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  • Published: 15 October 2005
  • ISBN: 9780552153201
  • Imprint: Corgi Audio
  • Format: Audio CD
  • Length: 3 hr 29 min
  • Narrator: Tony Robinson
  • RRP: $45.00
Categories:

Soul Music




The sixteenth Discworld novel.

Other children get given xylophones. Susan just had to ask her grandfather to take his vest off. Yes. There's a Death in the family.It's hard to grow up normally when Grandfather rides a white horse and wields a scythe - especially when you have to take over the family business, and everyone mistakes you for the Tooth Fairy. And especially when you have to face the new and addictive music that has entered Discworld. It's lawless. It changes people. It's called Music With Rocks In. It's got a beat and you can dance to it, but... It's alive. And it won't fade away.

  • Published: 15 October 2005
  • ISBN: 9780552153201
  • Imprint: Corgi Audio
  • Format: Audio CD
  • Length: 3 hr 29 min
  • Narrator: Tony Robinson
  • RRP: $45.00
Categories:

Other books in the series

About the author

Terry Pratchett

Terry Pratchett was the acclaimed creator of the global bestselling Discworld series, the first of which, The Colour of Magic, was published in 1983. In all, he was the author of over fifty bestselling books. His novels have been widely adapted for stage and screen, and he was the winner of multiple prizes, including the Carnegie Medal, as well as being awarded a knighthood for services to literature. He died in March 2015.

terrypratchett.co.uk

Also by Terry Pratchett

See all

Praise for Soul Music

'The great Terry Pratchett, whose wit is metaphysical, who creates an energetic and lively secondary world, who has a multifarious genius for strong parody ... who deals with death with startling originality. Who writes amazing sentences'

New York Times

'His spectacular inventiveness makes the Discworld series one of the perennial joys of modern fiction'

Mail on Sunday

'Like Jonathan Swift, Pratchett uses his other world to hold up a distorting mirror to our own, and like Swift he is a satirist of enormous talent ... incredibly funny ... compulsively readable'

The Times