Book:Truckers: Difference between revisions
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|cover=[[File:Cover Truckers.jpg|thumb|240px|Cover art by Josh Kirby]] | |cover=[[File:Cover Truckers.jpg|thumb|240px|Cover art by Josh Kirby]] | ||
|coauthors= | |coauthors= | ||
|illustrator= | |||
|date=September 1989 | |date=September 1989 | ||
|publisher=Doubleday | |publisher=Doubleday | ||
Line 42: | Line 43: | ||
*[[Bobo]] | *[[Bobo]] | ||
*[[Vinto Pimmie]] | *[[Vinto Pimmie]] | ||
==Adaptations== | |||
{{TV Data | |||
|title=Truckers | |||
|cover=[[Image:Truckers DVD.jpg|240px|thumb|Cover to the DVD]] | |||
|imdb=0105646 | |||
|date=1992 | |||
|channel=ITV | |||
|producer=Jackie Cockle | |||
|cast=Joe McGann, Debra Gillett, Rosalie Williams | |||
|duration=132 minutes | |||
|episodes=13 | |||
|series=Bromeliad | |||
|annotations= | |||
|notes= | |||
|prev= | |||
|next=[[TV and Film:Johnny and the Dead|Johnny and the Dead]] | |||
}} | |||
===[[TV and Film:Truckers|TV Series]]=== | |||
There is a stop-motion animated TV series version of '''Truckers'''; produced by Cosgrove Hall and broadcast by ITV in 1992. | |||
Cast: | |||
*[[Masklin]] — Joe McGann | |||
*[[Grimma]] — Debra Gillett | |||
*[[Granny Morkie]] — Rosalie Williams | |||
*[[Torrit]] — John Jardine | |||
*[[The Thing]] — Edward Kelsey | |||
*[[Angalo de Haberdasheri]] — Nigel Carrington | |||
*[[Gurder]] — Brian Southwood | |||
===[[Book:Truckers Picture Book|Picture Book]]=== | |||
Two picture books for children were produced using images from the TV series. | |||
===[[Theatre Adaptations|Theatre]]=== | |||
Adapted by Bob Eaton in 2002. The script for this adaptation was unpublished but a small piece was written by [[Terry Pratchett]] for the [[Articles and Speeches|theatre programme]] called 'A Word From Terry Pratchett,' this was reprinted under the title 'The Big Store' in {{OMWF}} and {{SK}}. | |||
==Other stuff== | ==Other stuff== | ||
*First book in the [[Bromeliad]] series | *First book in the [[Bromeliad]] series | ||
*Originally published in Great Britain by Doubleday.<br />Copyright (c) 1989 by Terry and Lynn Pratchett | *Originally published in Great Britain by Doubleday.<br />Copyright (c) 1989 by Terry and Lynn Pratchett | ||
*At the moment, Dreamworks has the film rights to ''Truckers'', and also to {{D}} and {{WI}} | |||
== | ==Gallery== | ||
{| | |||
|- | |||
| valign="top" | [[File:Cover Truckers.jpg|120px|thumb|First Edition Cover by [[Josh Kirby]]]] | |||
| valign="top" | [[File:T Proof.jpg|thumb|130px|Book Proof]] | |||
| valign="top" | [[File:T NM.jpg|thumb|130px|Cover by Neal McPheeters]] | |||
| valign="top" | [[File:T SG.jpg|thumb|130px|Cover by Susan Saelig Gallagher]] | |||
| valign="top" | [[File:T Tape.jpg|thumb|150px|Audio Cassette]] | |||
|} | |||
{| | |||
|- | |||
| valign="top" | [[File:T CD.jpg|thumb|180px|Audio CD]] | |||
| valign="top" | [[File:T DW.jpg|thumb|120px|Cover by David Wyatt]] | |||
| valign="top" | [[File:T DW2.jpg|thumb|130px|Cover by David Wyatt-alt]] | |||
| valign="top" | [[File:T MB.jpg|thumb|120px|Cover by Mark Beech]] | |||
| valign="top" | [[File:T MB2.jpg|thumb|120px|Cover by Mark Beech paperback]] | |||
|} | |||
{| | |||
|- | |||
| valign="top" | [[File:T Ill.jpg|thumb|150px|Truckers Illustrated Edition by Mark Beech]] | |||
|} | |||
[[Category:Bromeliad series|Truckers]] | [[Category:Bromeliad series|Truckers]] | ||
[[Category:Children's books|Truckers]] | [[Category:Children's books|Truckers]] | ||
[[de:Buch:Trucker]] | [[de:Buch:Trucker]] |
Latest revision as of 22:34, 13 March 2020
Truckers | |
Co-author(s) | |
Illustrator(s) | |
Publisher | Doubleday |
Publication date | September 1989 |
ISBN | 0385269617 |
Pages | 192 |
RRP | £6.99 |
Main characters | Masklin, Grimma, Gurder, Angalo de Haberdasheri |
Series | Bromeliad |
Annotations | View |
Notes | |
All data relates to the first UK edition. |
Blurb
'Outside! What's it like?' Masklin looked blank. 'Well,' he said. 'It's sort of big -'
To the thousands of tiny Nomes who live under the floorboards of a large department store, there is no Outside. Things like Day and Night, Sun and Rain are just daft old legends.
