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Discworld books regularly topped Sunday Times best-sellers list, making Pratchett the UK's best-selling author in the 1990s. Discworld novels have also won awards such as the Prometheus Award and the Carnegie Medal. In the BBC's Big Read, four Discworld novels were in the top 100, and a
Guards! is a fantasy novel by British writer Terry Pratchett, the eighth in the Discworld series, first published in 1989. [2] It is the first novel about the Ankh-Morpork City Watch . The first Discworld point-and-click adventure game borrowed heavily from the plot of Guards!
The Colour of Magic is one of the few Discworld novels to be divided into sections or chapters, the others being Pyramids, Going Postal, and Making Money, along with the Discworld novels for younger readers, which consist of the five Tiffany Aching books (The Wee Free Men, A Hat Full of Sky, Wintersmith, I Shall Wear Midnight, and The Shepherd ...
Like other Discworld tie-ins including Nanny Ogg's Cookbook, it is presented as though published in the fictional city of Ankh-Morpork. It makes reference to many characters and events from throughout the Discworld novels, though primarily from the Witches and Tiffany sub-series. [citation needed]
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I Shall Wear Midnight is a comic fantasy novel by English writer Terry Pratchett, set on the Discworld. It is the fourth novel within the Discworld series to be based on the character of Tiffany Aching. It was published on 2 September 2010 in the United Kingdom, and on 28 September in the United States, and won the 2010 Andre Norton Award. [1]
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Night Watch is the twenty-ninth novel in the comic fantasy Discworld series, written by Terry Pratchett, and the sixth to focus on the character of Sam Vimes.Pratchett felt the book was closer to Discworld novels like The Fifth Elephant more so than the first book, The Colour of Magic, believing the series had "evolved", attributing the series' success to its ability to change. [2]