There are four sections to the book, reflecting the source material, four volumes of the old ‘Discworld Diaries’, specifically the ‘Discworld’s Ankh-Morpork City Watch Diary 1999’, the ‘Discworld Fools’ Guild Yearbook And ‘Diary 2001’, the ‘Discworld (Reformed) Vampyre’s Diary 2003’ and ‘Lu Tze’s Yearbook Of Enlightenment 2008’. Fortunately, once you open up the book, it pretty much delivers on that. Of course, for £25 you’d expect a decent return for your money but, if you’re a Pratchett fan, this book promises a great deal. In fact, the whole thing oozes quality, with colourful hardback covers, beautifully marbled endpapers and heavy, glossy pages. Similarly, Paul Kidby’s detailed but always slightly comical artwork includes sepia-tinted portraits of notable characters on almost every page, hopefully bringing a smile to readers who’ve enjoyed the ‘Discworld’ novels over the years.Īt 240 pages and 24 by 24cm in size, this is a big, heavy book that’ll rest on any coffee-table with a certain solidity. Here are brief biographies, guild entrance exams, crime reports, sacred texts and even the plans to a certain celebrated floral clock. The central conceit, if you will, is that the inhabitants of the city of Ankh-Morpork are worth reading about, whether you’re student of anthropology or merely a curious tourist. If you’ve ever read one of those books about some exotic country filled with photos and essays about the lives of the people living there, you’ll have some idea of what ‘The Ankh-Morpork Archives’ is all about.
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