Talk:Book:Raising Steam/Annotations
p124: "-and a guaranteed herd of goats". No one has explained the goats to me yet. Trolls have an ancient and well-documented aversion to goats; they can't eat goat or cheese; what do they do with these goats? --Old Dickens (talk) 16:38, 13 February 2014 (UTC)
Wool, perhaps, for the essential troll loincloth... or it could be a Magpyr-style learning process in confronting what you most fear, ie a big billy-goat gruff bent on butting you off the bridge...AgProv (talk) 17:29, 13 February 2014 (UTC)
- Then another possibility creeps in: sacrificial purposes? Throw a goat off the bridge in hope of being hit on the head with the rock of good fortune? _ --Old Dickens (talk) 01:09, 14 February 2014 (UTC)
Or else the good old Discworld principle of opposites and balance: if trolls are traditionally associated with bridges, then so are goats. Maybe Vetinari thought this up...AgProv (talk) 01:16, 14 February 2014 (UTC) Like the Kitten Torture for people? Or else the goats are there to remind the trolls they're only employed and are tenants, so don't go getting any big ideas.AgProv (talk) 14:09, 8 March 2014 (UTC)
Foreshadowing
I like the idea of Murder on the Überwald Express, but how many set-ups has The Man laid out for sequels or new stories that we're still looking for? We have several pages for books that don't exist. He's not only an ideas machine, he likes to lead us on. --Old Dickens (talk) 20:41, 28 March 2014 (UTC)
A strange thing
And a little unsettling: I saw the p/b cover of Raising Steam in Waterstones today not far away from art books about socialist/realist totalitarian art in the 1930's. There was an artwork from Nazi Germany showing an idealised railway worker declaring his love for the Nazi Party; his pose and the angles of his arms and legs evoked a living swastika, with spanner upraised on right hand declaring that he was perfectly prepared to let the wheels (of the railways) turn for Victory. I looked again at Dick Simnel on the cover of RS and blow me.... almost the same pose. Also set against a railway engine. Was this meant to evoke a (National) Socialist realist-Art poster of the thirties, man subordinated to machine in pursuit of a greater ideology? (A background theme of the book is the railway in service of a (currently benevolent) Dictator, after all... can't see a way of putting this as a main Annotation yet, though! AgProv (talk) 01:01, 22 February 2015 (UTC)