Ratings74

Average rating4.3

15

Terry Pratchett is one of the most amazing people I wish I knew. The man came out with like 3 books this year while battling Alzheimer's and still being a decent human being. I've gotten behind on my Discworld, but picking this up again reminded me just how much has happened as old friends breeze through the story guiding, meddling, or interfering with the new cast. It's just neat.

The Tiffany Aching books are billed as Discworld for Young Readers, but seeing as this one begins with a girl who has a miscarriage after her father beats her half to death for getting pregnant, “Young” is a relative term. Tiffany is young, but it is her business to sort out the messy bits, and Pratchett doesn't shy away from showing all those bits. It's in the older school of fiction for young readers that assumes both A) Children know more than we give them credit for and B) Children will censor themselves if they are truly not ready for something.

I Shall Wear Midnight feature a 16 year old Tiffany who is not much changed from the little girl first introduced in the Wee Free Men. She is the type of practical, no-nonsense protagonist Pratchett writes so well. The story itself, while not my favorite in the vast ocean of Pratchetty goodness, is nevertheless a compelling addition to the series and lets the readers get a glimpse of Tiffany (and possibly her young coven's) future as she handles her steading with grit and determination. Thematically, it harkens back to the early books in the Witches Chronicles with mob mentality and prejudice woven into Tiffany's uniquely adolescent coming of age element.

If you enjoy Tiffany's stories (or any of the Witches Chronicles) definitely give it a read. It could stand on its own, but like most of Discworld, I think it just reads better once you can get more of the references.

October 20, 2014Report this review