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Terry Pratchett - Rest in Peace you wonderful man
Sixty-six years old - no age at all. And writing pretty much to the end.
I feel so sad that there will be no more of his wonderful stories. Selfish of me, I know - but I was soooo hoping that there would be one more outing for Vimes and the City Watch. I've been reading the Discworld novels since I was an adolescent. I think the most recent one I read was about 8 months ago. Thirty years of stories and wry observations of humanity and the oddities of existence. Pratchett's works have been with me my whole adult life and I already feel the loss keenly. From the Guardian: Quote:
Rest in peace Sir Terry, you'll be missed but you won't be forgotten. |
Very sad. I read the whole series over the last two years or so.
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:( Thor reads the series continuously. when he gets to the end, he starts over. Occasionally pausing to slot in the Hitchhiker's Trilogy. :cry:
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He was a truly brilliant mind.
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My father brought me home The Light Fantastic because he knew I liked fantasy and he liked the cover art.
I took it to France with me, where I read it obsessively, along with the very different Pawn of Prophecy. So years before their diagnosis of dementia, Dad and Terry Pratchett were linked in my mind. Gone far too soon. |
Awww.
Funny, though - my Dad got me into the Belgariad. We both read the whole series. So Pawn of Prophecy is also linked to my dad in my mind. |
Personal recommendations? What to give my son as a first exposure to Pratchett?
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The first of the Discworld books - The Colour of Magic.
Quote:
So there are actually a number of possible start points and, particlarly as the series developed, there are quite different tones depending on which you read. Some are very light and frothy, some are really quite dark. Some deal with things like religious fundamentalism (Small Gods) others deal with the coming of modernity, with Discworld versions of Hollywood (Moving Pictures) or war (The Fifth Elephant). Some are crime capers, others are about the coming of age (A Hatful of Stars). It's difficult to say which is the best intro - or which will draw someone in. Another brilliant intro to Pratchett is Good Omens, which he co-wrote with Neil gaiman. It is a brilliant little book. Very funny. Quote:
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This is a good resource:
http://www.voidspace.org.uk/cyberpun...ld_intro.shtml Here's an excerpt from the beginning of A Colour of Magic Quote:
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Outside of reading them in published order, or by storyline, Hogfather may be a good start. |
Or Small Gods - given the current real world issues with religious fundamentalism it's rather good fun.
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There's been a next discworld book for 22 or so years for, since I was in college, it's like staring into a void.
Bugger |
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