#Pratchat79 Notes and Errata
These are the episode notes and errata for Pratchat episode 79, “Unalive from Überwald”, discussing Terry Pratchett’s 2002 short story “Death and What Comes Next”, with returning guest Tansy Rayner Roberts and new guest Karen J Carlisle.
Iconographic Evidence
If you also took photos of us at the convention, please get in touch – we’d love to see them and add a few here!
You can also find photos of the convention at the official website.
Notes and Errata
- The episode title refers to the theme for Nullus Anxietas IX, “Come Alive in Überwald”, but since we were talking mostly about Death, “Live from Überwald” didn’t seem quite right.
- Nullus Anxietas IX is, as you probably know, the ninth bi-annual Australian Discworld convention. As mentioned at the end of the episode, the next convention will be in Sydney in 2026, and you can already get a supporting membership for the next convention. For details, plus information on past conventions and Discworld fan clubs across Australia, head to ausdwcon.org.
- Our previous live shows are:
- #PratchatNA7, “A Troll New World” from Nullus Anxietas 7
- “Book Discussion: The Carpet People” from the Virtual Discworld Fun Day (on YouTube)
- #PratchatNALC, “Twice as Alive” from Nullus Anxietas: The Lost Con
- Liz mentions two of her short stories:
- The story about women turning into cleaning equipment is “Call Him Al”. You can read it in Meanjin, where it was published in 2020.
- The story about an immigrant splitting into two people is “One’s Company”, originally published in the anthology Best Australian Stories 2017. It was published online at InterSastra in an Indonesian translation (“Cukup Sendiri”) by Nicolaus Gogor Seta Dewa; the original English version is also available there.
- “Pantsers and Plotters” are widespread terms for “the two types” of writers, embraced to varying degrees by writing communities and individuals. The classification is based on whether a writer works out a plot in advance (a plotter), or writes by the seat of their pants (a pantser), making it up as they go along. It’s not entirely clear where these terms originated, but these days some writers refer to themselves as “plantsers” (a combination of the two), and other terms exist for roughly the same ideas. For example, in 2011 George R. R. Martin used the terms architect (similar to a plotter) and gardener (a variation on pantser in which the emphasis is on the weeding, i.e. editing).
- Tansy’s stories that get mentioned include:
- Musketeer Space, the gender-swapped Three Musketeers in space;
- Teacup Magic, the Regency-inspired fantasy mystery series (we’ve linked to the collection);
- We don’t think Tansy has written “Beauty and the Beast with cyborgs”, but she has written Curse of Bronze, a novella which riffs on Beauty and the Beast. It’s available for free as an ebook via BookFunnel (you’ll need to sign up to Tansy’s mailing list), or in audio form on her podcast Sheep Might Fly.
- More notes coming soon.
Thanks for reading our notes! If we missed anything, or you have questions, please let us know.