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The Truth: A Novel of Discworld

The Truth: A Novel of Discworld

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Author: Terry Pratchett
Publisher: HarperCollins
Category: Book

List Price: $24.00
Buy Used: $0.43
You Save: $23.57 (98%)



New (3) Used (34) Collectible (8) from $0.43

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 96 reviews
Sales Rank: 692976

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 336
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.7 x 0.6

ISBN: 0380978954
Dewey Decimal Number: 823.914
EAN: 9780380978953
ASIN: 0380978954

Publication Date: November 1, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available

Also Available In:

  • Audio Download - The Truth: Discworld #25 (Unabridged)
  • Mass Market Paperback - The Truth
  • Paperback - The Truth (Discworld)
  • Paperback - Truth, The (Discworld Novel)
  • Kindle Edition - Truth, The
  • Audio CD - The Truth
  • Audio Download - The Truth
  • Audio Cassette - The Truth (Discworld)

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  • The Fifth Elephant: A Novel of Discworld
  • Night Watch

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
The Truth, Pratchett's 25th Discworld novel, skewers the newspaper business. When printing comes to Ankh-Morpork, it "drag(s) the city kicking and screaming into the Century of the Fruitbat." Well, actually, out of the Century of the Fruitbat. As the Bursar remarks, if the era's almost over, it's high time they embraced its challenges.

William de Worde, well-meaning younger son of reactionary nobility, has been providing a monthly newsletter to the elite using engraving. Then he is struck (and seriously bruised) by the power of the press. The dwarves responsible convince William to expand his letter and the Ankh-Morpork Times is born. Soon William has a staff, including Sacharissa Cripslock, a genteel young lady with a knack for headline writing, and photographer Otto Chriek. Otto's vampirism causes difficulties: flash pictures cause him to crumble to dust and need reconstitution, and he must battle his desire for blood, particularly Sacharissa's. When Lord Vetinari is accused of attempted murder, the City Watch investigates the peculiar circumstances, but William wants to know what really happened. The odds for his survival drop as his questions multiply.

The Truth is satirical, British, and full of sly jokes. Although this cake doesn't rise quite as high as it did in previous volumes, even ordinary Pratchett is pretty darn good, and those who haven't read a Discworld novel before can start here and go on to that incredible backlist. --Nona Vero

Product Description

Terry Pratchett's acclaimed Discworld novels have been number one bestsellers in England for more than a decade. In fact, this prolific author sold more hardcover books in the United Kingdom during the 1900's than any other living novelist. Critically recognized as one of the most celebrated practitioners of satire and parody -- in the company of Kurt Vonnegut, Douglas Adams, and Carl Hiaasen -- Pratchett, with his unique brand of irreverent humor, is at last being embraced across America.

In this, his twenty-fifth Discworld novel, Pratchett turns his pen on, well, the pen. Or, rather, the press, and its power to disseminate and create the truth. The lesser son of one of Ankh most privileged families, William de Worde a struggling scribe, hits on the brilliant idea of producing his upper-crust newsletter with a newfangled printing press.

Truer to the family motto, Le Mot juste, than his disapproving father can ever realize, de Worde soon finds that his Ankh-Morpork Times is a success. So big, in fact, that certain nefarious factions would like nothing better than to put him out of business. They begin their own rival Ankh-Morpork Inquirer--full of salacious bits -- to do just that. Soon, though, de Worde has more than just the competition to fret over. Lord Vetinari, the Patrician of Ankh-Morpork, is accused of a serious crime in a seemingly airtight case. But William de Worde knows that facts aren't always the truth. Along with a much too prim and proper assistant, a roving photographer vampire with a nasty reaction to his flashgun, and a talking dog who holds the key to the mystery, William de Worde will stop at nothing to get the truth.

And that's the truth.

A dead-on look at the revered fifth estate, the nature of news, and bareknuckled political intrigue, The Truth shall make you free. From everything else you'd be doing instead of enjoying it, that is.


Customer Reviews:   Read 91 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Wonderful book!   November 19, 2008
Okay, how can you not like this book? Again we are featured in Ankh-Morpork, in the dawning of a new revolution in print technology. Movable type. Now, can William de Word, the editor of the Ankh-Morpork Times live to sell their paper when they find out about the dastardly plot to incriminate the city's Patrician?


4 out of 5 stars Great book for frequent visitors to Discworld   October 22, 2008
The Truth, a novel in the Discworld series, represents one of Terry Pratchett's better efforts, which is quite the accomplishment given his immense talent. The book is very satirical look at journalism but without bludgeoning the reader. While the book contains a panoply of new and interesting characters, many of the characters are recurring. To those who have read several other Discworld novels, I strongly recommend this book. However, to the new visitor to Discworld I recommend waiting to read this book until you have read several others precisely because of the recurring themes and characters. [...]


4 out of 5 stars A good entry, but not the best of DiscWorld   September 29, 2008
A lot of your enjoyment of Terry Pratchett's DiscWorld series comes down to your awareness of the object of Pratchett's satire. In the case of "The Truth," it's the world of newspapers and journalism in general. Having a background in this, I found a lot of Pratchett's zingers and satire to be dead-on accurate in their humor and observation.

