Discworld discussion
Reading order

Thank you! You said it very well.

Probably not best for first time readers though as it doesn't have much to do with the actual series and would give the reader the wrong idea about what the series is really like(this is a much more valid argument than those put for not reading The Color of Magic first). Though one could probably safely read that book at any time while they are reading the series if they are interested in this earlier Pratchett novel. I found it to be a short, but very amusing read.

By the same token, people should stop 'warning' others not to read the series out of order, as if that would somehow result in the apocalypse or something, and just accept that many people have found reading the series in different orders enjoyable, and had no problem following the development of background characters while doing so.
Edit: On rereading the thread, it seems that it's not 'people' doing this, but just one person. Mostly everyone else seems to be pretty open-minded. So my posts may seem unnecessarily belligerent. My apologies.
I'm new to this group too - I joined a while ago, but this is the first thread I've posted in. Hi, fellow Pratchett fans. :)





You talk about people missing out on the intricacies and nuances of the Disc if they don't read in publication order. Yet you seem to have missed the recurring theme of Pratchett about not being tied to one blinkered way of doing things.
Remember Wolfie, The Turtle Moves...

Ps Raising Steam is about trains. You should enjoy it, trains can only follow the rail and only go forwards and backwards

Give it up, you are wrong and you just don't realize it.

I've never had any response to my observation!

(Although personally I don't think you get everything from the books in the first read. There are always little bits that jump out on rereading, even when read in publication order)
If you read TCOM backwards it's about a very brave wizzard that chases a malevolent travel chest across the disc and sends it packing to the counterweight continent

Dude, you are brilliant. What would you make of Wyrd Sisters or Nightwatch, or Guards! Guards! backwards? lol


Can books be read out of order and enjoyed? Absolutely.
Do you get more out of the books reading in order? yes, a lot of the little jokes and references in later books suddenly made sense and so I enjoyed re-reading these as almost a new book.
Each person is different, I personally think TCOM is one of the best Discworld books and Reaper man the worst, well until the last two books.

*shrugs* To each their own I guess...

Yes, you can read out of order if you like spoiling a very good series. If you've never read Discworld, reading out of order is the stupidest thing you can do.


Try walking into the next bookshop you see and finding the first 4 books. I tended to buy books at the airport before flying and the choice is even more limited, at best I might find a few Discworld books.
Did not reading Guards! Guards! first mean I spoilt reading pyramids? I don't think it mattered that much. yes reading Making Money without first reading Going postal makes it hard to fully understand Moist, but most books are easily read independently.

Try walking into the ..."
I don't by books at the airport. I make sure I have the books I want to read with me. I read mostly eBooks and Discworld is trivial to get as eBooks. So getting the first four is no problem at all.
Besides, if you plan on reading a series like Discworld, you don't just walk into it haphazardly; you plan for it. And in planning for it, you make sure you have the first four books before you start the series.
I just checked at Barnes & Nobel and the first four Discworld books are available in pBook form. So it's not hard to plan ahead be it eBook or pBook you want.


If that person wants to eventually read Monstrous Regiment, then go ahead and buy it. But then put it aside until it's gotten to. Sometimes you have to buy books in a series out of order in order to get them such that you can read in order.
What you want is people to read out of order. It's like knowing Col. Mustard did it in the library with the candle stick before you play the game.



Discworld isn't like LOTR where you need to have read the previous book to understand what is going on. You can read Monstrous Regiment without knowing who Granny Weatherwax is.
I'm glad you like ebooks, personally I hate them for several reason.



For me the experience was similar, I met the Discworld series 20 years ago in the public library. Started with Moving Pictures and fell in love with the series.
A beauty of the Discworld for me has always been the way that the series is divided: witches, wizards, guards, death etc. I've reread these many times over the years and always prefer to read each subset from beginning to end before starting the next set, which is completely out of order.
The exception here was TCOM, it was never available at my local libraries (I spite of all my requests), nor did I know any other Pratchett fans who had a copy. Actually only read it 3 years ago when my husband bought me a special edition. I don't think reading it almost 20 years after the others ever diminished my enjoyment of the series. I also don't think that this is a series that MUST be read in order, all readers are different, we all have our own style.

I totally agree, and for some people they make a lot of sense and I even know someone who only reads books because she has a Kindle.
Again personally I don't like them, but that a personal thing.

Love the analogy.

