And the Narnia Fans Think They Have It Rough
From L-space.org, a pictorial guide to the proper reading order of Terry Pratchett's Discworld series, listing novels, graphic novels, short stories, children's books, and science books.
Or you could just do what I did, starting in the middle and picking books up whenever I found them in bookstores.
(Link via.)
Or you could just do what I did, starting in the middle and picking books up whenever I found them in bookstores.
(Link via.)
Comments
Or not. I've actually only read The Colour of Magic (and liked it well enough), so I can't really comment with any authority.
I tend to recommend Wyrd Sisters, Mort, or Small Gods as good places to start in Discworld. By that point, Pratchett has gotten most of the serious kinks out of his system, and the imaginary world is starting to settle into a recognizable form, as opposed to the scattershot approach to fantastic invention that characterized the early novels.
But then, every Discworld fan has their own personal configuration of favorite and least-favorite books. Most fans will place the first two books at the bottom of the pile and Small Gods at the top, but there's nothing resembling a consensus about the middle.
Rereading them recently, I understand why people dislike the first two books. In fact, if I started with them today, I think I would have stopped...
In fact, I was having a hard time figuring out how to get other people into the books--you can't jump right in to Carpe Jugulum or Night Watch without the right background, but starting people with CoM tended to turn a lot of them off. Thanks to your blog, I now know what to try.
I do want to disagree with you on the recent books, however. Wee Free Men, Night Watch, and Going Postal are among my favorites, and I'm eagerly waiting for my copy of Making Money. OK, Thud! wasn't his best book ever, but even in the "good old days" (which seems to mean "when I started reading" to everyone except old fogies like me who started at the beginning) they weren't all Small Gods.
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