Introducing Discworld

Terry Pratchett’s Discworld series is old enough that it should hardly need an introduction but some people have been unfortunate enough not to encounter his magical (in both senses) world. It’s their loss, not mine, but I am always sorry to see people missing out on such a feast of freewheeling humour, ingenious invention, sharp satire and humane wisdom.

For their benefit, then, I have put together a quick introduction to the series, short reviews of two of the books, and advice about making the sprawling series more approachable. All of that makes this blog post long enough to need its own index but I’m also going to put the Reading Guide here at the top for convenience.

IntroductionMaking MoneyI Shall Wear MidnightNavigating the Series

discworld-reading-order-guide-2.0

Introducing the series

Discworld flies through interstellar space on the back of a giant turtle. People like us share it with dwarfs, werewolves (one of whom is a cop), vampires, trolls, elves (seriously malevolent) and Nac Mac Feegles. Real gods live on the mountain-tops and occasionally intervene in human affairs, and magic is as real as mud but far less predictable.

The series began with The Colour of Magic in 1983 and grew at better than one book per year until 2015, maturing from a flippant spoof of Dungeons and Dragons and Conan the Barbarian into a vehicle for astute, but always entertaining, social comment.

A satirist willing and able to tackle issues as divisive as racism and religion, an author with a sharp moral sense and an even sharper wit, should be entitled to some respect. If he writes fantasy, however, he generally won’t receive it. Pratchett, with sales of 45 million copies, sidestepped the issue very successfully but there is still a chasm between his fans and everyone else.

Making Money

Making Money
Terry Pratchett, 2007

All that Terry Pratchett’s fans need to know is that here is another Discworld novel, chronicling further adventures of the hero of Going Postal.

It may not be the best book of the series but it is still very, very good. Pratchett’s world is purpose-built for examining the weirder aspects of our own, just as Lilliput was created to illuminate the absurdities of Jonathan Swift’s society. Making Money takes a good hard look at the banking system: why on Discworld (or Earth) should anyone value a piece of paper more than a potato? You can’t eat a piece of paper, can you?

There’s a lot of wacky mayhem and serious clowning on the way to the answer but none of the running jokes trip over their own feet and the answer is a good one.

I Shall Wear Midnight

I Shall Wear Midnight
Terry Pratchett, 2010

Tiffany Aching is the young but competent, hard-working and respected witch of a small Discworld farming community, doctoring the farm-folk and their animals alike. Changes are coming, however. The old Baron is dying, the young Baron-to-be is about to be married, and a strange, nasty undercurrent of suspicion towards witches is seeping into the atmosphere.

Before very long, Tiffany is locked in a deadly battle with the merciless spirit of a witch-hunting priest of long ago. He is a daunting adversary even for one who has defeated the Fairy Queen but she has support from many around her, especially the Nac Mac Feegles, tiny but incredibly tough warriors with bad habits and good hearts.

The author has identified this as a book ‘for younger readers’ but there is, as always in Discworld, plenty for older readers to enjoy as well. Children new to the series might find the first of Tiffany’s adventures, The Wee Free Men, a slightly better starting point but continuity is managed so smoothly that this book is perfectly accessible on its own.

Calling any one novel in such a diverse series ‘the best’ is impossible, but I Shall Wear Midnight is certainly one of the best. Sadly, it was also one of Pratchett’s last. He was diagnosed with a rare form of early-onset Alzheimer’s disease in 2007 and passed away in 2015.

Navigating the series

Death and what comes next

When Death met the philosopher, the philosopher said, rather excitedly: “At this point, you realise, I’m both dead and not dead.”

There was a sigh from Death. Oh dear, one of those, he thought. This is going to be about quantum again. He hated dealing with philosophers. They always tried to wriggle out of it…

Click here for this tiny sample of Pratchett’s work, a Discworld short story.

Older readers will eventually negotiate the labyrinth of Discworld novels wherever they start (or they won’t: sadly, some people just do not ‘get’ Discworld) but some guidance can make it easier and more enjoyable, especially for younger readers. The reading order guide at the top of this page was created some years ago with this in mind.

It was posted on the L-Space Web, a fan site which still has a lot to offer but hasn’t been updated for at least ten years. Neither has its reading guide, which omits the last three novels in the series – Snuff (City Watch), The Shepherd’s Crown (Tiffany Aching) and Raising Steam (Industrial Revolution).

This wiki seems to be the replacement for L-Space. The publisher’s official reading guide  there looks quite different from the old one but is functionally equivalent apart from those last novels, so take your pick.

The terrypratchettbooks site is well maintained and includes links to dramatisations but not (oddly) the movies. There is also (of course) a Wikipedia page about Pratchett and another about the series.

• This page consists largely of reviews I wrote when the two books came out, suitably deconstructed, recycled and updated. More of my fiction reviews from that period are now on this blog under “words” while many with environmental themes (including nonfiction) are on my other blog, Green Path  under “Books“.

2 thoughts on “Introducing Discworld”

  1. Where to start the series is a common question but having just re-read The Colour of Magic I can’t recommend starting at the beginning. In retrospect, Pratchett took a few years to realise the full potential of the world he had brought in existence. The Colour of Magic is primarily a spoof of Dungeons and Dragons but he began to hit his stride with the third, Equal Rites, and from number 10, Moving Pictures, onwards they are all wonderful.

    1. Having just read Rob Wilkins’ excellent biography of Pratchett, I can now say that the author himself came to wish that people would not start the series at the beginning.

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