Johnny and the Dead
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Johnny and the Dead | |
Author | Terry Pratchett |
---|---|
Original title | Johnny and the Dead |
Country | UK |
Language | English |
Series | Johnny Maxwell Trilogy |
Genre(s) | Juvenile Literature, Fantasy |
Publisher | Doubleday |
Publication date | 1993 |
Media type | book |
Pages | 172 |
ISBN | ISBN 0-385-40301-1 |
OCLC | 28889741 |
Preceded by | Only You Can Save Mankind (1992) |
Followed by | Johnny and the Bomb (1996) |
Johnny and the Dead (1993) is the second novel by Terry Pratchett to feature the character Johnny Maxwell. The other novels in the Johnny Maxwell Trilogy are Only You Can Save Mankind (1992) and Johnny and the Bomb (1996).In this story, Johnny sees and speaks with the spirits (they object to the term "ghost") of those interred in his local cemetery and tries to help them when their home is threatened.
Johnny and the Dead is a feature of some schools' English curriculum.[citation needed]
Contents |
[edit] Plot summary
The story starts with Johnny and the gang (but not Kirsty, who isn't in this book) discussing the council's sale of Blackbury's neglected cemetery to a faceless conglomerate who plan to build offices on it. Various dead citizens, led by a former town counciller, ask Johnny, the only person who can see them, to help stop it.
While Johnny, helped by his semi-believing friends, tries to find evidence of famous interees and speaks out at community meetings, the Dead begin to take an interest in the modern day, and realise they are not, as they believed, trapped in the cemetery.
By the end of the book the council is forced to back down, but the Dead no longer care. However, the town's living residents have, thanks to the campaigning, rediscovered the cemetery as a link to their past. As one of the Dead puts it "The living must remember, and the dead must forget."
[edit] Ideas and themes
The book is loosely based on real events in Westminster in the 1980s, when the council sold three cemeteries as building land for 15p.
Part of the story deals with the last surviving member of the Blackbury pals, a Pals battalion with obvious parallel to the Accrington Pals. This gentleman is called Tommy Atkins, the name given to the generic British soldier of the day
A running joke in the book is that most of the Dead are "nearly famous", often being recognisable as very similar to a famous Briton. It is possible that Pratchett intends Blackbury Cemetery to be "nearly Highgate", especially as one of the most prominent ghosts (William Stickers) is described as "The man who would have invented communism if Karl Marx hadn't."
[edit] Adaptations
- The book was made into a TV serial for Children's ITV on ITV in 1995. It starred Andrew Falvery as Johnny, and featured Brian Blessed as William Stickers and George Baker as Alderman Bowler.
- It was also adapted as a play by Stephen Briggs.
[edit] Translations
- Johnny et les morts (French)
- Nur Du kannst sie verstehen (German)
- Johnny och döden (Swedish)
- Джонни и мертвецы (Russian)
- Johnny ve Ölüler (Turkish)
- Joni a'r Meirwon (Welsh)