Night Watch: A Discworld Novel (Mass Market Paperback)
by Terry Pratchett
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 2867)
bookshelves:
fantasy,
pratchett,
time-travel
Read in March, 2007
Pratchett books are like potato chips - can't read just one.
The Discworld books are broadly arranged into four groups. The Death books look at what it means to be a human being, the Wizard books are about how we deal with the universe at large, the Witches books are about how the individual fits into the rest of society, and the Watch books are about how we deal with being part of a system. Having been a poli-sci major, I tend to enjoy the latter group the most.
The main character of the ...more
The Discworld books are broadly arranged into four groups. The Death books look at what it means to be a human being, the Wizard books are about how we deal with the universe at large, the Witches books are about how the individual fits into the rest of society, and the Watch books are about how we deal with being part of a system. Having been a poli-sci major, I tend to enjoy the latter group the most.
The main character of the ...more
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I admit, I like Terry Pratchett a lot anyway, but "Night Watch" is hands down my favorite Discworld novels (Jingo comes in a distant second). One of the darkest and most complex of the City Watch stories, while pursuing a truly depraved criminal named Carcer, Commander Sir Samuel Vimes is thrown back through time on the eve of the birth of his son to help... well, himself. Ankh-Morpork is on the brink of revolution, and somebody's got to make sure young Sammy doesn't die before his tim...more
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Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
people who enjoy wit and/or cop shows
This book is a part of the massive Discworld series, and one of Mr.Pratchett's best works, in my opinion (aside from Good Omens, but that was a collaberation). It's something like the fifth or sixth book in the series of books invovling Ankh-Morpork's Night Watch, but I read "Thud!", the one right after it, first of all before I realized there were more "before" it, and it's realatively easy to follow. None of the jokes really need to be explained, so it could exist as a stan...more
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fantasy
Read in January, 2004
My favourite Pratchett novel, but I'm not really sure why.
I think that Sam Vimes' being in it definitely helps: I think my favourite "series" in the Discworld novels are the City Watch series (along with the witches of Lancre and Death). His character arc really comes to a head in this one, even though he still has another level to go to in </i>Thud!</i>
I also think that time travel being in it definitely helps. Though not the quantum, metaphysical, zany fun of ...more
I think that Sam Vimes' being in it definitely helps: I think my favourite "series" in the Discworld novels are the City Watch series (along with the witches of Lancre and Death). His character arc really comes to a head in this one, even though he still has another level to go to in </i>Thud!</i>
I also think that time travel being in it definitely helps. Though not the quantum, metaphysical, zany fun of ...more
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While Terry Pratchett is known for the humor in his Discworld series, I enjoy them primarily because-- while on the surface, his books do indeed classify as humor, he also writes these almost painful realities, very human thoughts and incredibly immersive emotions in situations that you generally don't find in most humorous fantasy/sci-fi which tends more towards parody and caricatures. Though, I wouldn’t exactly say that the Discworld series isn't a parody-- because his books are parodies, or...more
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Read in December, 2007
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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recommends it for:
Anyone over 12
Pratchet is brilliant. The story is part of the 'Guards' sequence in the Disc World series. For non-Disc Worlders you have to understand that prolific Pratchet created a comic fantasy world called the Disc World and then proceeded to write stories set in different parts of it, with different characters etc that sometimes meet each other.
The Guards sequence centres on Sam Vimes who is a cop in the city of Ank-Morepork. It is kind of medieval, kind of modern. In this story Sam has risen to be ...more
The Guards sequence centres on Sam Vimes who is a cop in the city of Ank-Morepork. It is kind of medieval, kind of modern. In this story Sam has risen to be ...more
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Read in January, 2005
I already put my placeholder for all books Pratchett on my shelf (Small Gods), but I decided I have to single out this one, since it's easily the best (or one of the best at the very least) installment of the Discworld series.
Sam Vimes, Commander of the Watch, travels into the past to give adivice to his younger self, and to make sure his future happens at all. This sounds like a familiar plot, but it is treated in a unique way: For one, Vimes isn't fazed by meeting his inept younger self, ...more
Sam Vimes, Commander of the Watch, travels into the past to give adivice to his younger self, and to make sure his future happens at all. This sounds like a familiar plot, but it is treated in a unique way: For one, Vimes isn't fazed by meeting his inept younger self, ...more
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Commander Vimes auf Zeitreise: Eigentlich sollte Vimes es inzwischen ja besser wissen: Jedes mal, wenn er sich darüber beklagt, dass sein Job zu langweilig geworden ist, passiert etwas, das ihn eines Besseren belehrt. Dieses Mal wird er durch eine magische Explosion in der Unsichtbaren Universität in die Vergangenheit katapultiert und wird dort, aus vollkommen logischen Gründen, sein eigener Ausbilder. Während er versucht, sich im Ankh-Morpork seiner Jugend zurecht zu finden, muss er sich mi...more
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Okay, I am a huge Terry Pratchett fan--his books are usually fun reads with satirical barbs that let you smile, chuckle, and sometimes laugh outright at the world around us. But Night Watch goes beyond Pratchett's normal fare. It is more poignant and thought out, with certain scenes near the end being quite touching. A large part of Pratchett's work satirizes existing works (Phantom of the Opera, Macbeth, etc.), but this book tackles weightier themes about duty, integrity, and family. If you're ...more
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While halfway through this book, I wondered why it took me a year to start it (having bought it on impulse at Logan Airport on my way to Denmark last year). It's classic Terry Pratchett satire, and is a hilarious and insightful send-up of leadership and politics. While thoroughly enjoying this book, it made me realize that I need t...more
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Read in May, 2008
I really enjoy Terry Pratchett's series about DiscWorld. This is one of the better books in the series. However, you need to have read some of the series in order to get all the little things about the different characters. The only bad thing about this book is that I don't really like the whole time travel concept of it. I liked seeing the characters when Sam Vimes is just starting out and is young and impressionable, but I didn't like having to go back in time and pretend to be someone else to...more
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Not as good as the other Discworld novels that I've read, but still enjoyable. This probably has something to do with my dislike for time travel plots than the actual contents of the book. Although, I will admit that Terry Pratchett does handle it with a wry sense of humor that is refreshing.
