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it confuses the gently caress out of me when a character says "gel". "when I was a gel". I ask british goons what the gently caress a gel is and they have no idea. It came to me recently when I imagined a certain type of british accent pronouncing "girl". Actually, I think I was watching some old movie and someone said it and I was just Just reading it, it made no sense ever. There are a lot of endearing british accents. I like the one that the elevator robot in that douglas adams video game about spaceship titanic. The one where it's not exactly cockney and he adds H's to the front of words that don't need them. I've seen the witches do that once or twice when they get self conscious about "dropping aitches"
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# ? Sep 21, 2007 02:02 |
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# ? May 11, 2024 14:55 |
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Making Money just came in the post and I'll probably drop all other books to read it, but this topic makes me really want to go back and read others and buy any I've missed, which woudld take a while and cant be good financially. nevermind that bollocks i was thinking of Eric, don't know how I made that mistake
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# ? Sep 22, 2007 12:40 |
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Sylphosaurus posted:More Lovecraft references: The Patrician also refers to an "incident" that involved Dagon street and a sushi eatery during a full moon. (Damned shame about what happened to Mr. Hong. "Crack-crack-gristle-ARRRRGH!" is no way for a man to go.) I'm wondering if he's setting up for an upcoming book with that, or whether it's just a running joke. Oddly enough, it'd be a parfect venue for a Wizards/Rincewind book if he's ever planning another one, as the Dungeon Dimensions type of story tended to feature them a lot. And I'm surprised by all the hate for the Fourecks book; it had one of the highest WPP* ratios in all of the Discworld, thus making it objectively good. I liked Moving Pictures a lot too, mostly because it had CMOT doing his thing, and the protagonist was likeable enough. Certainly better than Monstrous Regiment or the weaker Witch books, at any rate. And yes, I'm eagerly awaiting the new Lipvig book. *Wizards Per Page, which is the closest one can come to a standardized measurement of non-Vimesian Discworld book quality. Though a rough measurement at best, it does involve numbers, and thus is lent verifiable objective validity. This follows from the finest traditions of econometricians, who have never let sheer ludicrousness get in the way of a good bit of algebra. Nomenklatura fucked around with this message at 18:41 on Sep 23, 2007 |
# ? Sep 23, 2007 18:39 |
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Okay, what's "Shaken players shift the load (9 letters)" at the start of Chapter 12?
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# ? Sep 24, 2007 00:18 |
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Ok, reading Making Money right now... is it just me, or is Pratchett introducing Keynes to the masses?
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# ? Sep 24, 2007 17:52 |
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I purchased 'Hogfather' with the adult covers so I could read it twice by Christmas. And wow, the adult covers are NICE. They make me feel grown-up. Will look for Making Money if Chapters has it. Thud! was excellent, although Night Watch was better. But I'm biased because I love time travelling mind foolery.
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 00:06 |
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Fourecks posted:I purchased 'Hogfather' with the adult covers so I could read it twice by Christmas. And wow, the adult covers are NICE. They make me feel grown-up. adult covers? What?
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 00:11 |
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The adult covers are black and have photos, instead of the Kirby (?) drawings. http://www.amazon.com/Hogfather-Discworld-Terry-Pratchett/dp/0552154288/ref=sr_1_9/102-0839454-0332131?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1190677824&sr=8-9
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 00:50 |
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is this a kirby cover? http://www.amazon.com/Guards-Terry-Pratchett/dp/0061020648/ref=sr_1_22/103-0649916-4659804?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1190677988&sr=1-22 because my hogfather isn't the adult one, and it isn't the other one amazon has with the peppermint swirl and a sleigh. It's just some santa looking head with tusks. I can't find it
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 00:54 |
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Krinkle posted:is this a kirby cover? Naw those are the crappy American mass trade paperback covers. This would be the particular Hogfather Kirby cover: I ended up with a nice adult cover of Jingo as a Christmas gift. It is black and has a picture of a sword handles on it. Very snazzy.
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 03:06 |
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Archetype posted:Naw those are the crappy American mass trade paperback covers. This would be the particular Hogfather Kirby cover: Yeah I thought so. I also thought that guy died a long time ago and only drew the cover to like the first ten or so. In the lower right corner what is that thief boiling because it looks to me to a third leg
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 03:45 |
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Well, I'm standing in line now to have my book signed by pterry. In the q&a he revealed that the crossword puzzle answer is "carthorse"(which is an anagram of orchestra, ie "shaken players") Other news, the movie adaptation of CoM & LF(being filmed together) Vetinari has been cast and is supposedly "perfect". Curse these other fans in line. also curse the improbably British family behind me. what are you people doing in torrance!
