Satire/Terry Pratchett
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Satire/Terry Pratchett
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His characters and the dicsworld have developed and fleshed out over time and seem to have taken on a life of their own. Its interesting reading his earlier books and comparing the characters to their more evolved selves in later writings.
I love the way Pratchett's books take the mickey out of societal norms, economic theory, current events, the British class system, racism, government . . . Its very British!
'Small Gods' and 'Jingo' would have to be my favourite books of his. And while Granny Weatherwax and Nanny Ogg are fantastic, I have to say I prefer the books that involve Commander Vimes and The Watch.
I find I am often explaining Vimes theory of why the poor stay poor and the rich stay rich to other people: The poor are poor because they can only afford to buy cheap shoes, which are poor quality and don't last. So over their lifetime they buy many pairs of shoes and spend much more than the rich folk who buy expensive shoes that last a lifetime.

Meg
- ChrisSamsDad
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You've mentioned my two favourite characters - Granny Weatherwax and Sam Vimes. We named our son after Commander Vimes, though stopped short of calling our daugher 'Esmerelda'.kiwimeg wrote: 'Small Gods' and 'Jingo' would have to be my favourite books of his. And while Granny Weatherwax and Nanny Ogg are fantastic, I have to say I prefer the books that involve Commander Vimes and The Watch.
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Meg
They're both such wonderful examples of morality. Real genuine morality, not 'TV evangelist' fake, dogooder nonsense. They're both people who feel the pull to the dark side, but carefully, rationally and with some regret, do what's right, whatever the cost. If they occasionally do the wrong thing, they feel incredibly bad about it and have to put it right.
Also, I connect with Sam Vimes in the way he feels like a fish out of water almost all the time and feels he'll get 'found out' one day for not being up to the job.
"Thud" brought tears to my eyes regarding the responsibilities of fatherhood.
I could go on (and on and on and on). I've enjoyed all the Discworld series, obviously some aren't as good as others, but each one is certainly worth reading. Really looking forward to getting the new Football one - any day now - because I really hate football and I'm sure he'll point out the stupidity of it.
- ChrisSamsDad
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- ChrisSamsDad
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Loved it! It is absolutely hilarious. I also loved American Gods by Neil Gaiman, probably one of my favorite books of all time.
- szaloona.wroona
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However Pratchett`s sense of humor is great for me but his books touch upon very important questions such as politic, war, religion fame desire etc and by all this funny jokes i think it is easier to show what should be really important in our life.
I always roar with laughter when i read pratchetts books. I usually read them in tram when i go to university and people used to look on me like on crazy


Furthermore Pratchett is a very tough case for every translator and im so happy that we have such great translation into polish. i think that bad translation could destroy all joy of reading Pratchett`s book.
P.S. Sorry for my English

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I recently read 'date night at union station' which had a nice humorous view of sci fix, if anyone was looking for a similar lighter vein of escapism.
- Rebeccaej
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But
The narration is so *loud,* so *present,* I read two paragraphs, get overstimulated and have to take a break.
I love Good Omens, where Gaiman's influence toned him down some, but it took me forever to get through Reaper Man, and I've never gotten more than a few pages into Small Gods.
I've given up trying to read him. I remain a sideline fan.
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It looks like my library has books from both series! Do you have a recommendation on which to start with?CaitlynLynch wrote:If you enjoy Pratchett, have you tried Robert Asprin? His MYTH series and Phule's Company series are laugh-out-loud funny.