jazzfish: photo of a snapping turtle carrying dirt & grass (Great A'Tuin)
[personal profile] jazzfish
In which Death gets fired. (As distinct from Death taking a bit of a holiday, as in Mort.)

This marks the first appearance of the Auditors, who I think become sort of recurrent ... villains? Plot-motivators? At least, I remember them from the movie version of Hogfather. They seem like the sort of thing that would show up somewhat often.

Reaper Man feels like two half-books glued together: "Death gets fired" and "the wizards do some stuff back in Ankh." As a "Death" book, I like this less than Mort. As a "Wizards" book, I like it better than any of the other Wizards books thus far, excepting possibly The Light Fantastic. So, progress, of a sort?

Like everyone else in the known universe, I like Pratchett's Death. I like him as Death, and I like him as Bill Door. I guess this was a way to work the "Death learns about life" part of Death Takes A Holiday into the mythos, and it does a good job of that. I was happy to see Mrs Flitworth when she turned up (a rarity in a Pratchett female character for me, so far), I very much enjoyed the Death-vs-newDeath duel. As for the Combination Harvester and Death as John Henry... that, I'd say is how to do Modern Life Into Discworld in a way that I appreciate it.

Speaking of which: I did not enjoy the shopping mall, in the 'wizards' half. Partly it feels very nineties, very much Of Its Time in a way that even Moving Pictures wasn't; partly it just ... wasn't interesting. Okay, malls as parasites on cities, got it, but then it just sits there. (Snowglobes into trolleys is a better-worked-out version of Avram Davidson's "Or All The Seas With Oysters" but I preferred the original. Possibly because it didn't outstay its welcome.)

Against my will I have developed a fondness for Archchancellor Ridcully and his utterly unwizardly approach to wizards and wizardry. I hope to see more of him. Also the ridiculous vampires, and the werewolves.

Overall I'd say this was a better than average Discworld, but not as good as I'd hoped from a Death book. But after the disappointments of FaustEric and Moving Pictures, it's a welcome change. More trajectory like this, please.

Next time: Witches Abroad.

Date: 2023-02-19 01:56 am (UTC)
amazon_syren: (Default)
From: [personal profile] amazon_syren
I found that, while Mort was where he sort of got a feel for the world he'd come up with, Reaper Man was where he really started to hit his stride. If you're reading them in order, this should keep getting better.

Date: 2023-02-20 03:59 pm (UTC)
skygiants: the aunts from Pushing Daisies reading and sipping wine on a couch (wine and books)
From: [personal profile] skygiants
Hah, I feel sort of the opposite way about it -- it's my favorite Death book and as a Wizards book I think it's just kind of fine. But the Reaper Man part of the plot hits so hard for me that everything to do with Windle Poons, whom I like perfectly well, feels very slight in comparison ...

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"Jazz Fish, a saxophone playing wanderer, finds himself in Mamboland at a critical phase in his life." --Howie Green, on his book Jazz Fish Zen

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