Experience Sir Terry Practchett’s beloved Discworld series! Get 35+ books covering all corners of this comic fantasy universe and help support Room to Read!
Discover Sir Terry Pratchett's Discworld, the beloved comic fantasy universe that’s brimming with wit, wisdom, and wonder. Start where it all began in the seminal novel The Color of Magic, which follows the misadventures of the inept wizard Rincewind as he serves as tour guide to Twoflower, Discworld's first-ever sightseer. The hapless duo’s journeys continue in The Light Fantastic and Sourcery, where the scale of world-threatening hazards (and accompanying absurdities) increase exponentially. You’ll get over 35 Discworld novels in all, touching all corners of this whimsical realm and all manner of its denizens, and you’ll help Room to Read with your purchase!
**The titles in this bundle are available through Kobo.com. To access the content, create or log in to your Kobo.com account.
This bundle is only available to those in the US.**
Anyone know a good set of all the discworld ebooks where the footnotes actually work? This series is the only one I have to still read from a physical copy.
publishing rights for digital books internationally is a giant shit show. This is as much a problem with the laws and treaties over copyright as it is the individual publishers sublicensing copyrights between jurisdictions.
They are a kobo-flavored epub. If you install the Kobo Desktop program on your computer for windows or Mac, there is a obok drm removal plugin as part of the NoDRM/DeDRM tools for Calibre that works well. It’s what I use.
The Kobo epub just has some indexing stuff in it, but it doesn’t stop any other epub reader from being able to parse them. After using the obok plugin, Calibre just treats them as EPUBs.
They are DRMed, unlike the technical books I normally get from Humble. I should have read the fine print better and not believed the "works on all devices" summary. I trusted Humble and learned a good $18 lesson.
Can DRM be removed? Sure. But that's not why I buy books from Humble.
There is, Penguin Audio recently redid all the books with a mostly full cast. They are superior to the old ones, though the Tony Robinson ones hold a place in my heart.
Missing:
27. The Last Hero
40. Raising Steam
41. The Shepherd's Crown
By series:
City Watch - Has All
Witches - Has All
Unseen University - Has All
Death - Has All
Industrial Revolution- Missing Raising Steam
Gods Collection - Has All
Young Readers - Missing Shepherds Crown
A couple days late here, but: Shepherd's Crown is actually part of the purchase. It doesn't show on Humble, but it's listed on Kobo when redeeming the code.
I used a VPN and was able to purchase the $1 tier via PayPal and redeem the books to my Kobo account. When I was redeeming the code, I had to manually set the webstore to the United States. The books were added to my main Kobo library alongside everything else I own in there.
However, and this isn't a big deal for most, you will receive the American English 'prints'. Terry was so quintessentially English, it feels uncomfortable reading 'Color' of Magic rather than 'Colour'.
I just wanna mention for anyone out there who might need to hear this. It's not immoral to acquire the books via other means if you can't easily acquire them legally.
Me and some other Pratchett fans had this discussion last week and we concluded the "Going Postal" was the best entry into the series as by that point Pratchett had mastered his wit, and there's a movie to watch afterwards. Second place went to "Guards Guards" as the watch is easily one of the best arcs Discworld has to offer.
I read them in release order because I love seeing an author grow and master their craft. I also love seeing the "order" in which an author builds their world.
I've just picked up "Guards, Guards!" never having read any of the series. It's absolutely hilarious and I question myself why i haven't started earlier. This definitely won't be my last.
There are recurring protags in the series, and I've heard that many people read those batches together. I myself just looked up the release order and read it that way and it's been alright so far. It jumps around to different places and fleshes out the discworld pretty early on.
It depends on your tastes. I started with equal rites and wasn’t disappointed. Don’t start with I Shall Wear Midnight though. There are a lot of excellent places to start and that just isn’t one of them.
Seriously though, Mort, Guards Guards, Pyramids, Going Postal, Equal Rites, Wyrd Sisters, or The Colour of Magic.
Actually no. Small Gods. Nobody was ever disappointed by Small Gods. It’s a one off. It’s funny and clever and makes you think. It’s not his best by any means but it’s around where he hit his stride. It’s chronologically separated. Read Small Gods, it’s excellent.
Don't underthink it too much though, there are arcs and while it wouldn't be too awful to read an arc out of order, it could be more confusing than necessary.