Details

Synopsis It's tough to make a forensic crime novel funny, but Terry Pratchett pulls it off in this 17th Discworld fantasy. Golems are running amok; a priest's been murdered; someone's attempting to poison Ankh-Morpork's ruler, Lord Vetinari; and a new claimant to the Anhk-Morpork throne has been found: the utterly crass, barely human Corporal Nobbs. It's up to Commander Sir Samuel Vimes of the City Watch, aided by the stalwart Captain Carrot, the werewolf Constable Angua, and the dwarf forensic alchemist Cheery Littlebottom to make sense of all this.
| Details | | Series: | Discworld Series |
| Size | | Length: | 357 pages | | Height: | 6.8 in | | Width: | 4.3 in | | Thickness: | 1.2 in | | Weight: | 6.4 oz |
Publisher's Notes
First Line: "It was a warm spring night when a fist knocked at the door so hard that the hinges bent."
Industry Reviews Replete with parodies and puns, this second Discworld novel to appear this year finds previous city guardsman Commander Vimes, assisted by dwarfs, trolls, and a female werewolf, determined to solve a murder with a golem as the prime suspect. Wonderfully hilarious; recommended for fantasy collections. Breitman
A flat platter of a planet spinning atop the backs of four giant elephants perched on the shell of an immense turtle: it's no surprise that life on Discworld is far from mundane. Pratchett's 17th Discworld novel picks up where his last, Men at Arms, left off, following Ankh-Morpork City Watch Commander Samuel Vimes and his fellow cops as they strive to maintain a semblance of order in a city as infamous for its intrigues as for its ethnic diversity. An elderly priest is killed, then the harmless old curator of the Dwarf Bread Museum is found beaten to death with one of his own exhibits. Investigation reveals a link to the city's golems silent, tireless workers built of clay and brought to life with magic. There's a rash of golem suicides, and Vimes uncovers a plot that could topple the government. Pratchett's latest is full of sly puns and the lively, outrageous characters his readers expect. Those new to Discworld which first appeared in Pratchett's The Colour of Magic, 1983 will have no trouble keeping up with the action. This is fantasy served with a twist of Monty Python, parody that works by never taking itself too seriously. Author tour; U.K. and translation rights: Ralph Vicinanza. (Oct.) Lopate
|
|