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Loading... The Discworld Graphic Novels: The Colour of Magic and The Light Fantasticby Terry Pratchett
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I'm honestly a little surprised how well some of the original jokes transferred into a visual medium. A little confusing at first, I found myself getting wrapped up in the world of Terry Pratchett's - two books combined and made into graphic novels. I really want to read the novels now that I've enjoyed the colorful graphic novel. The plot was great, the characters hilarious, and the images great. These were nicely done. That artists caught the "four-eyes" effect of Twoflower's glasses and drew The Patrician as the Lord Vetinari we have come to know and love, instead of the stranger in the original text. I have not read the books in years but the stories fit with my memories of them. This volume brings together the graphic novel adaptations of the first two discworld books into a single hardback. It's not a bad adaptation, but after having had my own vision of Death, Rincewind, Twoflower, The Luggage and all the other characters, no doubt influenced by Paul Kidby's cover illustrations, it was jarring to see Steven Ross's interpretations of those same folks. A graphic novel does do an interesting job of visualizing the discworld, but at the same time it does the two novels a disservice. So much of Pratchett's strength is in the style of his writing - the wit, the puns, the detailed dialog. None of which translates well to the graphic novel. Too much has to be cut to make room for all the illustrations and fit in the little dialog bubbles. If you want a beautifully illustrated discworld novel, check out The Last Hero instead. None of Pratchett's story is sacrificed for Kidby's illustrations, and vice versa. Otherwise this edition is probably only for the completist. 0.048 seconds to build listing no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0061685968, Hardcover)
Imagine a flat world, sitting on the backs of four elephants who hurtle through space balanced on a giant turtle. The Discworld is a place (and a time) parallel to our own—but also very different. That is the setting for Terry Pratchett's phenomenally successful Discworld series, which now celebrates its twenty-fifth anniversary. The Discworld Graphic Novels presents the very first two volumes of this much-loved series in graphic novel form. First published fifteen years ago, these fully illustrated versions are now issued for the first time in hardback. Introduced here are the bizarre misadventures of Twoflower, the Discworld's first ever tourist, and possibly—portentously—its last, and his guide Rincewind, the spectacularly inept wizard. Not to mention the Luggage, which has a mind of its own. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:17 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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The Discworld graphic novel covers the stories The Colour of Magic and The Light Fantastic, the first two Discworld books written. I have to admit, they're pretty funny. I just love the idea of a sci-fi tourist. Twoflower is awesome. I just love the idea of this little Japanese tourist guy (regardless of how he comes across in the novels, the artists who did the graphic novel depict him as a camera-bearing, bermuda-shorts-wearing Japanese tourist) wandering around the most dangerous areas of a magical world, and looking at it from the POV of "How quaint! Wow, genuing XXX architecture!" It's just so...cute. And oh-so-funny. Luggage was just awesome, too.
The art's pretty good. I mean, it's pretty obvious the art's not from the past ten-fifteen years - we've evolved too deeply into digital-coloring for that - but it's nice. Reminds me a bit of P. Craig Russell.
This was a nice, painless way to dip my toe into the Discworld cauldron. Thanks to these comics and a list of books from one of my readers over at Fashionista Piranha I feel ready to take the plunge into more Discworld. (