
I was pleased, since I have to admit that I was a bit worried about the continuity of quality between story-arcs. At this point, I have only read one of those books, the first _Guards, Guards_. I neared the end of one of those books and I bought the first three books from the “Guards” story-arc. A quarter of the way through the second book, I bought the final two books of the arc. I liked it well enough I bought the next two books in the series on the Death story-arc. I bought the first one, _Mort_, just to see if I would like it. I read the entire sequence centered on Death (and his extended family) first, since my introduction to the world of the Disc was the movie version of _Hogfather_. I sought out experts on which order to read the books, since there is no one straight linear way to read the books. I have been sucked into the Discworld, and I am just fine with that. The last few weeks, my reading has been monopolized by the mind of Terry Pratchett.

Review #4 Thief of Time audio narrated by Nigel Planer

Perhaps that happens even to the best of us as we grow old. In this volume, however, he seemed more preachy than in his previous tales.

In this instance, Pratchett broke his own rules.Īs a rule, I have found Pratchett’s observations about politics, religion, society, and people in general to be astute, clever, or amusing. That being said, even fairy stories have to create credible worlds that is, they must follow the rules within the parameters of the universe they create. Of course, we expect to see the narrative unfold according to the well-established formula–that is part of what we enjoy in the works of our favorite storytellers.

Pratchett performs as expected in creating (or carrying forward) his charming characters and visual scene development, but for me the plot was too thin to hold my interest for more than a few pages each time I read in it. I am an avid fan of the Discworld series and have read them from the order they were published up to Thief of Time.
