Altiplano Express Line: Difference between revisions
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(adding annotation. I wondered why a Spanish-sounding name for a train into "Germany") |
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==Annotation== | |||
"Altiplano Express" is a Spanish-language novel published in South America in 2000. Translated into English as ''Andean Express'', it is a murder mystery reminiscent of Agatha Christie's "Orient Express" (but with a rather less reactionary set of socio-political assumptions) concerning strange deaths on a sleeper train crossing the Bolivian Andes. A reviewer notes that it ''presents a moving environment at once carnivalesque and sinister. The novel explores the social tensions characteristic of Bolivian society in a way that is both accessible and highly entertaining.'' | |||
The "altiplano" is apparently the high ground in South America where crossings of the Andes are possible. This engenders a certain mentality among people who live there. As this line crosses the mountains into Uberwald, or at least managed it ''once'' with golem assistance, it's an interesting choice of name by Terry. | |||
Revision as of 11:22, 10 December 2014
The Altiplano Express Line is currently the furthest extension of the railway system originating in Ankh-Morpork. This line begins at Sto Lat Junction and leaves at eight in the morning from Platform One. it originates in the driving need expressed in Raising Steam for a very fast, one-use-only, express line from Ankh-Morpork into Uberwald. Whilst the lines and tracks still exist leaving Zemphis and on the other side of the river, further use of the line is suspended until the not-insubstantial rebuilding of a viaduct capable of carrying trains is completed. This could well take some time and this line therefore terminates, for the moment, at Zemphis.
Stops on this line are;
- Hay-on-Ankh
- Much-Come-Lately
- Monks Deveril
- Upper Feltwhistle
- Seven Bangs
- Fratchwood
- Fustic Wells
- Gravelhang
- Zemphis
Annotation
"Altiplano Express" is a Spanish-language novel published in South America in 2000. Translated into English as Andean Express, it is a murder mystery reminiscent of Agatha Christie's "Orient Express" (but with a rather less reactionary set of socio-political assumptions) concerning strange deaths on a sleeper train crossing the Bolivian Andes. A reviewer notes that it presents a moving environment at once carnivalesque and sinister. The novel explores the social tensions characteristic of Bolivian society in a way that is both accessible and highly entertaining.
The "altiplano" is apparently the high ground in South America where crossings of the Andes are possible. This engenders a certain mentality among people who live there. As this line crosses the mountains into Uberwald, or at least managed it once with golem assistance, it's an interesting choice of name by Terry.