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==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
[[File:10.12.12TerryPratchettByLuigiNovi1.jpg|Sir Terry in 2012|thumb]]This comic is a tribute to the late {{w|Terry Pratchett|Sir Terry Pratchett}}. It came out the day after the renowned fantasy author died. The comic quotes a (slightly abridged) passage from ''{{w|The_Nome_Trilogy#Wings_.281990.29|Wings}}'', one of the three books of ''{{w|The Nome Trilogy|The Bromeliad Trilogy}}'' (also known as ''The Nome Trilogy''), a series of children's books by Sir Terry.
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[[File:10.12.12TerryPratchettByLuigiNovi1.jpg|Sir Terry in 2012|thumb]]
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This comic is a tribute to the late {{w|Terry Pratchett|Sir Terry Pratchett}}. It came out the day after the renowned fantasy author died.
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The comic quotes a (slightly abridged) passage from ''{{w|The_Nome_Trilogy#Wings_.281990.29|Wings}}'', one of the three books of ''{{w|The Nome Trilogy|The Bromeliad Trilogy}}'' (also known as ''The Nome Trilogy''), a series of children's books by Sir Terry.
  
 
During the first five panels of the comic [[Cueball]] reads the quoted passage in his book ''Wings''. This passage describes what Masklin thinks about when he told Grimma that they "were going to get married, and all she could talk about was frogs." He then recounts what she told him about a type of {{w|tree frog}} that are found in {{w|bromeliad}} flowers where they lay their eggs, which hatch into tadpoles, and then live most of their lives in a single plant. See a {{w|The_Nome_Trilogy#Diggers_.281990.29|description}} of this plot point when it happened in ''{{w|The_Nome_Trilogy#Diggers_.281990.29|Diggers}}''. She—amongst other things—muses about the fact that they are blind to the rest of the Universe, and that most people are blind to them.
 
During the first five panels of the comic [[Cueball]] reads the quoted passage in his book ''Wings''. This passage describes what Masklin thinks about when he told Grimma that they "were going to get married, and all she could talk about was frogs." He then recounts what she told him about a type of {{w|tree frog}} that are found in {{w|bromeliad}} flowers where they lay their eggs, which hatch into tadpoles, and then live most of their lives in a single plant. See a {{w|The_Nome_Trilogy#Diggers_.281990.29|description}} of this plot point when it happened in ''{{w|The_Nome_Trilogy#Diggers_.281990.29|Diggers}}''. She—amongst other things—muses about the fact that they are blind to the rest of the Universe, and that most people are blind to them.
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After reading this Cueball puts the book down and walks off, and soon finds that he himself has been living at the bottom of a flower much like the frogs in the bromeliad. This is an allegory for a common praise of the best fantasy and science-fiction writing: That by reflecting our own world in a different context, it allows us to better see ourselves. In the allegory, Cueball's journey to the edge of the leaf is a representation of broadening one's horizons, perhaps even in ways that are somewhat frightening.
 
After reading this Cueball puts the book down and walks off, and soon finds that he himself has been living at the bottom of a flower much like the frogs in the bromeliad. This is an allegory for a common praise of the best fantasy and science-fiction writing: That by reflecting our own world in a different context, it allows us to better see ourselves. In the allegory, Cueball's journey to the edge of the leaf is a representation of broadening one's horizons, perhaps even in ways that are somewhat frightening.
  
On a more literal level, the concept of living on a flat surface with a precipice at the edge is explored at length in the ''{{w|Discworld}}'' series, Pratchett's most iconic work. Both this series (wanting to own it all) and the space all of Terry Pratchett's books would take up on a bookshelf are the subject of [[625: Collections]]. The title text continues, more directly, the point previously made allegorically. It thanks the late Sir Terry, noting that his fictional worlds allowed us to better see the real world. "How big our world is" also ties into another point raised in the quoted passage, that there are countless amazing things happening around us all the time without our knowledge. Terry Pratchett was also referenced in [[1052#Verse 2|panel 18]] of [[1052: Every Major's Terrible]]. A similar [[:Category:Tribute|tribute comic]] was also dedicated to [[Steve Jobs]], the day after he died, in [[961: Eternal Flame]], to {{w|Gary Gygax}}, three days after he died, in [[393: Ultimate Game]], and to {{w|John Conway}}, two days after he died, in [[2293: RIP John Conway]].
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On a more literal level, the concept of living on a flat surface with a precipice at the edge is explored at length in the ''{{w|Discworld}}'' series, Pratchett's most iconic work. Both this series (wanting to own it all) and the space all of Terry Pratchett's books would take up on a bookshelf are the subject of [[625: Collections]].
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The title text continues, more directly, the point previously made allegorically. It thanks the late Sir Terry, noting that his fictional worlds allowed us to better see the real world. "How big our world is" also ties into another point raised in the quoted passage, that there are countless amazing things happening around us all the time without our knowledge.
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Terry Pratchett was also referenced in [[1052#Verse_2|panel 18]] of [[1052: Every Major's Terrible]].
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A similar [[:Category:Tribute|tribute comic]] was also dedicated to {{w|Steve Jobs}}, the day after he died, in [[961: Eternal Flame]], to {{w|Gary Gygax}}, three days after he died, in [[393: Ultimate Game]], and to {{w|John Conway}}, two days after he died, in [[2293: RIP John Conway]].
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
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:''at the top of the trees and don't even know about the ground, and once you know the world is full of things like that, your life is never the same.''
 
:''at the top of the trees and don't even know about the ground, and once you know the world is full of things like that, your life is never the same.''
  
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::''— Masklin, Terry Pratchett's'' '''''The Bromeliad Trilogy'''''
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::::::::::::::::::::::::::''— Masklin, Terry Pratchett's'' '''''The Bromeliad Trilogy'''''
  
 
:[Below are four more panels. Cueball stops reading in the book. Leaves the book and begins to walk. Walks out on a leaf from a big flower. Finally, zooming in on him at the edge of the leaf, he looks down and sees what is below the flower.]
 
:[Below are four more panels. Cueball stops reading in the book. Leaves the book and begins to walk. Walks out on a leaf from a big flower. Finally, zooming in on him at the edge of the leaf, he looks down and sees what is below the flower.]
  
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Cueball]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Cueball]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring real people]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring real people]]
 
[[Category:Tribute]]
 
[[Category:Tribute]]

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