book data
3933 ratings, 4.17 average rating, 174 reviews
(more data...)
edit
published
June 1996
(first published 1992)
by Corgi Audio
binding
Audio Cassette, 3 pages
setting
Unknown
isbn
0552144169
(isbn13: 9780552144162)
description
Discworld is an extragavanza--among much else, it has billions of gods. "They swarm as thick as herring roe," writes Terry Pratchett in Sma...more
Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
There are no discussion topics on this book yet. Be the first to start one »
friend reviews
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
This book is currently not featured on any Listopia lists.
Add this book to your favorite list »
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 4726)
All ratings
|
5 stars (1442)
|
4 stars (1369)
|
3 stars (675)
|
2 stars (107)
|
1 star (18)
|
avg 4.17
bookshelves:
fantasy,
world_builders
Read in January, 2003
This is the only Terry Pratchett book I've ever really been able to stomach. I've always found it odd that the stories of Discworld fail to strike home with me. I've tried to read several (Mort, The Color of Magic, Hogfather) and none have struck me enough within the first forty pages to keep reading.
This is the exception to the rule.
It covers the story of a forgotten god of the Discworld universe: the Great Turtle. Everyone knows about the Four Elephants holding up the g...more
This is the exception to the rule.
It covers the story of a forgotten god of the Discworld universe: the Great Turtle. Everyone knows about the Four Elephants holding up the g...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
An excerpt:
"It was the dreamtime. The unformed time.
The small gods chittered and whirred in the wilderness places, and the cold places, and the deep places. The swarmed in the darkness, without memory but driven by hope and lust for one thing, the one thing a god craves -- belief.
Then there was a day. In a sense, it was the first day.
Om had been aware of the shepherd for some ti--for a while. The flock had been wandering closer and closer....more
"It was the dreamtime. The unformed time.
The small gods chittered and whirred in the wilderness places, and the cold places, and the deep places. The swarmed in the darkness, without memory but driven by hope and lust for one thing, the one thing a god craves -- belief.
Then there was a day. In a sense, it was the first day.
Om had been aware of the shepherd for some ti--for a while. The flock had been wandering closer and closer....more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
People who like Terry Pratchett and/or people who like witty British humor
So, I'm nearly to the end of this book and I have to say...I think maybe I'm just not Terry Pratchett material. I will admit I've only read 2 of his books, The Color of Magic and Small Gods so maybe I haven't given him proper review. The Color of Magic was painfully boring for me, and I finished it because I felt like I should, not because I wanted to. Small Gods is better but not a lot...I've concluded that some of this is fundamental to how/what I read. I primarily read books because they...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
1 comment
Read in January, 2004
Hands-down my favorite DiscWorld novel.
From the perfectly twisted and filigreed mind of Terry Pratchett we have a book that addresses why religion starts stupid and only gets dumber. And no religion is spared!
Brutha is a child-like novice in his religious order, and he will never achieve anything more than novice status. Until one day his god literally falls from the sky and realizes that Brutha is the only person in his entire religion who actually *believes* and isn't j...more
From the perfectly twisted and filigreed mind of Terry Pratchett we have a book that addresses why religion starts stupid and only gets dumber. And no religion is spared!
Brutha is a child-like novice in his religious order, and he will never achieve anything more than novice status. Until one day his god literally falls from the sky and realizes that Brutha is the only person in his entire religion who actually *believes* and isn't j...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
This wonderful standalone novel set in Terry Pratchett's Discworld starts with the idea that gods are only as powerful as their true believers. At the beginning of the novel a distant god who has long ignored his followers comes to awareness trapped in the body of a turtle. He has exactly one believer left; a naive farmboy. In order to stop being a turtle, he has to convince the farmboy that he's really a god, then get the boy to recruit more believers. As his campaign for new believers continue...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in December, 2008
Small Gods by Terry Pratchett is probably my favorite Discworld book that I have read so far. It was really funny as usual, but I really liked some of the themes and ideas. In the Discworld, there are many gods. Some are more powerful than others, and a god's power is directly related to the number of people who believe in them. If a god loses all its believers, then it ceases to exist. This story is about a land in the Discword named Omnia, who worship a god named Om. Omnia is currently r...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
currently-reading
Read in September, 2008
After reading my first Terry Pratchett book (Mort), I had vowed to return to this author soon. Thanks to a friend who is a huge fan of the author, I am now reading this book. As with Mort, it does not disappoint. The laughs are plentiful and some are hearty. The philosophy is nicely woven in to the tale and comes from the mouths of the least intelligent of characters leading me to think the author is one of those great thinkers who is careful and wise enough not to portray himself thus. A small ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
fantasy,
funny,
religion
Read in September, 2008
recommends it for:
anyone
I love Terry Pratchett! The main character, Brutha, is a novice at a rather remote monastery devoted to the worship of the god Om. Brutha is minding his own business tending the garden when he finds a tortoise - a talking tortoise. In fact, the incarnation of the god Om. Om has been in a bit of a decline. Although the Inquisitors and Exquisitors are doing all kinds of things in his name and generally getting things completely wrong, Om himself finds things a bit quiet. It's time for a new prophe...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
fantasy,
humor,
pratchett,
religion,
top-shelf
Read in November, 2008
This was the first Pratchett book I read, and I'm glad of it. While it has the humor and satire that is inherent in all of the Discworld books, it also has something else - something to say. It was evident, even from the first time I read this book, that Pratchett had put some real heavy thinking into it.
