Product Details
Pyramids (Discworld Novel)

Pyramids (Discworld Novel)
By Terry Pratchett

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2227 in Books
  • Published on: 1990-07-01
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 288 pages

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
Being trained by the Assassin's Guild in Ankh-Morpork did not fit Teppic for the task assigned to him by fate. He inherited the throne of the desert kingdom of Djelibeybi rather earlier than he expected (his father wasn't too happy about it either), but that was only the beginning of his problems..."Pyramids" (the book of going forth) is the seventh Discworld novel - and the most outrageously funny to date.

From the Back Cover
Being trained by the Assasin's Guild in Ankh-Morpork did not fit Teppic for the task assigned to him by fate. He inherited the throne of the desert kingdom of Djelibeybi rather earlier than he expected (his father wasn't too happy about it either), but that was only the beginning of his problems...

Pyramids (the book of going forth) is the seventh Discworld novel - and the most outrageously funny to date.

About the Author
Terry Pratchett
Terry Pratchett is one of the most popular authors writing today. He lives behind a keyboard in Wiltshire and says he 'doesn't want to get a life, because it feels as though he's trying to lead three already'. He was appointed OBE in 1998. He is the author of the phenomenally successful Discworld series and his trilogy for young readers, The Bromeliad, is scheduled to be adapted into a spectacular animated movie.


Customer Reviews

Terrific Fantasy Writing5

Terry Pratchett has become one of the most popular authors alive today and his popularity is richly deserved. This book was first published in 1989. That means that the Discworld had been spinning around in Terry Pratchet's head for six years and all its avid readers are praying that the series does not end just yet. Little did they realise at the time that the series would still be going nearly 20 years later.

You would think that a fantasy world full of trolls, zombies, witches, vampires would be an alien concept to most readers. Werewolves and dwarves in the Ank Morpork city watch. Wizards running a university. Or with this particular book a country, similar in just about every grain of sand to Egypt. Pratchett's brain must have been working overtime on this one.

The author keeps his reader's laughing throughout the book with the story of how difficult it is being a teenage Pharoah Terry Pratchett gets a laugh out of just about anybody or anything you can think of that relates to Ancient Egypt. Pyramids, high priests, mummies that come to life. Pyramid builders that couldn`t build a brick s - - - house, sacred gods, you name it and it is there in this hilarious book.

Standing On The Shoulders Of My Ancestors5
Terry Pratchett's first novel, "The Carpet People", appeared in 1971. "Pyramids" is the seventh novel in his hugely popular Discworld series and was first published in 1989. It's the first - and, to date, only - book to feature Teppic, and is largely set in his home country of Djelibeybi.

As the book opens, Teppic (or Pteppic) is approaching the end of his education at Ankh-Morpork's Guild of Assassins. (The final exam, if failed, tends to be very......final). However, there is more to Teppic than dressing very stylishly and inhuming only for vast amounts of money. With the very recent death of his father, he has also become King Pteppicymon XXVIII of Djelibeybi. Teppic's home country is very obviously based on Egypt : it's two miles wide, one hundred and fifty miles long and runs along the river Djel. It has driven itself bankrupt, having spent seven thousand years building pyramids for its monarchs - invariably on the country's most fertile soil. Having become the first Pharoh to be educated outside Djelibeybi, Teppic finds it difficult to re-adapt to the traditions of his home country. He is technically a God and although he is officially Head of State, it's Dios - the very aged High Priest - who actually runs the country. Teppic isn't entirely impressed about this - he wants to introduce proper plumbing and pillows, for example. However, in spite of the country's debt, he does agree to building a massive pyramid for his late father. (This isn't something his late father - still pottering around as a ghost - isn't too impressed with). The final straw comes when Dios decides to feed Ptraci - the late King's favourite handmaiden - to the crocodiles. Teppic decides to become a little more politically active - and, luckily, he has a helpful education to fall back on.

Like everything else I've read by Pratchett, this is an excellent book. It's easily read, features plenty of likeable characters and there are plenty of laughs. As it's one of Pratchett's stand-alone books, it's a good starting point if you've never read any of the Discworld books before. (In a way, I find that a pity : I'd love to have known what became of Teppic and Ptraci). Definitely recommended !

Biblical5
This was the first Pratchett I ever read, I laughed out load on page one and have been reading them ever since. Pratchett's the master of observational humour, even a passing knowledge of current and recent events allows you to see where he's coming from and who he's borrowed from in real life to create the inasanity that is Discworld. This isn't primarily a book for fantasy or sci-fi fans, pratchett breaks too many rules to make them happy, nor is it a childrens book, I don't think they would (or should) get some of the underlying humour, he's a writer for everyone really, unique in his genre and possibly one of the funniest writers in existence (living or inconveniently undead for that matter). If you've not read one before - try it you might just like it; if you have, well he's not written any christmas roaster books yet, and probably never will - enjoy