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 03:45 |
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Vetinari wasn't the Patrician in the first two books
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 03:57 |
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ONE YEAR LATER posted:Vetinari wasn't the Patrician in the first two books Movie!
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 04:00 |
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ONE YEAR LATER posted:Vetinari wasn't the Patrician in the first two books Pratchett claims he was.
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 05:33 |
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Eunabomber posted:Other news, the movie adaptation of CoM & LF(being filmed together) Vetinari has been cast and is supposedly "perfect". Is that this? Says it's for tv, but I suppose you could still call it a movie.
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 06:55 |
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LooseChanj posted:Is that this? Says it's for tv, but I suppose you could still call it a movie. Yeah, made for TV movie like Hogfather. And Argus Filch is going to be a pre-change librarian!
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 06:57 |
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Eunabomber posted:Yeah, made for TV movie like Hogfather. I wasn't aware of *any* movies. Is this a british thing?
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 06:59 |
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Yes. I went to the Torrance signing earlier; got there late because I became ensnared in the trap that is IKEA and arrived just in time to hear his last line of the talk and then people lined up for the signing. The line took about two hours to go through; I was one of the last ten or so. There was a surprising amount of people (to me at least) there. I didn't know he was so popular around here; very nice showing. The man himself is much smaller and elderly looking than I realized. I'd like to hear more of what he had to say during his talk, so I'd appreciate any more details. I've now put my copy away and started looking for an ebook version.
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 08:52 |
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bobula posted:Yes. I too was in the very back for the talk as I arrived mere minutes before he began. By pure dumb luck I got into the back of the white ticket line instead of the red ticket line, so it only took me 45 minutes or so. Do you recall the weird people with a vaguely British accent in th back of a line? I was right in front of them. He talked a little about how traveling is very hard on him, various health issues(I think his parents died or were hospitalized recently) and his bad reaction to CA sushi. Not much about a new Discworld book, he did say something about a non-discworld adventure book, something about how he hates weak woman characters, and how his protagonist-a timid mid Victorian era "gel"-became a badass in two chapters of being shipwrecked. His caveat to this was that his mind is incredibly non-linear, and nothing has been finished yet. I do not recall any questions being asked about the new Tiffany Aching book. The first thing he did was ask everyone if they liked Mr. Fusspots new toy.
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 16:21 |
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Bah, sucks living in a non-english speaking country. I preordered Making Money from amazon.de, the shipping date was the 24th. But now it has been pushed back to the first week of october Well, on the good side this gives me more time to finish Going Postal for the second time. I like the "modern" Ankh-Morpork centric books a lot, The Truth and Going Postal are among my favorite Pratchett books. The Tiffany Aching series is brilliant as well.
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 19:39 |
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Doh-Doh posted:Bah, sucks living in a non-english speaking country. I preordered Making Money from amazon.de, the shipping date was the 24th. But now it has been pushed back to the first week of october Unfortunately, I haven't seen anything as unquestionably awesome as the pleas of the unwritten letters from Going Postal, but it's DEFINITELY a nice switch from how dark Thud! was, and Moist has turned into one of the best of the running Discworld protagonists. (If only for his interactions with Vetinari, which are arguably even better than the Vimes/Vetinari relationship. Only Moist could actually snow Vetinari, and only ol' Havelock could discern when Moist is snowing him. Reading them both do it is one of the highlights of the entire series for me.) Nomenklatura fucked around with this message at 20:43 on Sep 25, 2007 |
# ? Sep 25, 2007 20:38 |
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Nomenklatura posted:Unfortunately, I haven't seen anything as unquestionably awesome as the pleas of the unwritten letters from Going Postal, but it's DEFINITELY a nice switch from how dark Thud! was, and Moist has turned into one of the best of the running Discworld protagonists. The darkness of Thud! made it amazing when Vimes started shouting WHERES MY COW? which I loved, so, so much
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# ? Sep 25, 2007 23:52 |
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I'd say The Truth and Thud were possibly among my favourites, though "improving" is a fairly simple way of looking at it. I'd say his earlier books were funnier (Mort, Witches Abroad, Small Gods), though his latest are arguably slightly... cleverer (oh god, I really did just type that). Does that make sense? Books like Masquerade, Jingo and Hogfather were real duds though - I guess after so many books they can't all be great. He's certainly still on form, I think that's easy to agree with.
