Merged Pterry's death announced / Terry Pratchett dead at 66

Amen to all you've said here.

Not long ago I read a Discworld novel for the second time for the first time (eh?), Feet of Clay as it happens. Time to start over, and I'll go back to Thief of Time and Going Postal soon. Followed by the rest before long.

Can't help picture a large hooded figure looming over his soul in the afterlife, talking in capital letters :)
 
Thought I'd come and be gutted in this thread as well as in the other.


Er... Gutted. :(
 
There are now three threads on this. Hopefully they can be merged.

If anybody deserves three threads it's Pterry.


I'm probably the only nerd in the world who has never read Pratchett. Guess I'd better give him a try.

I am jealous. Start at the beginning, especially if you have background reading in popular fantasy as he lampoons it quite nicely. The style changes when he discovers the joy of plot.
 
I'm probably the only nerd in the world who has never read Pratchett. Guess I'd better give him a try.

I envy you, just as I envy people who haven't yet seen that great film or TV series. Folks differ on the best of Pratchett, so just dip in where you feel like :) It all makes sense in the end, no need to follow a strict timeline.
 
"Personally, I'd eat the arse out of a dead mole if it offered a fighting chance"
 
It feels very strange to have followed an author through pretty much his entire publishing life. I started with the first Discworld novel Strata*, that was a fantastic parody of Ringworld but already showed his greater gift of satire. Then the next novel I read was The Darkside of the Sun, and the greatest compliment I can give that book is that he is the only author I have read that surpassed the great Robert Sheckley (at his peak).




* :)

Strata actually contains one of my favorite single lines from his works: "The lights in the sky are scenery."

As for my absolute favorite, it's a tie between the following two.

FOR THE SAKE OF PRISONERS AND THE FLIGHT OF BIRDS.
- Death, in Reaper Man

"You have plans for rats? Well, I have dreams for them."
- Dangerous Beans, in The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents
 
There are now three threads on this. Hopefully they can be merged.

I'm probably the only nerd in the world who has never read Pratchett. Guess I'd better give him a try.

I've only read a couple of his novels, and I thought they were great. He wasn't afraid to push genres together (fantasy, comedy, adventure, serious drama.)

I will be reading more.
 
Only just now found out that Terry Pratchett has died (I was basically offline all yesterday). This is sad.

Not only was he funny and sharp as hell in his books, but he also had a message of and for humanity in every one of them. Sometimes hidden, sometimes obvious, but always there. It may have seemed weird to use the setting of dragons and wizards and a world that's on top of four elephants that's on top of a turtle swimming through space to make a commentary on our own society... But he did, and he did it better than most that used our own world as their setting. The silliness hid a compassion that is seldom matched in more "serious" books.

And the silliness also hid an anger. An anger at organised religion, an anger at greedily driven men willing to destroy everything in the name of profits, an anger at those looking for power for the sake of having power, an anger at those concealing their bigotry in "tradition" and "culture"... In short, an anger at everything that made people commit the biggest sin (and in some ways, the only true sin) there is: To think of other humans as things instead of as humans.

The only thing left to say now, is that Terry Pratchett most definitely made this world a better place to be in while he lived. And that is, ultimately, the best anyone can hope to achieve.

(And if, against all odds, anyone reading this thread has yet to discover what Discworld is truly about... Well, it's a huge series, but while it's loosely connected and preferably better to read in order, it's not necessary. And as such, if you want to read the books that best shows the anger against those things that seeks to deprive people of their humanity, then these are the three books to read: Small Gods, Night Watch, Going Postal.)
 
Strange. I did do a search before making a thread about it. Oh, well..
 

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