Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
I was refering to the whole shopping centre growing outside the city in Reaper Man. I really liked Windle Poons' story and loved Death's part, but when the purpose of the snow globes and shopping trolleys comes into place it just seems really silly and out of place.I hate* to be a Grammar Nazi, but it's hard to tell what the expression "the former" refers to when you have more than two articles in a sentence at a time.
For posterity's sake, he's referring to Hogfather with the mall incident.
...Probably.
Wait, Are you referring to the bit where Death played a mall San - Hogfather in, well, Hogfather, or the bit where the horrible Lovecraftian shopping mall invaded Ankh-Morpork in Reaper Man?
You should have added a semi-colon, you bastard. Then none of this would have had to happen. Now look what you did.
* Foul lies.
Never read a thing by Pratchett, mostly because someone tried to tell me he was a better writer than Douglas Adams so I've been somewhat prejudiced due to my anger at that statement.
All of the books are great, but i've a soft spot for Pyramids, Guards Guards, Men At Arms, Sorcery, Reaper man and Mort. Good Omens, writen with Neil Gaiman, is also awesome.
Did anyone here read Truckers, Diggers and Wings?
These first two are by no means his best, btw, but they do set up the Discworld nicely - which is such a trippy and wonderful place - while introducing Rincewind, the rubbish Wizzard.
Fixed
I stuggled with Moving Pictures more than any of his other books. The characters were as funny as ever, but something didn't quite click. Soul Music was similar, but Death is such a pimp. The only Johnny book I read was Only You Can Save Mankind, which was alright.
Moist Von Lipwip books
Only two of these so far. Perhaps even more down to earth than the watch books. The first sees him being put in charge of running the post office, the second, the mint. Like the watch books it shows the city life and politics.
Truckers, Diggers and Wings are the first ones I read, and still my favourites, probably because my simple brain can understand them easily. With Discworld I always have a huge feeling that there's something I'm not getting, especially with the Tiffany Aching books. Not that I don't like them, I'm on to The Fith Elephant ATM, but I'm probably missing quite a few of the jokes and parodies. The Wizzards books are my favourites, especially Reaper Man, or whichever one it was with the wizards vs walking compost heaps. Small Gods, Guards! Guards!, Moving Pictures, Sourcery, Pyramids and a few others I can't remember the names of are also at the top of my list. Then there's The Amazing Maurice and his Educated Rodents which is excellent, and Thud!, one of the best Watch books.
@ Enuii: I always thought Pratchett's style was very similar to Douglas Adams's actually, if you liked Adams then chances are you'll like Pratchett too.
EDIT: The Science of Discworld is also well worth a read, to anyone interested in the random science of pretty much everything.
The science bits of the Science of the Discworld books are interesting, but the stories aren't great.