Sir Terry was a true Inspiration to us all
living with this illness
Sir Terry Pratchett: Tributes paid to
Discworld author
Authors and
Alzheimer's campaigners have been among those paying tribute to author Sir
Terry Pratchett, who has died at the age of 66.
Novelist Philip
Pullman said he would be remembered for the "love of humanity in what he
did", while actor Sir Tony Robinson called him a "contradiction"
- a shy man in "urban cowboy clothes".
He suffered from
Alzheimer's, and a charity said he opened the "floodgates" to help
people talk about the disease.
Sir Terry's last
tweet said: "The end."
His daughter
Rhianna tweeted: "Miss you already."
Start Quote
His Alzheimer's was the cruellest possible blow to a mind so inventive,
so rich and so funny”
Val McDermidCrime
writer
Sir Terry died on
Thursday, eight years after being diagnosed with a rare form of early onset
Alzheimer's called posterior cortical atrophy.
He campaigned in
favour of assisted suicide after his diagnosis, but his publishers said he did
not take his own life.
'Watershed moment'
Charlie Russell,
who made several documentaries about Sir Terry, including one on assisted
suicide called Choosing to Die, said he was a "lovely man".
"He was very
kind to me to take me into his home and take me into this heart," he said.
"It was such a
pleasure to get to know him."
Hilary Evans,
director of Alzheimer's Research UK, said Sir Terry's death would have "a
profound effect on both literature and the 850,000 people who live with
dementia" in the UK.
She said his
announcement of his illness was "a watershed moment" and "a call
to arms for society to talk about dementia and take steps towards defeating
it".
Sir Terry's publisher,
Larry Finlay, said: "Terry faced his Alzheimer's disease (an
'embuggerance', as he called it) publicly and bravely.
"Over the last
few years, it was his writing that sustained him. His legacy will endure for
decades to come."
Writer Neil Gaiman said:
"There was nobody like him.
"I was
fortunate to have written a book with him, when we were younger, which taught
me so much. I'll miss you, Terry."
Philip Pullman said
there was "nothing spiteful, nothing bitter or sarcastic in his
humour".
'Brave campaigner'
Sir Terry was best
known for the Discworld series of novels, which began in 1983 and contains more
than 40 books.
Writing in the Guardian, crime novelist
Val McDermid said the novels were the "perfect antidote to being alone and
far from home".
"His
Alzheimer's was the cruellest possible blow to a mind so inventive, so rich and
so funny," she wrote.
"With his
passing, the world is a less fantastic place."
Prime Minister
David Cameron said Sir Terry "fired the imagination of millions",
while Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg called him a "fabulous" writer
and a "brave campaigner for dementia awareness".
Sir Tony Robinson
told BBC News: "Everybody who reads his work would agree his finest
creation was his character Death.
"Any fans of
his will know Terry in some way has shaken hands with one of his greatest
creations."
And the final posts
on Sir Terry's Twitter account, posted by his assistant after his death,
followed that theme.
They read: "AT LAST, SIR TERRY, WE MUST
WALK TOGETHER.
"Terry took
Death's arm and followed him through the doors and on to the black desert under
the endless night.
"The
End."
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I always say that we may have this illness, but we are all so different.
This is my own daily problems, but I would gladly share anyone elses, if they send them in,