What I didn't find quite as spot-on was some of the twists and turns of the novel. For one thing, the identity of who is behind the elaborate conspiracy is so easily deduced that it ruins some of the driving force of the last half of the novel. Of course, the problem is that the readers know the identity (or can deduce it easily if you're paying attention), while the characters don't because they don't have as much information as we do. It's a case of the reader being a bit too omniscient for his or her own good and ruining the final revelation a bit.

Another issue is the speed at which things occur. William DeWorde goes from hand-carving a monthly newsletter for five at-home benefactors to running a newspaper complete with moveable type press within a week. Pratchett works too hard to pile on absurdity after absurdity as the newspaper takes off in ways that William can't expect and doesn't prepare for. Pratchett works too hard to make a few funny observances by compresing the timeline and making the story feel a bit rushed at points.

Which a lot of this can be forgiven with Pratchett being his typical self and finding unique ways to put words together to be both thought-provoking and funny. Once again, Pratchett has this way of finding just the exact right turn of phrase and combination of words to make what he's doing appear completely effortless. But if you step back and look at it, you realize exactly what he's doing and how he's doing it. And that alone makes "The Truth" worth appreciating



5 out of 5 stars Turning lead into gold - The Dwarven way   August 19, 2008
Reviewing Pratchett is always hard, I absolutely adore most of his books, and his literary cannon is huge. I have been reading all of the Discworld books in chronological order and have finally arrived at "The Truth," the twenty-fifth book in the series. "The Truth" introduces the character of William de Worde, a young son of a noble who chooses not to follow in his father's footsteps, rather attempting to make his own way in the world. Late one night the local rumor that Dwarves have found a way to turn lead into gold comes to light right in front of de Worde. Lead can be turned into gold if you use the lead to make a printing press, and manage to find an excellent writer like de Worde to start Ankh-Morpork's first newspaper.

As with all of Pratchett's books, we have the evolution of the newspaper over a matter of a week rather than the hundred or so years that it took in our world. Soon there is competition across the street with headlines like "Woman gives birth to snakes" and "Man abducted by Demons." William de Worde however, is obsessed with truth, stories come flooding in, and soon he has hired Sacharissa as a story writer, and Otto the vampire as a photographer. I have to admit that the first time Otto takes a picture for the paper literally cause me to snort my drink out through my nose, and tears to come to my eyes from laughing so hard. I think that scene is one of the funniest moments I have ever read in a book. Sacharissa is the daughter of an engraver who becomes quite the excellent reporter, and ends up being key to the discovery of the truth at the end of the book. Otto, a vampire from Uberwald has joined the temperance group and given up the red stuff, not that he doesn't have his moments, but he tries so hard to keep himself under control.

William's struggle as the head of the newspaper suddenly is flung into high gear when the Patrician is accused of murder. At this point the book begins satirizing the Watergate scandal complete with the anonymous tipster who is never seen (though readers of other discworld books will figure out who the tipster is fairly quickly). The guards, specifically Vimes, figure heavily into this book as they go about trying to discern what actually occurred with the Patrician. This book has one of the stronger plots in a Discworld book, rather than the humor coming from the plot, the plot is rather serious and the characters involved are the source of the humor. I personally find this to be a much better book than some of his earlier works because it feels as though it has more control over itself and doesn't sacrifice for a joke except in some minor areas involving the bad guys.

Speaking of the bad guys, we have Mr. Pin and Mr. Tulip... the bad guys from the Looney Toons, you know the ones... the big dumb guy and the little wise a__. They have been hired by a group of "concerned citizens" to set up the Patrician... these concerned citizens are of course, from the upper crust of society with a very defined idea of who should actually be in charge (preferably someone very dumb who will do what they tell him). I personally did not enjoy the bits with Mr. Pin and Mr. Tulip (who has a cursing problem and an obsession with trying to get high, even though it's never stated outright). I found them to be rather tedious though I know others would find them to be the most humorous part of the book. For those of you who either read these with your children or let your little ones read discworld books (we listen to many of them on audio CD while on road trips, our children think they are hysterical). I don't know that I would hand this to a child under 12... possibly under 14. The main reason being that Mr. Tulip snorts anything he can get his hands on, though most of the time he's completely unsuccessful, having snorted mothballs, flour, flea powder etc, I'm not sure that I'd want my kids hearing that (my kids are 7 and 10).

As a whole this book is brilliantly funny and the satire is genius. This will be funnier to people who are familiar with the press, particularly writing for papers and those with a pretty good idea of how Watergate played out. Although I considered making this a four star book because of my dislike for Mr. Pin and Mr. Tulip... the fact that the scene with Otto made my drink exit my nose bumped it back up to a five star book. I highly recommend it to Discworld fans and those who are considering becoming Discworld fans.



5 out of 5 stars All the News that's Print to Fit   April 10, 2008
It's easy to turn lead into gold. Take the lead, cast it into font and start a newspaper with the help of a disgraced scion of a noble family. In this lively tale, Terry Pratchett sends up the newspaper industry and the sometimes noble profession of journalism and the public's fondness for human interest stories about funny vegetables.

There's a plot to overthrow the government, a pair of henchmen with one redeeming feature between them and a little dog. Make that two little dogs, one acting as translator for the other.

Although the Night Watch is involved, and Sam Vimes makes cameo appearances, the protagonist is William de Worde, the accidental editor of the Ankh Morpork Times. We also learn more about dwarf marriage customs. Highly recommended.


 

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