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I didnt know he'd released any since, not very good?
I am just going through that phase of re-reading through all my old Terry Pratchett books, at two days per book its quick work but with Pratchett at least there is always something new to notice in them. Regretting the third read of Nation though.
Oh yes; there's Snuff, Unseen Academicals and I Shall Wear Midnight, all of which are sadly quite poor. I won't harp on them too much because I'm a massive Pratchett fanboy, but it feels like the medical condition is preventing him producing a satisfactory plot. The writing is fine on a page by age basis, but ISWM legitimately forces you to read two thirds of the way through before introducing the main story, and Snuff barely has a main story at all, just being random adventures of Sam Vimes in the country. UA is plotted fine, it's just shit with unlikable characters acting out a dull story.
I've read Unseen Achademicals actually, really got on with it, probably because I love football and Mustrum Ridcully is the greatest character ever put to print. Not read Snuff, but if its Sam Vimes I'll give it a go, just on the basis that its Sam Vimes. Is I Shall Wear Midnight a Tiffany Aching book?
A few people I know have been saying that the quality has dropped off since he was diagnosed, I wouldnt know really, up until now I thought it was just people tricking themselves into believing it.
I have a book of Oscar Wilde plays sitting on my nightstand since January. I also have the Canterbury Tales (er, a translated version) with a receipt from work as a bookmark dating back to November of 2010; I was only six pages into the book! =/
Mustrum is indeed one of the greatest characters in all of print media, right up there with Gytha Ogg and Vimes, the problem is that that he's hardly in the book, and at no point does he actually do anything of relevance. UA spends its entire time dicking around with a collection of unamusing and frankly unlikable characters doing a species equality plot that has already been done better with Dwarfs, Trolls, Vampires, Females and Golems.
To be clear; I don't think UA is a bad book because of Pratchett's condition; I just think it's shit. Bad story, bad characters and boring themes.
The other two however, whilst both more enjoyable that UA, show unmistakable signs of TP's medical condition becoming a factor. The narrative simply doesn't flow through ISWM or Snuff, plot threads are established early on and then abandoned whilst new plot elements are plucked out of nowhere at the last minute and presented as the main story. Prolepsis takes place, but then the events that are being foreshadowed never transpire making the novels seem like a total mess.
You'll probably enjoy Snuff, just because it does still have a fair bit of Sam Vimes being Sam Vimes, but the police procedure that usually accompanies him is conspicuously absent. I'd give ISWM a miss though; it has hardly any Granny Watherwax or Nanny Ogg, an insufficient quantity of Feegles and a shit story that doesn't make sense.
I read that early in 2011, and thought it was great. I may actually still have it on my shelf, if my old roommate didn't take it back when I left college.I just got finished reading Chuck Klosterman's Sex, Drugs, and Coco Puffs. It was very entertaining, somewhat intellectual, but definitely funny.
I'm surprised you didn't just wait for the Kindle Fire HGR. I know what you mean about reading more when you get the Kindle, exact same thing happened with me.
Барбоса;4139739 said:Currently on a History of Norman England from 1066 to 1284. Interesting stuff with the Norman kings trying to balance being an English king and a Norman duke at the same time, whilst dealing with the French, Welsh, Scots and eventually the Irish.
Got a few Star Wars books high on my wish list now, espeically the long-awaited Revan. Anyone who played and loved KOTOR should be interested in what happened to the villain turned hero after his disappearance and whether the Exile ever found him.
As disappointed as I was in the sheer lunacy of pricing for the MMORPG of The Old Republic, I am interested in the story behind it starting with Deceived before Red Harvest and Fatal Alliance.
However, I still have about five other books to get through before I consider buying more.
Currently reading The Crucible. Its a bit interesting, but nothing to great.