Not that I am aware of. L-Space hasn’t been updated in at least a decade.
Eric is second-rate, but it does set up Rincewind for Interesting Times, which is much better.
Not that I am aware of. L-Space hasn’t been updated in at least a decade.
Eric is second-rate, but it does set up Rincewind for Interesting Times, which is much better.
Eh, I read them all in publication order, too, and I still see some big stylistic jumps.
Mind you, as fully illustrated Pratchett books go, Paul Kidby’s work on The Last Hero is a pretty high bar. Also Sean Connery should have come out of retirement one last time to play Cohen the Barbarian.
Am I the only one on Roundworld who liked Eric?
(It was the second DW book I read, and the one that convinced me to keep going back for more).
I can recommend the graphic novelisation of Small Gods. I got it for my niece who is dyslexic but a parental veto was applied so I enjoyed it myself. 
Eric isn’t as bad as some would make out. It isn’t first tier Pratchett, but it also isn’t irredeemable dreck like Unseen Academicals.
I’m one of the few people who liked Unseen Academicals.
I **love **Unseen Academicals. But then, I grew up in a soccer-mad community…
Agreed!
Yuck! Let’s agree to disagree, there.
My Dad’s from Liverpool and used to watch the English football on a Saturday morning when I was a kid growing up, and that stuff gets ingrained.
Faust - Eric
I thought it was OK and it helps tie between the end of Sourcery and the beginning of Interesting Times, which will obviously be my next Rincewind book. I didn’t laugh out loud much. I keep believing Rincewind books will improve. I like the idea, I like the university, but his books have not been huge hits with me.
Interesting Times is one of the better Rincewind books. I think you’ll like it.
If they’re going to make movies of the whole series, I think they should put Paul Kidby together with Pixar.
I’d prefer Aardman did them, myself, or Laika, rather than Pixar. They both have the right sensibilities, in a way Pixar doesn’t.
I’d say it was, in some way, capturing the essential Englishness of Discworld - Laika’s as thouroughly American a company as Pixar, yet has a similar humour style to Aardman in e.g. Boxtrolls and ParaNorman.
To me, the biggest problem with Unseen Academicals wasn’t the football madness. It was that the football madness comes out of nowhere. If football were really as big in Ankh-Morepork as UA claims, then it should have at least been mentioned in one of the 20-odd previous books. And it wasn’t even a leakage from Roundworld like movies and rock and roll were-- It’s just “we have always played football against Eastasia”.
Ermm, except forthat one time a soccer match helped settle the war between Klatch and Ankh-Morpork, you mean? Or this quote from Reaper Man (pg 21, while describing Ridcully’s larger-than-life persona):
Clearly yet another sign that I need to re-read all of the books one of these days.
Have prior books focused on the life of families in the poorer areas? That seems to be the last place where the footie was happening, it being forbidden and all. And if that doesn’t do it for you, blame the monks of time. There was a sweeper near the beginning. No telling what he had been getting up to.
Witches Abroad
I have a screw loose. I love moments in the Witches books, but I have yet to enjoy one very much. Things happen in them that make me smile, but I am never drawn into the characters the way the Night Watch books pull me in. In those books, I love cutting to just about every character or set of characters. In the Witches book, it’s only ever OK for me.
I wonder if it has to do with the fact that I listen to the audio books for over 80% of the time I read these. Nigel Planer is great, but perhaps it is harder to bring to life a book about three women. Most of the Watch is male and maybe it is easier to change voices for them.
I’m not sure, but I haven’t read a great Witches book year. I’ll continue, of course. I enjoy reading them, of course. But they haven’t lit up yet for me.
Unseen Academicals
I’m actually not done, but am about 80% through this and have some thoughts.
I like this book more than many of you. It’s basically a wizards-novel, just one not focused on Rincewind. I like that, actually.
It seems very much to me like this book is a few stand-alone novellas that Terry Pratchett eventually merged into one story. We have:
I picked this because of the World Cup and while not a great book, I like it quite a bit.
Somebody has to, I suppose. It is only because of my completeness fetish that the book remains on the bookshelf. And I still own a copy of Battlefield Earth!