MAGAZINE

  - Hivemind social net
  - News
  - Features
  - Blogs
  - Events Calendar

  - Editorials
  - Monthly Zine
  - Offworld Report
  - Our Daily RSS Feed
  - Google Toolbar scifi

   
  More on SFcrowsnest's mag
 BOOKS & FILMS

  - Movie/TV Reviews  
    > Recent movies
    > Movies by year
    > Movies by title

  - Book Reviews  
    > Recent books
    > Books by year
    > Books by title

The Court of the Air
 
The Kingdom Beyond the Waves

The Rise of the Iron Moon

 ONLINE MOVIES

 STEPHEN HUNT

  - Home  
  - Worlds  
  - Biography  
  - Bibliography  
  - Appearances  
  - Reviews  
  - Blog  
  - Community  
  - Press  
  - Links  

 VISIT OUR ADVERTISERS

  Become an Advertiser

  SCIFInder

  - Web Site Directory
 
- Search the Net

  OTHER SITES

  - StephenHunt.net
  - WoodenRocket.com

  TOOLS

  - Check your E-mail
  - Non Sci-Fi News

Terry Pratchett: The Wit & Wisdom Of Discworld compiled by Stephen Briggs
01/12/2007 Source: Phil Jones 

pub: Doubleday/Transworld Publishers. 304 page indexed hardback. Price: £14.99 (UK), $34.95 (CAN). ISBN: 978-0-385-61177-0.

Buy The Wit & Wisdom Of Discworld in the USA - or Buy The Wit & Wisdom Of Discworld in the UK

check out website: www.transworld-publishers.co.ukand www.terrypratchett.co.uk

I'm always a bit dubious of spin-off or compilation books where large series are concerned. As far as 'Discworld' is concerned, it is quite a large one at that, the series that is. I think you have to ask yourself does it add or aid to your overall experience or cynically is it just another search for more cash? I think, though, with this book it's more of the former.



Stephen Briggs has in the past provided us with maps including the streets of Ankh Morpork, a Discworld companion book and numerous play adaptations of Discworld books. So it follows that our friend Stephen Briggs is fairly well-versed in the Discworld Universe. So we have a book full of the juiciest tidbits from the very first book 'The Colour Of Magic' to the recent 'Making Money'. So as to speak, we have a fair amount of material to go at.

This then makes for a rather good coffee table item for our Discworld fans out there, but it also acts as a rather good introduction to the style, humour and imagination of Terry Pratchett. For example, plunging inward into the bowels of the book:-

'Meat pies! Hot sausages! Inna bun! So fresh the pig hasn't noticed They're gone!' - Moving Pictures

'He... liked my singing. Everyone else said it sounded like a flock of vultures who've just found a dead donkey'- Pyramids

'The librarian ambled back down the aisles. He had a face that only a lorry tyre could love'- Sourcery


There are plenty of short clips from the books along with longer passages which provide the evolving humour of 'Discworld' books. It's not an exhaustive book but rather Stephen Briggs favourite excerpts. A complete book would have course been huge. One point of note is the cover. Impressively, like an aged Victorian book.

What you don't get is the longer more complex and involved jokes which would in effect spoil many of the books if you haven't read them. Actually, regarding spoilers I would say you could read this book with relative safety. You're not going to run the risk of finding out major plot-lines or elements if you haven't read a particular book in the series. It's really designed for just dipping in whenever you fancy a bit of TP. Like I said earlier, it's a good way to introduce yourself to Terry Pratchett - sort of Pratchett-lite. It also gives you a quick way to wander through Discworld.

Phil Jones

click here to buy Stephen Hunt's The Court of the Air

Get our Free MagBacktop of the page

Home | About Us | Write for Us | Subscribe to our Free Magazine | Advertiser Login

All content, unless otherwise indicated, is © www.SFcrowsnest.com 1991-2008 - our content management proudly powered by CuteNews


Advertise on SFcrowsnest: Click here

Recent Book ReviewsBook review archive