Tuesday, February 02, 2010

Can This Merely Be A Coincidence?

The 3,544-foot Southern Sky Column (below), one of 3,000 such formations in China's Zhangjiajie National Forest Park, is said to be the inspiration for the magical floating peaks (above) in James Cameron's Avatar.

But as inspirations go, it is tough to beat the opening paragraphs
of "The Lure of the Wyrm," the third of four chapters in The Colour of Magic, Terry Pratchett's first Discworld book:
It is called the Wyrmberg and it rose almost one half of a mile above the green valley; a mountain huge, grey and upside down.

At its base it was a mere score of yards across. Then it rose through clinging cloud, curving gracefully outward like an upturned trumpet until it was truncated by a plateau fully a quarter of a mile across. There was a tiny forest up there, its greenery cascading over the lip. There were buildings. There was even a small river, tumbling over the edge in a waterfall so wind-whipped that it reached the ground as rain.
Pretty amazing, eh?
Oh, and the denizens of Wyrmberg ride personal dragons, just like in Avatar.

1 comment:

Linda Ryan-Harper said...

Aye, Amen, brother, 'tis a sad, sad, crazy, mixed-up world we live in—if only I could say that I don't contribute to her insanity, but alas—'tis a vicious cycle and we feed off each other's madness. At times, I am conservative, most often liberal, but at all times, I agree with what Twain said, "Whenever you find that you are on the side of the majority, it is time to reform".