I was 11 or 12 when I picked up Hogfather, one of the 40-odd installments in Terry Pratchettβs Discworld series, and discovered one of his seminal characters: Death, anthropomorphized as a shadowy andβmuch to my surpriseβnot overtly frightening figure. Powerful, yes; implacable, yesβbut also curious, astute, and fundamentally fair. (And very fond of cats.) The book itself was a riot, but I was most struck by one idea: It is possible to take the scary and overwhelming things about life and twist them around to find nuggets of humorβand even comfort.
Pratchett, who died last Thursday at age 66, worked deftly in that pattern, combining fantasyβescapismβwith shrewd commentary on the ills that plague humanity. On subjects ranging from growing up and oneβs inescapable mortality to the frustration of dealing with regular old stupidity, he was lighthearted without being dismissive, clever without being self-satisfied, and funny without insulting his readersβ intelligence. (Quick asideβPratchett was knighted in 2009 for βservices to literature,β and if you donβt think thatβs the coolest thing, then you can get out.)
More so than the fantastical elements, it was the underlying kindness of Pratchettβs books that set them apart. I enjoy sarcasm as much as the next person (unless that person is a 14-year-old who has just discovered it), and bald, barbed critiques are often better at attracting attention, but keeping the world at a scornful distance can be tiring. It can seem at times like all cultural commentary falls into one of three categories: bitter cynicism, brainless nonsense, and somber self-righteousness, bordering on melodrama. (Did I just describe the major cable news channels? Hmm.) Rarer, and sorely needed, are those people and things that prompt serious reflection without giving up on the world entirely.
Tina Feyβs newest project, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidtβwhich hit Netflix on March 6βemploys humor to tackle the unthinkable and the distasteful in just such a manner. (Donβt worry if you havenβt gotten around to watching yet, no spoilers. Although, truthfully, the lack of detail is less out of concern for you, dear Reader, and more so no one can gauge how much time I may have spent binge-watching.) The showβs premise isβand thereβs no way around thisβjust a huge bummer. Our eponymous heroine emerges from an Indiana bunker, where sheβs been held captive for 15 years by a radical preacher as part of a doomsday cult, and attempts to start life anew in New York City. Thatβs not a thought experiment for the faint of heart. Yet through its relentlessly cheerful leading lady, Kimmy Schmidt manages to take a perspective that, while slyly critical, remains affectionate toward humanity and its foibles.
This tack is as much a worldview as a method of self-defense. As Andy Greenwald writes in a glowing Grantland.com review of the show, βYou donβt need to have spent half your life in an apocalypse bunkerβor below 14th Streetβto know that sometimes laughter is the only thing that can keep you from going crazy.β I doubt that the idea that humor can be a shield or a coping mechanism is news to anyone. Itβs why Louis C.K. is so popular. Itβs why we watch SNL and read The Onion. Itβs why people make jokes on Twitter when theyβre kind of sad and lifeβs not working out the way they wanted. (β¦ So Iβve been told.) The willingness to be more forgiving, thoughβto pick wry amusement over standing aloofβis what differentiates works like Kimmy Schmidt and Pratchettβs books from other brands of comedy.
Like bunker-bound Kimmy, Pratchett had plenty of reasons to be less than amiable. Perhaps most notably, he spent the last eight years of his life coping with Alzheimerβs disease. As his friend and Good Omens co-author Neil Gaiman wrote last fall, Pratchettβs humor ought not to be mistaken for a lack of anger. βHe will rage, as he leaves, against so many things,β Gaimain wrote. βStupidity, injustice, human foolishness, and shortsightedness, not just the dying of the light.β Despite everything, though, Pratchett maintained a fondnessβhowever reluctantβfor humanity. He managed to be funny without being bitter, and in a world that invites bitterness at every turn, that is an immense feat.
Featured Image byΒ Breck Wills / Heights Graphics