This book is, as the title suggests, about gods. Where do they come from? Where do they go? What keeps them moving? Ordinarily, gods don't like this sort of question. People who thin...more
This book is, as the title suggests, about gods. Where do they come from? Where do they go? What keeps them moving? Ordinarily, gods don't like this sort of question. People who thin...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
fantasy--traditional
Read in December, 2007
I discovered Terry Pratchett's "Discworld" books a few months ago, and have read about 8 of them so far. Some are better than others. Discworld is a place that exists on a disc (as you might've guessed) that rests on four elephants standing on the back of a giant turtle swimming through space (which you probably wouldn't've guessed). It's populated by a weird assortment of comic characters, various countries and cities, magic aplenty, all interwoven from book to book. This one wasn...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
released
Read in February, 2007
Terry Pratchett has written more than thirty-five Discworld books. Of the lot I've ready maybe a dozen. I read Colour of Magic the year it was first published and some how completely missed that the book had become a series. Even though I introduced Ian to Pratchett's books he has read significantly more of the series than I have.
I decided to read Small Gods after hearing it performed on Radio 4 and a copy came my way via BookCrossing. I'm glad I heard the audio version first becaus...more
I decided to read Small Gods after hearing it performed on Radio 4 and a copy came my way via BookCrossing. I'm glad I heard the audio version first becaus...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Pratchett seems to be one of those authors best appreciated when his story is related to something that touches your life.
In the case of Small Gods, it helps to know a little bit of something in the history of the Catholic church.
Think of this book as the Dogma of humor fantasy.
In the case of Small Gods, it helps to know a little bit of something in the history of the Catholic church.
Think of this book as the Dogma of humor fantasy.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
pratchett,
sf-and-fantasy
Read in January, 2005
This is one of my favorite Pratchett novels. Even though it's set in Discworld, there aren't a lot of DW characters to contend with if you haven't read the earlier books. DEATH makes several appearances, but that shouldn't be a problem for someone new to DW.
Small Gods deals with religion, and the author is a bit more free with the biting satire. Gods gain strength by having more believers, the more fervent the better. When they're forgotten they fade away to nothingness. Not a new t...more
Small Gods deals with religion, and the author is a bit more free with the biting satire. Gods gain strength by having more believers, the more fervent the better. When they're forgotten they fade away to nothingness. Not a new t...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
discworld
Read in September, 2008
Possibly the best of the Discworld novels; I say possibly since I haven't actually read them all yet. But it's not everyday that you find a book that forces you to care about the characters and think about the philosophical implications of the plot at the same time that you're rolling around on the floor in tears of laughter. I find that humorous books don't usually stand up well to multiple readings, but this one certainly does.
If you only read one Pratchett novel ever, read this ...more
If you only read one Pratchett novel ever, read this ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Small Gods is great!: There are billions of gods in the world; they swarm as thick as flies. Most of them are too small to see & never get worshipped, at least by anything bigger than bacteria. Consider the tortoise & the eagle. The former, a ground-hugging creature with limited, immediate horizons & the latter, while living in high places, sits for hours surveying all until it spies the wobbling tortoise. If you've not dabbled in a Terry Pratchett yet, you are in for a treat. If you...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
fantasy,
fiction
Read in May, 2008
Small Gods was different from the other Terry Pratchett books I've read. It wasn't as easy to get caught up in it because it didn't have some crazy kind of plot. My only opinion about it as I read it was that it was "different." The ending is great. It is a pretty good crack at talking about religion and god and what they all should really look like, and it is also a pretty good description of problems with structured religion.
It makes a lot of sense why he and Neil Gaiman...more
It makes a lot of sense why he and Neil Gaiman...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
contemporary
Read in October, 2007
This book is a satire on all things faith, and is hilariously, hilaroiusly funny. Working from the premise that gods derive their power from the extents of human belief, Pratchett, to great effect, explores religion, philosophy, and their impact on society.
When the Great God Om returns to the Discworld to wreak some havoc on humanity, he finds himself reduced in stature and power to the form of a tortoise. Eventually, Om connects with Brutha, his one remaining true follower (and the ...more
When the Great God Om returns to the Discworld to wreak some havoc on humanity, he finds himself reduced in stature and power to the form of a tortoise. Eventually, Om connects with Brutha, his one remaining true follower (and the ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
just-read
Read in January, 2009
One of my favorites by Pratchett, in spite of the fact that none of my favorite Discworld characters make an appearance.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
This book gets you to take a look at what you believe: do you believe in a god, gods, God, or do you believe in a church? If too many people believe in the Church and not the god, the rituals and trappings become the whole religion, and the god starves.
Enter the Great God Om, currently residing in the body of an old, beat-up tortoise, whose only believer is... not the sharpest knife in the drawer, but that's what Om has to work with.
Ancient Greece, metaphysics, irony, and...more
Enter the Great God Om, currently residing in the body of an old, beat-up tortoise, whose only believer is... not the sharpest knife in the drawer, but that's what Om has to work with.
Ancient Greece, metaphysics, irony, and...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 2008
Some interesting ideas in this cute little book -- it actually fits in quite well with one of my current preoccupations, which is what is it about the human mind that makes us believe that gods exist. And it was very amusing to read it immediately after Pinker's "The Stuff of Thought," because Pratchett uses the very same analogy of Plato's that Pinker does, of humans perceiving the real world as dimly perceived shadows on a cave wall; I laughed out loud when I read that.
S...more
S...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment

























