Mine

  1. Vonnegut, specifically “Cat’s Cradle” (I know he’s a comrade, but I didn’t find that out until a decade after I read any of his work)

  2. Ursula LeGuin

  3. Kafka

  4. Camus

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13 points

I know nothing about Terry Pratchett, sell me! (If you have the time and energy)

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7 points
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Terry Pratchett wrote the Discworld series, he’s a fantastic author with good takes and a better sense of humor. Discworld is awesome because it’s both self-serious, but whimsical at the same time.

Captain Samuel Vimes "Boots" theory of socioeconomic unfairness.

The reason that the rich were so rich, Vimes reasoned, was because they managed to spend less money. Take boots, for example. He earned thirty-eight dollars a month plus allowances. A really good pair of leather boots cost fifty dollars. But an affordable pair of boots, which were sort of OK for a season or two and then leaked like hell when the cardboard gave out, cost about ten dollars. Those were the kind of boots Vimes always bought, and wore until the soles were so thin that he could tell where he was in Ankh-Morpork on a foggy night by the feel of the cobbles. But the thing was that good boots lasted for years and years. A man who could afford fifty dollars had a pair of boots that’d still be keeping his feet dry in ten years’ time, while a poor man who could only afford cheap boots would have spent a hundred dollars on boots in the same time and would still have wet feet. This was the Captain Samuel Vimes “Boots” theory of socioeconomic unfairness.


Descriptions of my top 3 Pratchett books:

(Going Postal and Good Omens both have really good TV adaptations)


Mort

As a teenager, Mort had a personality and temperament that made him rather unsuited to the family farming business. Mort’s father, named Lezek, felt that Mort thought too much, which prevented him from achieving anything practical. Thus, Lezek took him to a local hiring fair, hoping that Mort would land an apprenticeship with some tradesman; not only would this provide a job for his son, but it would also make his son’s propensity towards thinking someone else’s problem.

At the job fair, Mort at first has no luck attracting the interest of an employer. Then, just before the stroke of midnight, a man concealed in a black cloak arrives on a white horse. He says he is looking for a young man to assist him in his work and selects Mort for the job. The man turns out to be Death, and gives Mort an apprenticeship in ushering souls into the next world (though his father thinks he’s been apprenticed to an undertaker).

When it is a princess’ time to die (according to a preconceived reality), Mort, instead of ushering her soul, saves her from death, dramatically altering a part of the Discworld’s reality. Although, the princess, for whom Mort has a developing infatuation, does not have long to live, and he must try save her, once again, from a seemingly unstoppable death.

As Mort begins to do most of Death’s “duty”, he loses some of his former character traits, and essentially starts to become more like Death himself. Death, in turn, yearns to relish what being human is truly like and travels to Ankh-Morpork to indulge in new experiences and attempt to feel real human emotion. Conclusively, Mort must duel Death for Mort’s freedom.


Going Postal

Moist von Lipwig (aka Albert Spangler) is a skilful con artist. Nevertheless, he is confined to a cell in Ankh-Morpork and scheduled to be hanged, having stolen a total of AM$150,000. He is saved when his own death is faked and Lord Vetinari offers him a choice: he can walk out of the door (and fall to his death), or he can become Postmaster of the city’s run down Post Office. Lipwig chooses the latter, hoping that a chance to escape will present itself. Lipwig’s first and last escape attempt is thwarted by a golem named Mr Pump, previously called Pump 19 because he had spent the previous 250 years at the bottom of a well pumping water, who delivers Lipwig back to the office of the Patrician.

With great reluctance, Lipwig takes up his duties, only to find things are even worse than he had presumed. The Post Office has not functioned for decades, and the building is literally full of undelivered mail. Two eccentric employees remain: the aged Junior Postman Tolliver Groat, and Stanley Howler, a pin-obsessed boy who was raised by peas. They are more concerned about following the Post Office Regulations than seeing the postal system restored. There is also a Post Office cat, Mr. Tiddles, but it is even more set in its ways than its owners. Lipwig learns that within the last couple of months, while he was waiting to die in his prison cell, a whole string of newly-appointed Postmasters have met their own deaths in the Post Office building. Lipwig eventually discovers that most of the men were killed by failure to safely interact with a “ghost reality” which overlays the physical structure in the Post Office. A wizard at Unseen University explains to him that this phenomenon is caused by the fact that words have power, and masses of them are currently crammed into every available inch of space in the Post Office.


Good Omens

It is the coming of the End Times; the Apocalypse is near, and Final Judgment will soon descend upon the human race. This comes as a bit of bad news to the angel Aziraphale (who was the angel of the Garden of Eden) and the demon Crowley (who was the Serpent who tempted Eve to eat the apple), respectively the representatives of God and Satan on Earth, as they’ve actually gotten quite used to living their comfortable, lives and, in a perverse way, actually have taken a liking to humanity. As such, since they’re both good friends (despite supposedly being polar opposites, representing Good and Evil as they do), they decide to work together and keep an eye on the Antichrist, destined to be the son of a prominent American diplomat stationed in Britain, and thus ensure he grows up in a way that means he can never decide simply between Good and Evil and, therefore, postpone the end of the world.

Unfortunately, Warlock, the child everyone thinks is the Anti-Christ is, in fact, a perfectly normal eleven-year-old boy. Owing to a bit of a switch-up at birth, the real Anti-Christ is in fact Adam Young, a charismatic and slightly otherworldly eleven-year-old who, despite being the harbinger of the Apocalypse, has lived a perfectly normal life as the son of typically English parents and, as a result, has no idea of his true powers. As Adam blissfully and naively uses his powers, creating around him the world of Just William (because he thinks that’s what an English child’s life should be like), the race is on to find him — the Four Horsemen (or, rather, Bikers, owing to their motorcycles) of the Apocalypse assemble and the incredibly accurate (yet so highly specific as to be useless) prophecies of Agnes Nutter, seventeenth-century prophetess, are rapidly coming true.

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6 points
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10 points

I would also recommend Small Gods, it is brilliant and works well as a standalone if you want to get a feel for his writing style.

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15 points
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The Discworld books are light, easy to read, and funny. They generally start out with a bunch of jokes about stock fantasy tropes and modern society, but they get less jokey and more serious (not incredibly serious) once you get attached to the characters and invested in the plot of the book. Then they become well written but fairly standard internal/external plot stuff, but you like all the characters because they made you laugh when you met them, and the actual meat of the plot is something new because it started out as a joke.

I’d start with Mort, but you could start with any sub-series and have a good time. (Though the early books starring Rincewind aren’t as good as the rest. )

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Thanks!

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16 points
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11 points

Comrade, this is absolutely wonderful. You’ve sold me! Really, thank you so much for sharing this. Amazing.

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6 points
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9 points
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7 points

Guards Guards is great for people who believe in police reform, because the Guards are exactly the kind of people you would want to be police; Kind, compassionate, dedicated, honest, (except Nobby), and devoted to protecting the people of the city, individually and collectively, whatever the odds, even if they need to be protected from themselves.

And you read this, and fall in love with them, and eventually realize that they behave exactly un-like cops in every detail and particular.

Also, Terry accidentally said Trans Rights before he even properly knew that Trans people were a thing, which is both cool for him as an individual, and cool to hear from someone who was extremely British.

He also has a series of books that center on young women who do things. Unlike a lot of fantasy authors from his era he always treated women characters seriously and, to the best of my knowledge, was never a creep about it.

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