Ratings166
Average rating4.3
Nineteenth in the Discworld universe and third entry of the City Watch series, this novel follows Captain Carrot, Commander Vimes, and the rest of the Night Watch as they attempt to unravel the mystery of who poisoned Lord Vetinari the Patrician.
Series
41 primary books49 released booksDiscworld is a 49-book series with 41 primary works first released in -422 with contributions by Terry Pratchett.
Series
30 primary booksKolekcja Świat Dysku is a 30-book series with 30 primary works first released in 1983 with contributions by Terry Pratchett.
Series
8 primary books10 released booksDiscworld - Ankh-Morpork City Watch is a 10-book series with 8 primary works first released in 1989 with contributions by Terry Pratchett.
Series
15 primary booksWielka Kolekcja Terry Pratchett is a 15-book series with 15 primary works first released in 1983 with contributions by Terry Pratchett.
Reviews with the most likes.
I'm glad I went ahead and bought the audio book version, so I can look forward to Nigel Planer reading me to sleep as I revisit this in the near future. Like the other City Watch books, it calls for re-reading both because of the liberally sprinkled jokes and wordplay (parsing the delights from the pure groaners is no doubt a matter of taste), but also because it's so obscure what's actually happening in the early chapters. I like going back and covering that ground again with full knowledge of the mystery.
As always, the characters are wonderful. I certainly hope to see more of Wee Mad Arthur, and Vetinari is his usual dry and calculating self in all the best ways. Once again, I'm missing Sybil, but you can't have everything.
this book is so SO good. i adore the city watch cast and the mystery in this story is really engaging... and as always vetinari is a great character. he really shines when he's used sparingly
The City Watch of Ankh-Morpork is perplexed by a series of apparently inexplicable crimes, and Lord Vetinari is being slowly poisoned in some unidentifiable way.This is the first story to make real use of golems, although they were briefly mentioned in [b:Interesting Times 386368 Interesting Times (Discworld, #17; Rincewind, #5) Terry Pratchett https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1332112344l/386368.SY75.jpg 22431183].A female dwarf not exactly rejoicing in the name of Cheery Littlebottom is recruited into the Watch. She turns out to have some expertise in alchemy, although we'd probably call it chemistry.The mystery of the inexplicable crimes is gripping, and overall this makes rather a good story, although for some reason I find it only moderately enjoyable, so I haven't reread it often. Perhaps it's rather too serious for my liking, although of course there are scraps of humour in it here and there.It's a rather complicated story, and I get to the end feeling that (a) I haven't completely understood what was going on, and (b) the author hasn't persuaded me to care quite as much about it all as he does. I like some of the regular characters, but the golems are new and my sympathy with them isn't fully engaged.Terry Pratchett evidently had a mission to persuade us that every thinking creature capable of communication is a person who deserves human rights and our full sympathy, however weird he/she/it may be. This is commendable, I suppose, but the repetition of this basic theme gets a little tiresome as he extends it to more and more different categories of creatures.