Feet of Clay

, #19

Listening Length 12 hours and 20 minutes

Brought to you by Penguin.

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'Sorry?' said Carrot. If it's just a thing, how can it commit murder? A sword is a thing' - he drew his own sword; it made an almost silken sound - 'and of course you can't blame a sword if someone thrust it at you, sir.'

For Commander Vimes, Head of Ankh-Morpork City Watch, life consists of troubling times, linked together by...well, more troubling times.

Right now, it's the latter. There's a werewolf with pre-lunar tension in the city, and a dwarf with attitude and a golem who's begun to think for itself, but that's just ordinary trouble. The real problem is more puzzling - people are being murdered, but there's no trace of anything alive having been at the crime scene.

17 editions

reviewed Feet of Clay by Terry Pratchett (Discworld, #19)

NO MASTER

As a Jewish person, I don’t know how to feel about the ending.

But then again, Pratchett was notorious for overgeneralizations and ethnic stereotypes in his books (take the whole inverse asians, who travel to Ankh-Morpork to study at the feet of a regular Morporkian housewife or Time Monks from the same book, some examples from forthcoming Jingo). However these overgeneralizations for me hitting just the right left-centrist note to not sound ethnicitist.

That said, if I would had to formulate an outtake of this book in one phrase, I would say “you can’t spell nobility without knob… even if you do”.

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Subjects

  • Discworld (Imaginary Place)
  • Science Fiction
  • Fantasy
  • Samuel Vimes (Fictitious character)
  • Fiction
  • Fiction, fantasy, general
  • Discworld (imaginary place), fiction
  • Carrot (fictitious character : pratchett), fiction
  • Fiction, humorous
  • Drama (dramatic works by one author)
  • Science fiction, fantasy, horror