I've been reading the books out of order so I don't know if the cast of characters is generally the same or different every time, but this brought back Sam Vimes who was one of the many good characte...more
I've been reading the books out of order so I don't know if the cast of characters is generally the same or different every time, but this brought back Sam Vimes who was one of the many good characte...more
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If I had only one novel to take with me to a desert island, this would be it. It's a mistake to view Terry Pratchett as "only" a comic fantasy writer--he's so, SO much more, and Night Watch is probably one of the finest examples of his breathtaking ability to have you laughing out loud with one paragraph and nearly in tears with the next. Samuel Vimes is the best kind of everyman character, the sort of human that *defines* humanity. The fact that he happens to live on a disc-shaped wor...more
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bookshelves:
discworld-pratchett
Read in May, 2007
recommends it for:
Humorists
Night Watch is the tale of Commander Sam Vimes' past...again. In a freak accident above the Unseen University, Vimes and a criminal are thrust back in time. Which isn't good, because the criminal quickly kills the man who taught Vimes everything he knows. So Vimes must teach himself everything he knows, as well as live through Ankh-Morpork's revolutionary times without destroying the fabric of history.
As always with Pratchett, this is hardly a serious novel. But it does show a lot...more
As always with Pratchett, this is hardly a serious novel. But it does show a lot...more
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I truly, truly want to like Terry Pratchett. I absolutely loved Good Omens, but I found the first DiscWorld book frankly silly in a non-funny way (I mean, please, the long running joke about economics?). Mind you, bits were good, but not enough for me to put him up their in my internal canon of fun-silly writers like Wodehouse, Adams and Milton.
But friends told me "Oh, read a LATER DiscWorld novel, he gets much better". So, I'm trying this one out. Already about a third into it...more
But friends told me "Oh, read a LATER DiscWorld novel, he gets much better". So, I'm trying this one out. Already about a third into it...more
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bookshelves:
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fiction
Read in May, 2007
recommends it for:
People who have already read several Sam Vimes books
Fantastic. One of his bests. (It's the time-travel Sam Vimes one.) One of the few Discworld books that really makes me feel emotional more than it makes me want to laugh my face off. You'll have to have read quite a few Sam Vimes novels before you read this one, though. I'd suggest Guards, Guards!, Men at Arms, Feet of Clay, and Jingo-- I th...more
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bookshelves:
discworld,
humor
My favorite of the Discworld books. This is frankly the best novel of the series. It would stand alone as a novel even to those who will never read another of Pratchett's books. His writing and story telling are at their sharpest. It's not as laugh out loud funny as the other books, although certainly there are many belly laughs to be had. But the humor and the plotting are more subtle than any of the others. It's a little bit melancholy in places, but still has a wistful humor in those places. ...more
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Time travel and police work come together in this installment of Terry Pratchett's Discworld. Definitely a book for the seasoned Discworld explorer, but one of the best that he's written.
Sam Vimes gets thrown into his own past with a psychotic cop-killer. Not only does he have to hunt the murderer down, but he has to keep the murderer away from the young Sam Vimes, just joining the police force. The revolution going on in the city doesn't help matters, either, come to think about it...
A ...more
Sam Vimes gets thrown into his own past with a psychotic cop-killer. Not only does he have to hunt the murderer down, but he has to keep the murderer away from the young Sam Vimes, just joining the police force. The revolution going on in the city doesn't help matters, either, come to think about it...
A ...more
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bookshelves:
fantasy
Read in February, 2007
recommends it for:
Everyone
Another of Pratchett's best, this follows the later and early career (at the same time!?) of the Captain of the Ankh-Morpork watch, Sam Vimes. This book may make you question your undestanding of temporal paradox.
The best part of this book, in my opinion, is Pratchett's development of his characters. From Carcer Dun's ability to convince you of his earnest intentions, to the members of the watch who are introduced in the beginning of the book and developed throughout the rest of the book, ...more
The best part of this book, in my opinion, is Pratchett's development of his characters. From Carcer Dun's ability to convince you of his earnest intentions, to the members of the watch who are introduced in the beginning of the book and developed throughout the rest of the book, ...more
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