Lol, I saw that on reread, I meant TCOM(the color of magic). Was hoping I'd fix it before it was seen. I'm sure Dibbler would be cutting his own throat with glee at my slip up

Yeah I saw that you fixed it after I posted which was why I then deleted my post, but I guess you guys are too quick and saw it anyway. LOL
I'm really very shocked by some of the opinions expressed in this thread. It seems there are people here who think it's OK to read the later books in the Discworld series without having read the earlier books. People, if you do that, you will fail to understand many of the references!!
By the same token, no-one should be allowed to read The Color of Magic until they have read at least one Lankhmar novel by Fritz Leiber, because if they do, they won't understand that Bravd and the Weasel are a spoof on Fafhrd and the Mouser.
Also no-one should be allowed to read Pyramids until they have completed a degree course in Egyptology.
A degree course in fairy tales is also absolutely essential to properly understanding the Discworld novels, as is a thorough knowledge of police procedure (the Vimes novels), feminism (Monstrous Regiment), the history of warfare (Jingo), the history of economics (Making Money) and the postal system (Going Postal), and I could go on like this for ever, but you get my drift. Frankly, you and I are simply not worthy to read these books at all.
Let's face it, the only person who should be allowed to read the Discworld novels is Terry Pratchett himself, because he's the only person with a sufficiently encyclopedic knowledge to understand everything in them. If riff-raff like you and me read them, we will almost certainly miss something, and Terry's hard work will go unappreciated.
All Discworld novels should therefore be banned at once for everyone (except Terry Pratchett), and anyone found reading one should be sentenced to death.
Happy April the 1st.
By the same token, no-one should be allowed to read The Color of Magic until they have read at least one Lankhmar novel by Fritz Leiber, because if they do, they won't understand that Bravd and the Weasel are a spoof on Fafhrd and the Mouser.
Also no-one should be allowed to read Pyramids until they have completed a degree course in Egyptology.
A degree course in fairy tales is also absolutely essential to properly understanding the Discworld novels, as is a thorough knowledge of police procedure (the Vimes novels), feminism (Monstrous Regiment), the history of warfare (Jingo), the history of economics (Making Money) and the postal system (Going Postal), and I could go on like this for ever, but you get my drift. Frankly, you and I are simply not worthy to read these books at all.
Let's face it, the only person who should be allowed to read the Discworld novels is Terry Pratchett himself, because he's the only person with a sufficiently encyclopedic knowledge to understand everything in them. If riff-raff like you and me read them, we will almost certainly miss something, and Terry's hard work will go unappreciated.
All Discworld novels should therefore be banned at once for everyone (except Terry Pratchett), and anyone found reading one should be sentenced to death.
Happy April the 1st.

This is the most sensible thing that's been said on this thread.


Very funny! Well done.

I can't believe that one person has kept this argument going for two years, continually trying to impose personal views on all other Discworld readers. Perhaps that's his job. Or perhaps "Get a life" is pertinent here.

You read something in a later book about something and go back to an earlier book and you may very well have spoiled something.
Also, some books rely on what you should know from earlier book(s). Terry does not recap so what you don't know, he won't tell you.

It applies here.
Let's say you read any of the earlier novels where Foul Ol Ron crops up. Then read The Truth where we learn Gaspode is his thinking-brain -dog and that Altogether Andrews has joined the canting crew. But you missed The Hogfather where you learnt who the canting crew is and where they live.
Third thoughts enable us to recognize that we missed something and to hold that something for later for when we see it again. This would apply for any of the minor characters.
Also, those of us who haven't read in order don't seem to feel that we have missed out on anything.
If I'd waited for Colour of Magic before reading Discworld, I would have missed 20 years of fantastic reading, reading that shapes my thoughts and how I read.
If it's the choice between connecting the dots for subtleties versus missing out entirely, I know where I stand.

Hah! That's awesome. Thanks for the laugh. :)


And as I've said before, it's something to do at night. :)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents (other topics)The Color of Magic (other topics)
Pyramids (other topics)
The Color of Magic (other topics)
The Truth: Stage Adaptation (other topics)
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I recognize that everyone has different opinions and different people prefer to read series in different orders and that's ok. What really pisses me off though is when people constantly say that you should never start out with The Color of Magic because it's not that good and it will put you off from reading the series entirely.
The Color of Magic was my first taste of Discworld. I didn't have anyone telling me what I should or shouldn't read first. I just went into the book store, asked a salesperson to recommend an author with a similar style to Douglas Adams and he said I should read the Discworld series by Terry Pratchett. I bought The Color of Magic and absolutely loved it and couldn't wait to read more of the series.
So I wish everyone who is warning people off of The Color of Magic would kindly just knock it off. Just because you didn't like that book very much doesn't mean that other potential fans won't like it or even love it as I did.