Cult of Anoia discussion
What to read after Discworld?
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Marissa
(new)
Jun 09, 2008 07:27PM

reply
|
flag
Gaiman is an great choice for post Pratchett plus if you love Terry you should love Good Omens


I'm hooked i have the graveyard book sat on my shelf awaiting me to finish reading my current book ..other fav authours of mine would have to include Tolkien. C.S Lewis David eddings Stephanie myer J.K Rowling Greogory macguire and David gemmell amongst others lol


It is a very different author from Pratchett, but Sherman Alexie is a fantastic writer. He is friends with Neil Gaiman and has a similar sense of humor. "Flight," and "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian." The later being specifically for Teens. His short stories go from funny to heartbreaking. He is worth a read.

Also, I must second any recommendation of American Gods. It's an amazing novel.
Finally, when last at Half Price books I checked out the "if you like this author, you might like . . . " list and saw that Terry Pratchett and Robert Asprin were in the same group - has anyone ever read any of Robert Asprin?
The Eyre Affair
Hit or Myth

I also have started reading anything that has a quote from Neil Gaiman recommending it on the cover. I found Martin Millar this way - I really like
Lonely Werewolf Girl. Check it out!



(And I love most of the previously-mentioned series)
Valerie Estelle Frankel
Author of Henry Potty and the Pet Rock:
An Unauthorized Harry Potter Parody
www.HarryPotterParody.com


I've read a few of Connie's books and all are really good. She has a great sense of humor.
The Doomsday book, Bellwether, passage and Impossible Things (Short Stories), and to say nothing of the Dog.
The short story collection I'm reading now and so far there are a couple stories that was just really great so far.
Ado which takes political correctness to it's ultimate, and Even the Queen which address "the women's issue".

If anyone else has read it already, I'd be interested to know what you thought.

Robert Rankin is amusing, as is Robert Asprin's MYTH series. From MYTH, I love Ahz, the demon from Perv (call him a Pervect, not a Pervert!).
John Scalzi's Agent to the Stars was great. He wrote it as a starter book.
Recently, I've been reading A. Lee Martinez. Gil's All Fright Diner was very good--how can you go wrong with zombie cows?!
Douglas Adams is a given. PG Wodehouse's Jeeves stories are fabulous.
Right now, I'm on a Simon R Green kick. Nightside and Secret Histories are both great so far (with lots of nods to Doctor Who).
Has anyone read Tom Holt? I bought two of his books to try out.

I've read about half of Tom Holt's. They are good and the humor is similar to Pratchett's but they are MUCH drier. The characterization is flatter so they are harder to get through. Some of the later books seem to me to be recycling standard characters in different plots.
I'd recommend reading Who's Afraid of Beowulf?, Flying Dutch or Expecting Someone Taller for his humorous novels and Goatsong A Novel of Ancient Athens for his historicals.
* * * * *
If anyone is up for some classic novels with a lot of humor included (like Wodehouse), may I recommend
Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons, the Lucia Novels by E.F. Benson, and The Darling Buds of May by H.E. Bates. Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day is great too

Oh, the to-read list just keeps expanding. If only I were independently wealthy and could fritter away my days reading on a verandah...

Oh, I dream of that. Or even one of those nice month-long vacations the Europeans seem to have. Sigh...

And if you like Hiassen and Christopher Moore you'll love Tim Dorsey. Very twisted stuff. But in a good way.




Space Captain Smith
God Emperor of Didcot
Wrath of the Lemming Men


A movie of Bartimaeus would be amazing! I love that series. It is a good Pratchett follow-up, too.




Yep. There's Discworld, and then, some fair distance below, there's everything else. I've read Jasper Fforde, Ben Aaronovitch, A. Lee Martinez, Christopher Moore, John Moore, Gordon Dickson... pretty much everyone whose name comes up in 'If you like Pratchett..." posts. Some I've liked, but they're simply not as enjoyable to me. I'd like to say Pratchett's works are more sophisticated, but I don't think that's the right word. "Better" serves, but it's hardly specific.


I also really enjoyed Daniel O'Malley's The Rook and am eagerly looking forward to Stiletto.
Keep the suggestions coming, I love this!

Books mentioned in this topic
Stiletto (other topics)The Rook (other topics)
The Seventh Bride (other topics)
Nine Goblins (other topics)
Rock Me (other topics)
More...