SPOILERS Going Postal Discussion *Spoilers*

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Trish said:
Tonyblack said:
What did we think of the other characters in this book? Stanley and Mr Groat and what about the relationship between Moist and Adora Belle?
Groat and his socks...did people really put sulfer in them? For ]freshness? Say it aint' so.

I got a kick out of Stanley and, yes, I got the joke. 4th reading, but hey.
Stanley and his Little Moments ... my, my.

I particularly like Mr Pump, but I like all the golems. They're so literal.
Well, Dr. Lawn did say that he was a case to be observed, preferably a good distance away and behind a tree, and NOT to let him take up tap dancing.

Stanley is fascinating, being raised by my favorite veggie and all. I loved how he "grew up" and decided Stamp Collecting was a True Man's Hobby. :laugh:
 

Jason

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Nope, it is the first adult Discworld book to have numbered chapters - I think Making Money follows the same pattern.

Now I come to think about it - do the Tiffany books have numbered chapters? I know they have chapters but I don't have time to look it up at the moment.
 

Tonyblack

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Jason said:
Nope, it is the first adult Discworld book to have numbered chapters - I think Making Money follows the same pattern.

Now I come to think about it - do the Tiffany books have numbered chapters? I know they have chapters but I don't have time to look it up at the moment.
Yes they do! :)

It seems that Terry has returned to the old chapterless format with Unseen Academicals. ;)
 

kakaze

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Someone asked Terry about the chapters at the Con.

He said that it wasn't do to pressure from editors or publishers. He said that he just always liked the little teasers that you saw in the very old movies. That's also the inspiration for the little artwork (pointing fingers, etc) in the chapter titles.
 

kakaze

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I just read something interesting. The clacks were real! In 1793 a French man named Claud Chappe built a mechanical signaling system like a semaphore mounted on a vertical post. It was able to send a short message 21 miles in 11 minutes and apparently could send messages from Paris to Marseilles in half an hour.

Three years later England built a similar, but simpler, mechanical telegraph but it only lasted a few years before it was displaced by the electric telegraph.
 

Tonyblack

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kakaze said:
I just read something interesting. The clacks were real! In 1793 a French man named Claud Chappe built a mechanical signaling system like a semaphore mounted on a vertical post. It was able to send a short message 21 miles in 11 minutes and apparently could send messages from Paris to Marseilles in half an hour.

Three years later England built a similar, but simpler, mechanical telegraph but it only lasted a few years before it was displaced by the electric telegraph.
Absolutely! :laugh: Semaphore devises were used a lot during the Napoleonic Wars. In one of the Sharpe books by Bernard Cornwell (I've forgotten which :oops: ) part of the plot revolves around getting a message via the semaphore.
 

kakaze

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CrysaniaMajere said:
wow, i'm getting quite an education on this forum :eek: . I had never heard of that.
1. Mr. Pratchett's books are simply stuffed with historical & cultural references.

2. We (the readers) can be increadably obsessive sometimes.

3. I'm in the middle of a very interesting book about Victorian technology. :twisted:
 
CrysaniaMajere said:
wow, i'm getting quite an education on this forum :eek: . I had never heard of that.
Isn't it Wonderful? I learn all kinds of history which I missed out on during my unfortunate incarceration in a christian school in the Dominican Republic for 1 1/2 years. These guys make up for it with their extensive knowledge and while I am great with computers and higher/scary maths, these guys are simply fantastic as a base of knowledge on EVERYTHING else, And the puters and maths LOL I love it here and even YOU Pooh! :p
 

Tonyblack

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Actually, semaphore was used a lot earlier with the means of flags. The large towers simply meant that a larger signal could be seen from a long way off. :)

The CND sign like this:



Is actually made up of the semaphore signals for 'N' and 'D' as in 'Nuclear Disarmament'. :)



 

kakaze

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Tonyblack said:
Actually, semaphore was used a lot earlier with the means of flags.
Yeah, I knew that. I'd just thought the idea of building a string of semaphore towers across the land to send short messages quickly was just a figment of Terry's imagination.

I just think it's too bad they waited until four years before the electric telegraph before coming up with the idea... :rolleyes:
 

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