![]() ![]() He is alsounbearbly honest and people just don’t know how to handle that. People think he is slow or even stupid when in reality, Brutha is just quite and not particularly eloquent. He is perfectly happy doing the jobs nobody else wants to do because he is secure in his faith and knows that somebody’s got to sweep the floor and pull out the weeds in the garden. We follow young Brutha, a novice at the Citadel, who has no aspirations to become anything higher than that because he has no aspirations at all. What I’m saying is I am so grateful for Terry Pratchett and his books and this one is giving me a major book hangover and I want to just continue reading Discworld for the forseeable future.Īs the title suggests, this book deals with religion on the Disc, specifically with Omnianism (at least at the beginning). Then again, Discworld is not only re-readable but practically begging to be re-read because there are always references and jokes and little asides that you don’t get on your first read. ![]() ![]() I have read just over half of the Discworld novels and with every one I finish, I get a bit sadder that there are fewer left I haven’t discovered yet. Terry Pratchett’s writing always gives me warm and fuzzy feelings and somehow manages to regrow my hope in humanity. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |