Books by Other Authors: Difference between revisions
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* [[Neil Gaiman]] - close friend of Terry, and an early collaborator; he had the original idea that became {{GO}} and eventually become the show runner and lead writer for the [[Good Omens (TV series)|television adaptation]]. | * [[Neil Gaiman]] - close friend of Terry, and an early collaborator; he had the original idea that became {{GO}} and eventually become the show runner and lead writer for the [[Good Omens (TV series)|television adaptation]]. | ||
* [[Gabrielle Kent]] - British narrative consultant (mostly in games) and children's author. She's Rhianna Pratchett's co-author on {{TAGBW}}. | * [[Gabrielle Kent]] - British narrative consultant (mostly in games) and children's author. She's Rhianna Pratchett's co-author on {{TAGBW}}. | ||
* [[Caimh McDonnell]] - Irish comedian and author of the ''Stranger Times'' series of comic urban fantasy books, which are frequently compared to Pratchett (if for no other reason than they combine comedy and fantasy). | |||
* [[Tamsyn Muir]] - New Zealand fantasy/sci-fi author whose debut “Locked Tomb” series combines space opera, necromancy, noble intrigue and queer romance. | * [[Tamsyn Muir]] - New Zealand fantasy/sci-fi author whose debut “Locked Tomb” series combines space opera, necromancy, noble intrigue and queer romance. | ||
* [[Garth Nix]] - Australian fantasy and science fiction author best known for his “Old Kingdom” YA fantasy series. Known Pratchett fan. | * [[Garth Nix]] - Australian fantasy and science fiction author best known for his “Old Kingdom” YA fantasy series. Known Pratchett fan. |
Revision as of 23:02, 26 October 2023
This is the list of books written by authors other than Terry Pratchett which have been given major coverage by the podcasts listed in this wiki. For a list of Pratchett's works, see the lists of Discworld and non-Discworld books. (Co-authored books by Pratchett will appear in those lists, not here.)
Books about Terry Pratchett or Discworld
These are nonfiction works about Terry or his work, usually the Discworld. We’ve listed them here in anticipation of them appearing on some of the Pratchett podcasts, though so far aside from the biographies they’ve only been mentioned in passing.
Title[1] | Author | Publication Date | Category | Abbr.[2] | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Terry Pratchett: Guilty of Literature | Andrew M Butler (editor) | 2000 | Companion | GOL | Revised edition in 2004 |
Terry Pratchett: The Pocket Essentials Guide | Andrew M Butler | 2001 | Companion | ||
An Unofficial Companion to the Novels of Terry Pratchett | Andrew M Butler (editor) | 2007-10-10 | Companion | Second edition | |
Terry Pratchett: The Spirit of Fantasy | Craig Cabell | 2012 | Biography | Unauthorised | |
Pratchett’s Women | Tansy Rayner Roberts | 2014 | Essays | Revised edition in 2018 | |
Philosophy and Terry Pratchett | Jacob Held and James South (editors) | 2014-11-19 | Essays | PATP | |
Discworld and the Disciplines | Anne Hiebert Alton and William C. Spruiell | 2014 | Academic | ||
Terry Pratchett’s Narrative Worlds | Marion Rana (editor) | 2018 | Academic | ||
Terry Pratchett’s Ethical Worlds | Kristin Noone and Emily Lavin (editors) | 2020 | Academic | ||
The Magic of Terry Pratchett | Marc Burrows | 2020-10-19 | Biography | TMOTP | Unauthorised; winner of a Locus Award |
Terry Pratchett: A Life With Footnotes | Rob Wilkins | 2022-09-29 | Biography | ALWF | The official biography |
Mapping a Sense of Humor | Daniel Lüthi | 2023 | Academic | Publisher website |
Pratchett-Adjacent Fiction
This is work by other authors who have appeared as guests on podcasts in this wiki, or whose work is frequently mentioned or covered in Pratchett podcasts. We’ll exercise a little editorial restraint, as we don’t want the list to grow too long. The books for each author will be listed on their own pages. We've listed them here in alphabetical order (by surname).
- Ben Aaronovitch - British author best known for his series about Peter Grant, a police officer who becomes an apprentice wizard and investigates supernatural crimes. The series comprises novels, novellas, short stories and comic books.
- Douglas Adams - British writer behind the various iterations of The Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy; probably the most famous writer of comedy science fiction. He passed away in 2001.[3]
- Neil Gaiman - close friend of Terry, and an early collaborator; he had the original idea that became Good Omens and eventually become the show runner and lead writer for the television adaptation.
- Gabrielle Kent - British narrative consultant (mostly in games) and children's author. She's Rhianna Pratchett's co-author on Tiffany Aching’s Guide to Being a Witch.
- Caimh McDonnell - Irish comedian and author of the Stranger Times series of comic urban fantasy books, which are frequently compared to Pratchett (if for no other reason than they combine comedy and fantasy).
- Tamsyn Muir - New Zealand fantasy/sci-fi author whose debut “Locked Tomb” series combines space opera, necromancy, noble intrigue and queer romance.
- Garth Nix - Australian fantasy and science fiction author best known for his “Old Kingdom” YA fantasy series. Known Pratchett fan.
- Rhianna Pratchett - Terry's daughter, best known for her work in videogames. She's also worked as a journalist and written for comics, tabletop games and now books. Her first published Discworld work will be Tiffany Aching’s Guide to Being a Witch.
- Diana Wynne Jones - prolific UK fantasy author whose books show an understanding and subversion of stories in some ways similar to Pratchett. They knew each other.
The following table will be removed when articles for the above authors are created and its contents moved to their pages.
Title | Author | Publication Date | Series | Series # | Wikipedia link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy | Douglas Adams | 1979-10-12 | Hitchhikers' Trilogy | 1 | The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy |
Howl’s Moving Castle | Diana Wynne Jones | 1986-04-01 | Howl series | 1 | Howl’s Moving Castle |
Rivers of London[4] | Ben Aaronovitch | 2011-01-10 | Peter Grant | 1 | Rivers of London |
Gideon the Ninth | Tamsyn Muir | 2019-09-10 | The Locked Tomb | 1 | Gideon the Ninth |
Harrow the Ninth | Tamsyn Muir | 2020-08-04 | The Locked Tomb | 2 | Harrow the Ninth |
Nona the Ninth | Tamsyn Muir | 2022-09-13 | The Locked Tomb | 3 | Nona the Ninth |
The Crystal of Storms | Rhianna Pratchett | 2020-10-01 | Fighting Fantasy | 17[5] | Fighting Fantasy |
Footnotes
- ↑ The academic titles are often very long, with subtitles explaining exactly what they're about. We've abbreviated those in this table, but the full titles will appear in their articles.
- ↑ Books that are likely to appear multiple times may have a template set up using this abbreviation to make linking to them easier. Type the acronym in braces, e.g. {{RM}} will produce Reaper Man. These shortcuts may also link to external articles by supplying a further parameter; for example {{RM|ls}} produces a link to the L-Space wiki article, like this: Reaper Man. (See Template:BookShortcut for more info.) Note that shortcuts for Pratchett's works and for podcasts are given precedence over books by other authors where they might conflict.
- ↑ We don't think he's stylistically similar to Pratchett, but they're often compared.
- ↑ Originally published as Midnight Riot in the US.
- ↑ This is the book's numbering in the modern Scholastic series of Fighting Fantasy books, which has no relation to the numbering of the originals.