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# ? Sep 26, 2007 12:19 |
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I liked Making Money a lot, Mr Bent's origin is cool and the Golem standard (I take it this was a reference to marxism and the value of labour?) is awesome. The highlight of the book had to be the blind letter office, the twisted logic of it all and the reminder of just how clever the Patrician is was great. I know it was just setup for the Patrician adopting Mr Fusspot but I was sad to read that Wuffles had died. Moist is a wonderful tool to show how various large institutions works in a humourous manner and always making you wonder about why a con artist is so very suited to running said institutions. I hope we get to see his next hinted at adventure. I do have one plot question though, When the gold starts raining into the vault Moist laments that things had "been going so well..." surely extra gold is a good thing now the currency is based on Golems, its just a large amount of a valueable tradeable commodity? Or is he just upset the moment with Adora has been ruined? icenode posted:Books like Masquerade, Jingo and Hogfather were real duds though
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# ? Sep 26, 2007 12:47 |
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icenode posted:I'd say The Truth and Thud were possibly among my favourites, though "improving" is a fairly simple way of looking at it. I'd say his earlier books were funnier (Mort, Witches Abroad, Small Gods), though his latest are arguably slightly... cleverer (oh god, I really did just type that). I would mostly agree with that, except the Girls-Night-Out scene in Thud is probably the funniest thing he's ever written.
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# ? Sep 26, 2007 13:46 |
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I think Jingo is one of the best ones. I think it has all the good funny har har from his early books combined with the more intricate nature of his latter works.
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# ? Sep 26, 2007 16:15 |
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Jingo and Hogfather are two of my favorites, and I really like Maskerade too. :O Really, I'd switch the ones you listed as liking for these. Except Small Gods. Small Gods can stay.
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# ? Sep 26, 2007 18:03 |
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I think Sorcery and Equal Rites are the only two books I'm not a giant fan of, simply because it's pretty obvious that Pratchett wasn't planning on having the series go on as long as it did and the stuff that happens feels out of place compared to the rest of them. Although I did like the call back to Sorcery in one of the later Wizard books, I think the Patrician asks the facility about when the Wizards tried to take over the world. One of my favorite parts of Making Money was when the Patrician was discussing the latest crossword with Drumknot and mentioned that only 5 or 6 other people knew the answer to a question, one of them being a pet store owner and Vetinari tells him to keep an eye on it since no one who could get that answer could be satisfied with just a pet shop for too long. I can't remember the exact wording but the one line that really killed me was something like "Rumors are like mushrooms; they both grow in the dark and on bullshit."
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# ? Sep 26, 2007 18:24 |
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For some reason I really disliked Hogfather the first time I read it, when I went back and tried it a second time it turned out to be one of my favorites. I thought he secret identity of the tooth fairy was absolutely brilliant.
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# ? Sep 26, 2007 21:05 |
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Grum posted:The darkness of Thud! made it amazing when Vimes started shouting WHERES MY COW? It's a pity that we haven't seen Moist "from the outside" from the perspective of someone like Vimes, by the way. That's one of my favorite parts of Discworld, and after Making Money, I'm anxious to see what others actually think of the man.
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# ? Sep 26, 2007 21:39 |
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Nomenklatura posted:It's a pity that we haven't seen Moist "from the outside" from the perspective of someone like Vimes, by the way. That's one of my favorite parts of Discworld, and after Making Money, I'm anxious to see what others actually think of the man. I think it's pretty clear at least from Going Postal (I haven't read Making Money yet, motherfucking Amazon.com gently caress) that Vimes hates everything Moist stands for and would love nothing more than to drag him back in front of the Patrician for something, going "HA! You can't change a con-man's spots!" Angua seems to like Moist, which makes sense, because Moist is good with the ladies and is good with canines. Carrot is, of course, Carrot.
