"If it wasn't for the fun and money, I really don't know why I'd bother"
About this Quote
Pratchett’s line is a deadpan grenade: it sounds like a shrug, but it’s actually a scalpel aimed at the holy aura we drape over “art.” By yoking “fun” to “money” in the same breath, he punctures the pious fantasy that serious writing should be fueled by suffering, purity, or noble self-denial. The joke lands because it’s heresy delivered in the voice of a practical man counting the hours. Writing is hard, publishing is fickle, and the culture loves a myth that the real artist would do it for nothing. Pratchett, who wrote at industrial speed and still managed to smuggle moral philosophy into troll jokes, refuses the myth with a comedian’s timing.
The subtext is less mercenary than it pretends to be. “Fun” is doing heavy lifting: the playfulness, the curiosity, the addictive puzzle of making a world run on absurd rules until it reveals something true. “Money” is the unromantic acknowledgment that art is labor, and labor needs a life around it: bills, time, a body not wrecked by precarity. Put together, they form a two-part ethic: joy is a legitimate motive, and getting paid is not a moral stain.
Context matters: Pratchett’s career sits at the intersection of mass popularity and critical skepticism toward genre fiction. This quip is a preemptive defense and a subtle flex. He’s saying: I’m not begging for respectability. I’m doing the work because it’s pleasurable and because readers reward it. If you want martyrdom, look elsewhere; he has novels to finish.
The subtext is less mercenary than it pretends to be. “Fun” is doing heavy lifting: the playfulness, the curiosity, the addictive puzzle of making a world run on absurd rules until it reveals something true. “Money” is the unromantic acknowledgment that art is labor, and labor needs a life around it: bills, time, a body not wrecked by precarity. Put together, they form a two-part ethic: joy is a legitimate motive, and getting paid is not a moral stain.
Context matters: Pratchett’s career sits at the intersection of mass popularity and critical skepticism toward genre fiction. This quip is a preemptive defense and a subtle flex. He’s saying: I’m not begging for respectability. I’m doing the work because it’s pleasurable and because readers reward it. If you want martyrdom, look elsewhere; he has novels to finish.
Quote Details
| Topic | Witty One-Liners |
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