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1.
Terry Pratchett – Wintersmith
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(Review)
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Wintersmith is the 3rd book in the Tiffany Aching arc, and the 31st overall Discworld book by Terry Pratchett. I thoroughly enjoyed it, despite the suspicion that there would have been a 2nd book in the ...
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Created on 13 September 2013
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2.
Terry Pratchett - Thud!
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(Review)
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Here's my review of Thud!, the 30th (according to the blurb) instalment in the Discworld series by Terry Pratchett. Thud! is a Watch novel, or, by current standards, a Commander Vimes novel. Now, some of ...
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Created on 27 January 2012
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3.
Terry Pratchett - I Shall Wear Midnight
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(Review)
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Do I need to introduce Terry Pratchett? Thought so. Do I need to introduce his bestselling Discworld series, now running to 38 books? Nope, neither. I Shall Wear Midnight is the latest instalment in said ...
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Created on 15 December 2011
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4.
Terry Pratchett - Going Postal
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(Review)
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Here's my review for Going Postal - which was just out in PB when this was written - from Terry Pratchett’s Discworld Universe: Now here’s a book that somehow missed my desk in the Hardback form, so here’s ...
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Created on 18 November 2011
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5.
Terry Pratchett - Unseen Academicals
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(Review)
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Unseen Academicals is the 32nd book in Sir Terry Pratchett's Discworld series. I do belive that neither the author nor the series need introducing here, no? Here we go: The Unseen Academicals is the Unseen ...
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Created on 01 November 2010
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6.
Terry Pratchett - Nation
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(Review)
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Nation is a stand-alone novel by Terry Pratchett, written, I presume, for Young Adults market, but just as enjoyable for any adult young at heart.
Mau is on his way back from the Island of Boys. He ...
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Created on 23 June 2010
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7.
Terry Pratchett – Making Money
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(Review)
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Here's my review of Making Money, the 2nd book in the Moist von Lipwig sequence (and 31st Discworld novel overall) by the inimitable Sir Terry Pratchett. Interesting, captivating, and very funny; if not ...
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Created on 06 February 2010
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8.
Neil Gaiman - Norse Mythology
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(Review)
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... in the mainstream - the late Terry Pratchett might have come close, but otherwise you’re going back to Vonnegut, Ballard, or maybe Asimov.
The book starts with an introduction where Neil explains ...
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Created on 28 May 2017
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