The Long War, Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter

The Long War, Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter

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amancalledrob

Original Poster:

1,248 posts

141 months

Wednesday 1st February 2017
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Someone bought me The Long Earth for Christmas, probably because I'm known among my family for a deep love of the Discworld series and they saw Sir Terry's name on the cover.

I was excited about it but by the end of the book I just didn't feel like much had happened. I'm now a third of the way through The Long War and I still feel like I'm waiting for something to happen. I'm considering abandoning it.

Has anyone else read the series? Does it get exciting?

brrapp

3,701 posts

169 months

Wednesday 1st February 2017
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I'm the same, read The Long Earth and got bored before the end, something I've never done with anything written solely by TP. My son is a great TP fan and has read everything he's ever written, he's read all 5 books in the 'Long' series and while he says they're not as good as the better Discworld novels, they're still worth a read. I'll get round to the rest one day.

amancalledrob

Original Poster:

1,248 posts

141 months

Wednesday 1st February 2017
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I've managed a bit more of it at lunchtime, and it appears there may be some (minor) drama on the horizon. I'll give it a bit more time but at the moment it's a chore. Fingers crossed, I hate abandoning books/films

HappyMidget

6,788 posts

122 months

Wednesday 1st February 2017
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I found the first hard reading and never bothered getting round to reading the second one. Guess I should at some point though.

jimmyjimjim

7,537 posts

245 months

Wednesday 1st February 2017
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Just acquired all 5 in the series today. In no rush to read them, though.

Bullett

10,973 posts

191 months

Thursday 2nd February 2017
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Read the first one, don't really remember much about it and can't be bothered to read anymore.

Sorry Terry.

tankplanker

2,479 posts

286 months

Thursday 2nd February 2017
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I've read all of them, mostly because I was intrigued by the premise. They didn't feel like any of Pratchett's other work (I'm a massive Pratchett fan), more like he and Baxter came up with the idea, then Baxter did all the heavy lifting due to Pratchett's illness. While I don't mind Baxter I don't find him anywhere near as engaging as Pratchett.

They do feel a lot like Waiting for Godot.

55palfers

6,006 posts

171 months

Thursday 2nd February 2017
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Bullett said:
Read the first one, don't really remember much about it and can't be bothered to read anymore.

Sorry Terry.
Yes, agreed. Very much the same feelings.

I wanted to enjoy the book but found myself struggling to finish it.

amancalledrob

Original Poster:

1,248 posts

141 months

Thursday 2nd February 2017
quotequote all
jimmyjimjim said:
Just acquired all 5 in the series today. In no rush to read them, though.
Oh god there are five of them? I was really hoping it'd just be three. I suppose I could have looked in the cover to find out. I'll finish the second and see how I feel

CanAm

10,057 posts

279 months

Thursday 2nd February 2017
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I've read all the Discworld books and more. Bought The Long Earth and Long War together; struggled through the first without really enjoying it and have never bothered to start the second.
But with a wonderful back catalogue of Sir Terry's to enjoy I'm not complaining.

jet_noise

5,800 posts

189 months

Friday 3rd February 2017
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If you like the idea of parallel worlds then have a go at Zelazny's Amber series. More fantasy than the Long Earth's sci-fi but a great read,

regards,
Jet

amancalledrob

Original Poster:

1,248 posts

141 months

Friday 3rd February 2017
quotequote all
jet_noise said:
If you like the idea of parallel worlds then have a go at Zelazny's Amber series. More fantasy than the Long Earth's sci-fi but a great read,

regards,
Jet
Thanks, I'll give it a try. Might hang in there with Long War as I've just found some excitement (it's taken seven hundred pages and two books so I'm making the most of it while it lasts!)

jet_noise

5,800 posts

189 months

Friday 3rd February 2017
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amancalledrob said:
Thanks, I'll give it a try. Might hang in there with Long War as I've just found some excitement (it's taken seven hundred pages and two books so I'm making the most of it while it lasts!)
I too found the Long Earth series not as entertaining as the 100% Terry stuff. I also felt I could spot the bits that were Terry from the rest!

amancalledrob

Original Poster:

1,248 posts

141 months

Friday 3rd February 2017
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jet_noise said:
I too found the Long Earth series not as entertaining as the 100% Terry stuff. I also felt I could spot the bits that were Terry from the rest!
Yeah I agree with you there. Kinda shines through doesn't he smile

jimmyjimjim

7,537 posts

245 months

Saturday 4th February 2017
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amancalledrob said:
jimmyjimjim said:
Just acquired all 5 in the series today. In no rush to read them, though.
Oh god there are five of them? I was really hoping it'd just be three. I suppose I could have looked in the cover to find out. I'll finish the second and see how I feel
rofl

I'm just glad they didn't cost me anything.

perdu

4,885 posts

206 months

Saturday 4th February 2017
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I found that anything by Baxter causes me to sleep better than anything by Pratchett



As for that excitement in The Long War, it's not for long frown

Nor is it really exciting, almost a relief that Terry isn't writing/involving himself in any more of them

Although I would naturally prefer it if he could...


I tried a series by Baxter about the land under the North Sea before it flooded

Number one (Stone Spring?) was OK, the rest of the series tailed off into inconsequence for me

Ace-T

7,813 posts

262 months

Saturday 11th February 2017
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Terry Pratchett in his own words.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b08fjlvx/terr...

A bit of a cross posting with the telly forum, I know, but I only spotted this programme by chance. Enjoy and be glad we can still read his wonderful words.