Snuff

Snuff

Softcover
4.338

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Description

"A lively outing, complete with sly shout-outs to Jane Austen and gritty police procedurals."-Publishers Weekly (starred review)In Terry Pratchett's delightful New York Times bestselling satirical fantasy, a tale of crime, class, prejudice, and punishment, Commander Sam Vimes of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch is on vacation. But this is Discworld, where nothing goes as planned-and hilarious adventure ensues.It is a truth universally acknowledged that a policeman taking a holiday would barely have had time to open his suitcase before he finds his first corpse.At long last, Lady Sybil has lured her husband, Sam Vimes, on a well-deserved and long-overdue holiday. But for the commander of the City Watch, a vacation in the country is anything but relaxing. The balls, the teas, the muck-not to mention all that fresh air and birdsong-are more than a bit taxing on a cynical city-born and -bred copper facing a classic countryside mystery.The policeman is back on familiar ground in this compelling fantasy mystery when a body is found-the first of many, many corpses-and an ancient crime involving the local goblins is uncovered. Out of his jurisdiction, out of his element, and out of bacon sandwiches (thanks to his well-meaning wife)-Sam must rely on his copper's instincts, guile, and Ankh-Morpork street smarts to see justice done.As he sets off on the chase, though, he must remember to watch where he steps. . . . This is the countryside, after all, and the streets most definitely are not paved with gold.The Discworld novels can be read in any order, but Snuff is the 8th book in the City Watch collection and the 39th Discworld book.The City Watch series in order:- Guards! Guards!- Men at Arms- Feet of Clay- Jingo- The Fifth Elephant- Night Watch- Thud!- Snuff

Book Information

Main Genre
N/A
Sub Genre
N/A
Format
Softcover
Pages
418
Price
19.50 €

Posts

4
All
5

The most serious Discworld book I have read so far

While retaining a lot of the humour that Pratchett is well known for, Snuff really gets dark, more than other Discworld books I have read and shows how far Pratchett had come as an author since The colour of Magic

3

Terry Pratchett schafft es, selbst aus einem Buch mit einem so harten Thema wie Rassismus eine Wohlfühlgeschichte zu machen. Und das ohne das eigentliche Thema zu verharmlosen oder aus den Augen zu verlieren. Wieder einmal beweist Sir Terry, dass er ein Meister seines Faches ist. Bei Pratchett kann das Unschuldige in Gegenwart der Dunkelheit unschuldig sein und bleiben. Und das Raue, Deftige darf sich selbst bleiben. Es darf gelacht werden, es darf geweint werden und es darf sich geprügelt werden. Das Buch ist vielleicht ein wenig zu lang geworden, zumindest aus meiner Sicht, aber Pratchett geht trotzdem immer und enttäuscht nie.

3.5

Pratchett Reread 8/41 _ Watch Arc

I'll be honest, after finishing this last book in the Discworld Watch Arc, I feel reluctant to pick up anything else because it won't contain nearly enough of Samuel Vimes. However, Snuff ends that storyline rather fittingly (even though that may not necessarily have been Sir Terry's intention). After having been convinced (or coerced?) by his wife (and Lord Vetinari, let's not kid around), to go for a holiday in the countryside, it doesn't take Sam Vimes too long to find himself in a fistfight, closely followed by a moonlit stroll in the hills and a dead body. Is he far out of his jurisdiction? Naturally. But murder is murder and gods be damned if he doesn't do anything about this. I did miss the rest of the Watch a bit in this one, but we get a lot of Willikins, Vimes' martial butler, which nearly makes up for the lack of Carrot, Angua et al. On to the wizards next, I think! 🌟

4

I liked this Vimes novel. Including all the poo. The only think I would have preferred to be a bit better would be everyone else except the "Vimes Family". A village mystery like this one should have more fleshed-out characters. The bad guy is bad because he is bad... and never once appeared in the novel. The poo-lady was there to give some explanation and then was never mentioned until the happy end... and somehow it feeled like there should have been some kind of romance between Feeney and the poo-lady but it was with the blacksmith who made 10 pages of the book?

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