Then a devastating piece of news shatters their existence: the Store - their whole world - is to be demolished. And it's up to Masklin, one of the last Nomes to come into the Store, to mastermind an unbelievable plan that will take all the Nomes into the danger of the great Outside...
Plot
Nomes are tiny people who live in a human world. For them, time passes at a tenth the speed that humans feel it pass, and thus they move quickly and never get noticed. Masklin, Grimma, Granny Morkie and Old Torrit are the remaining members of a dwindling tribe of Nomes who live by a motorway and own a mysterious device called The Thing. One day, Masklin persuades them to ride away on a lorry which takes them to the Arnold Bros (est. 1905) department store in Grimethorpe.
The department store is home to a great civilisation of Nomes. The Nomes and their ancestors have lived inside the store for so long that they are unsure if the world outside even exists. Each department has a Nome tribe with a matching name, and "Arnold Bros (est. 1905)" is viewed as being a deity. They are greeted by Angalo de Haberdasheri, a member of the Haberdasheri clan. He takes them to see their father, Duke Cido de Haberdasheri. They are turned away by the Duke and wander through the corridors beneath the floors of the shop.
The Thing touches some electric wires, which recharges and activates it. It reveals it to be the computer of Starship Swan, which brought the Nomes from another planet. The Thing explains that they are descendants of the ship's crew, who were marooned there thousands of years ago when the ship broke down. The Thing also reads radio signals and reveals that the department store is about to be closed and demolished.
Masklin faces a difficult task of convincing the other Nomes that they must leave the shop. Only when the Abbot of the Stationeri is convinced by the Thing are they finally able to get the message through. They decide to flee by stealing one of the lorries that park outside the shop, using pieces of wood and string to reach the controls. With instructions from The Thing, Masklin and Grimma train a group of Nomes to operate the controls. As workmen begin clearing the shop, the Nomes board the lorry and drive erratically through Grimethorpe and out in the countryside. The Nomes abandon the lorry just before the police catch up with it and escape to an abandoned quarry. The Nomes begin a new life at the quarry, while Masklin watches planes at a nearby airport and begins planning a way for the Nomes to head home.
Characters
- Masklin
- Grimma
- Granny Morkie
- Old Torrit
- The Thing
- Dorcas del Icatessen
- Gurder
- Angalo de Haberdasheri
- Duke Cido de Haberdasheri
- The Baroness del Icatessen
- The Count de Ironmongri
- The Abbot of the Stationeri
- Bobo
- Vinto Pimmie
Adaptations
Truckers | |
ASIN | {{{asin}}} |
IMDB | 0105646 |
First Broadcast | 1992 |
Broadcast Channel | ITV |
Director(s) | {{{director}}} |
Producer(s) | Jackie Cockle |
Writer(s) | {{{writer}}} |
Starring | Joe McGann, Debra Gillett, Rosalie Williams |
Duration | 132 minutes |
Episodes | 13 |
Series | Bromeliad |
Annotations | Annotations for Book:Truckers |
Notes | |
Preceded by | ' |
Followed by | Johnny and the Dead |
All data relates to the UK home release. |
TV Series
There is a stop-motion animated TV series version of Truckers; produced by Cosgrove Hall and broadcast by ITV in 1992.
Cast:
- Masklin — Joe McGann
- Grimma — Debra Gillett
- Granny Morkie — Rosalie Williams
- Torrit — John Jardine
- The Thing — Edward Kelsey
- Angalo de Haberdasheri — Nigel Carrington
- Gurder — Brian Southwood
Picture Book
Two picture books for children were produced using images from the TV series.
Theatre
Adapted by Bob Eaton in 2002. The script for this adaptation was unpublished but a small piece was written by Terry Pratchett for the theatre programme called 'A Word From Terry Pratchett,' this was reprinted under the title 'The Big Store' in Once More* *with Footnotes and A Slip of the Keyboard.
Other stuff
- First book in the Bromeliad series
- Originally published in Great Britain by Doubleday.
Copyright (c) 1989 by Terry and Lynn Pratchett - At the moment, Dreamworks has the film rights to Truckers, and also to Diggers and Wings