Reaper Man: A Discworld Novel"Engaging, surreal satire. . . nothing short of magical." —Chicago Tribune The eleventh installment in the Discworld fantasy series from New York Times bestselling author Terry Pratchett — in which Death has been fired by the Auditors of Reality, and Ankh-Morpork's undead and underemployed set off to find him. They say there are only two things you can count on. But that was before Death started pondering the existential. Of course, the last thing anyone needs is a squeamish Grim Reaper and soon his Discworld bosses have sent him off with best wishes and a well-earned gold watch. Now Death is having the time of his life, finding greener pastures where he can put his scythe to a whole new use. But like every cutback in an important public service, Death's demise soon leads to chaos and unrest—literally, for those whose time was supposed to be up, like Windle Poons. The oldest geezer in the entire faculty of Unseen University—home of magic, wizardry, and big dinners—Windle was looking forward to a wonderful afterlife, not this boring been-there-done-that routine. To get the fresh start he deserves, Windle and the rest of Ankh-Morpork's undead and underemployed set off to find Death and save the world for the living(and everybody else, of course). The Discworld novels can be read in any order, but Reaper Man is the second book in the Death series. The Death collection includes:
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... fingers rise and reach out. Select. And another. Select. And more. Many, many more. Select, select. It's all in a day's work. Or it would be, if days existed here. Click, click, as the dark shape moves patiently along the rows. And ...
... Fingers . . . you used to get proper fingers in the old days . . . Someone pulled the covers off a lantern. Someone else pushed REAPER MAN 13.
... fingers on the table. “Mr. Poons,” he said, “are you quite sure?” Windle had gone off at a tangent. “Any more of these toturerillas? Not that I call it proper food,” he said, “dippin' bits of hard bikky in sludge, what's so special ...
... fingers on his desk. “Dead people walking around is unhygienic,” he said. This silenced them. No one had ever looked at it that way, but Mustrum Ridcully was just the sort of man who would. Mustrum Ridcully was, depending on your point ...
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Astronomically Speaking: A Dictionary of Quotations on Astronomy and Physics C.C. Gaither,Alma E Cavazos-Gaither No preview available - 2003 |