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# ? Sep 26, 2007 22:51 |
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Keshik posted:I think it's pretty clear at least from Going Postal (I haven't read Making Money yet, motherfucking Amazon.com gently caress) that Vimes hates everything Moist stands for and would love nothing more than to drag him back in front of the Patrician for something, going "HA! You can't change a con-man's spots!" Shorts, you can't change a conmans shorts I don't know, I just recall Vetinari saying 'cant change a leopards shorts' and going but no one noticed in the book also I'm hoping that Moist will actually growl under his breath infront of Angua sometime Grum fucked around with this message at 00:18 on Sep 27, 2007 |
# ? Sep 27, 2007 00:15 |
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I thought it was Nanny Ogg that said the bit about the leopard's shorts? Or did Vetinari say it too. edit: dur you must be talking about Making Money which I haven't read yet
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# ? Sep 27, 2007 07:33 |
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bobula posted:I thought it was Nanny Ogg that said the bit about the leopard's shorts? Or did Vetinari say it too. It is a phrase used constantly in Making Money.
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# ? Sep 27, 2007 09:28 |
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Keshik posted:I think it's pretty clear at least from Going Postal (I haven't read Making Money yet, motherfucking Amazon.com gently caress) that Vimes hates everything Moist stands for and would love nothing more than to drag him back in front of the Patrician for something, going "HA! You can't change a con-man's spots!" I think the thing that might annoy Vimes the most about Lipwig is that (at least in Going Postal) Lipwig is about the only person on the Disc would can keep up with Vetinari, which is why (speculation based on Making Money here) The Lipwig series is really about Vetinari grooming his replacement: not another tyrant, but a popular politician with a gift for bullshit that knows how to take people's money and make them happy he did it. Which may just make Lipwig himself the most important person on the Disc, and considering how much I LIKE the character, that makes me a happy reader indeed. And yes, Carrot is Carrot. Who knows what he's really thinking? Lipwig can read Vetinari, and yet still can't read Carrot. I'd LOVE to see more Lipwig/Carrot scenes, though, based on that speculation above. Their abilities with people compliment each other amazingly; were Carrot ever to become King, he'd need the fully-trained-up Lipwig desperately to add flare and humanity to his somewhat overwhelming ability to dominate and command. Carrot would make a TERRIBLE politician, but he'd need them regardless, and I can't think of a more natural politician than Moist von Lipwig. In any case, now that I've finished it, I can say that Making Money isn't as good as Going Postal, but it is exactly what the series needed after Thud! and I'm really glad that the "industrial revolution" books have a consistent protagonist. Funny how the once heavily anti-establishment Discworld books have been doing so much institution-building, though. He's fixing all his old jokes. Nomenklatura fucked around with this message at 19:29 on Sep 28, 2007 |
# ? Sep 28, 2007 19:27 |
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bobula posted:Jingo and Hogfather are two of my favorites, and I really like Maskerade too. :O Really, I'd switch the ones you listed as liking for these. Except Small Gods. Small Gods can stay. I don't think anyone in their right minds can diss Small Gods, it's stand alone excellence. I don't know, the ones I/you mentioned just didn't amuse or interest me, hard to put a finger on why I was so unimpressed. Actually, another odd one out is probably The Last Continent. A decent Rincewind story, but about twice as funny if you actually lived in Australia due to all the clever references. Pyramids was a mess incidentally, however it also had the finest intro to a Pratchett book where he spends pages describing how the main character's getting garbed in assassin gear, blades blackened with lamp soot, caltrops and so on, only for him to promptly fall over. Masterful. icenode fucked around with this message at 23:10 on Sep 28, 2007 |
# ? Sep 28, 2007 23:07 |
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The opening of pyramids was loving fantastic. And then he had to go to djellibeibi . I want an all assassins book
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# ? Sep 29, 2007 01:24 |
I don't know. I didn't feel that Making Money matched up with Going Postal. It was good, but the plot just wasn't compelling in the way that Postal's was -- it lacked tension, on a lot of levels. I felt like it had been written more to be another Moist book than because he had another compelling Moist story to tell. I believe the Golem Standard was a reference to Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations, i.e., the doctrine that the wealth of nations comes from work, not from gold.
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# ? Sep 29, 2007 01:32 |
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# ? May 11, 2024 14:55 |
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Krinkle posted:I want an all assassins book The one with the tooth fairy is the most assassin-y probably, but it's pretty DEATH-y too.
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# ? Sep 29, 2007 01:32 |