loppear reviewed Equal Rites by Terry Pratchett (Discworld (3))
re-read with my daughter
4 stars
Will Unseen University accept a gifted girl to train as a wizard? Love this early Pratchett.
254 pages
English language
Published Nov. 25, 1988 by New American Library.
At birth, Eskarina becomes a female wizard by mistake. Granny Weatherwax, the town witch, takes on the responsibility of furthering Esk's wizard training and adventures begin.
At birth, Eskarina becomes a female wizard by mistake. Granny Weatherwax, the town witch, takes on the responsibility of furthering Esk's wizard training and adventures begin.
Will Unseen University accept a gifted girl to train as a wizard? Love this early Pratchett.
Will Unseen University accept a gifted girl to train as a wizard? Love this early Pratchett.
The first flight on the rod scene, to me, is more epic than Luke getting the lightsaber.
Amazing rhyme of the two storylines of the main characters, a counter-position between the cozy and contained village life and dramatic path to the city, as well as events that followed, genius driven by dark conspiracy, ah. So much of this is absolutely badass.
Half a point nudged off for Pratchett's favorite idea of putting enough machinae around to pull dei out of those by their ears.
The first flight on the rod scene, to me, is more epic than Luke getting the lightsaber.
Amazing rhyme of the two storylines of the main characters, a counter-position between the cozy and contained village life and dramatic path to the city, as well as events that followed, genius driven by dark conspiracy, ah. So much of this is absolutely badass.
Half a point nudged off for Pratchett's favorite idea of putting enough machinae around to pull dei out of those by their ears.
What a fun book! This is my very first Terry Pratchett. After the stories of the Discworld have been on my to-read list for way too long I was finally convinced to try one and Equal Rites is definitely a very good start into the series.
It was fun, honest, critical and everything what you want. So much magic and quirkiness, but not in a bad way—I enjoyed this book very much and definitely cannot wait to be drawn even deeper into the Discworld!
This perfectly ridicules the arbitrariness of gender stereotypes. Everybody knows that only men can be wizards, everybody knows it’s part of the lore, but nobody actually knows where it is written or why it should be the case. And Esk just ignoring both her role as a wizard and a witch and rescuing Simon and herself by not using magic is about the best possible ending.