Equal Rites

A Discworld Novel

Hardcover, 224 pages

English language

Published March 7, 1988 by Victor Gollancz.

ISBN:
978-0-575-03950-6
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(4 reviews)

The wizard Drum Billet knows that he will soon die and travels to a place where an eighth son of an eighth son is about to be born. This signifies that the child is destined to become a wizard; on the Discworld, the number eight has many of the magical properties that are sometimes ascribed to seven in other mythologies. Billet wants to pass his wizard's staff on to his successor.

However, the newborn child is actually a girl, Esk (full name Eskarina Smith). Since Billet notices his mistake too late, the staff passes on to her. As Esk grows up, it becomes apparent that she has uncontrollable powers, and the local witch Granny Weatherwax decides to travel with her to Unseen University in Ankh-Morpork to help her gain the knowledge required to properly manage her powers.

But a female wizard is something completely unheard of on the Discworld. Esk …

24 editions

An artifact more badass than a lightsaber

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.

An artifact more badass than a lightsaber

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.

reviewed Equal Rites by Terry Pratchett (Discworld (3))

Review of 'Equal Rites' on 'Goodreads'

Third Discworld book overall, and the third that I've read - perhaps I should go back and read the first two sometime. This was also the first outside the City Watch books - and I loved it.

Granny Weatherwax ("I'm not a lady, I'm a witch") is just a great character, more than a match for her wizardly counterparts. Both she and the protagonist are strong female characters. We learn more about Discworld in this book than in the other two, each admittedly later in the series.

Read in preparation for reading Wyrd Sisters next month.

Subjects

  • Fantasy
  • English Science Fiction And Fantasy
  • Fiction
  • Fantasy - General