Listening Length 7 hours and 57 minutes

Published 2022

Over 1 million Discworld audiobooks sold – discover the extraordinary universe of Terry Pratchett’s Discworld like never before

The audiobook of Mort is narrated by the BAFTA award-winning actor Sian Clifford (Fleabag; Vanity Fair; Quiz). BAFTA and Golden Globe award-winning actor Bill Nighy (Love Actually; Pirates of the Caribbean; Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows) reads the footnotes, and Peter Serafinowicz (Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace; Shaun of the Dead) stars as the voice of Death. Featuring a new theme tune composed by James Hannigan.

'YOU CANNOT INTERFERE WITH FATE. WHO ARE YOU TO JUDGE WHO SHOULD LIVE AND WHO SHOULD DIE?'

Death comes to us all. When he came to Mort, he offered him a job.

Death is the Grim Reaper of the Discworld, a black-robed skeleton with a scythe who ushers souls into the next world. He is also fond of …

3 editions

reviewed Mort by Terry Pratchett (Discworld, #4)

Death gets angry

Because of course the person Death would choose as an apprentice has a name that means... Death.

ANYWAY

I really don't know what to say beyond the usual "Pratchett is a brilliant satirist" and "this is both hilarious and super deep". Because it is those things.

Audiobook generally excellent, though the fact that Rincewind's speech patterns were markedly different than Color of Magic/Light Fantastic was a bit jarring (yes, different narrator, but the fact that the speech pattern wasn't even close was annoying). (I wonder if this is why there's consistently a separate narrator for Death through this whole series of audiobooks?)

reviewed Mort by Terry Pratchett (Discworld, #4)

Review of 'Mort' on 'Goodreads'

Terry Pratchett is what I’ve been missing when reading Douglas Adams. Mort is not just witty, but actually quite touching and even frightening. The humour seems somehow profound, for example when Death explains that everyone gets what they think is coming for them, because “it’s so much neater that way”. This light-hearted fun actually opens up a philosophical can of worms: If I expect a heavenly afterlife together with my family, but my brother expects to be rotting in hell, is the brother in heaven actually my brother? He can’t be, but did I then actually get what I expected? This dilemma is even touched upon later. I much prefer this humour to cliché nihilism.

avatar for sherwoodinc

rated it

avatar for yzh

rated it

avatar for Crazypedia

rated it

avatar for Tattooed_Mummy

rated it

avatar for BillieCodes

rated it

avatar for chrisbier

rated it

avatar for elevynn

rated it

avatar for KevSaund

rated it

avatar for mambrs

rated it

avatar for dlloyd

rated it

avatar for tecnijota

rated it

avatar for stacey

rated it

avatar for louisbirla

rated it

avatar for boocks

rated it

avatar for mirihawk

rated it

avatar for nabcos

rated it

avatar for Eat_Read_Knit

rated it

avatar for dlloyd@books.420gay.org

rated it

avatar for rgibert

rated it

avatar for OnLien

rated it

avatar for Skipcap

rated it

avatar for funkyduck

rated it

avatar for JimLiedeka

rated it

avatar for citrus

rated it

avatar for Magusbear

rated it

avatar for Akasha

rated it

avatar for Oze

rated it

avatar for deeoh

rated it

avatar for lexolf

rated it

avatar for boum

rated it

avatar for RBuzz

rated it

avatar for burgess@bookwyrm.social

rated it

avatar for seetee

rated it

avatar for reader_jwd

rated it

avatar for unixsmurf

rated it

avatar for MParker546

rated it

Subjects

  • Death
  • Discworld (Imaginary place)
  • Fantasy
  • Fiction
  • satire
  • humor
  • anthropomorphic.
  • Discworld (imaginary place), fiction
  • Fiction, fantasy, general
  • Death (fictitious character : pratchett), fiction
  • Fiction, humorous