Terry Pratchett is a Hard Sell?
Feb. 12th, 2020 08:52 amLast year's record of books read was interesting, and I was pretty pleased with the result, which showed I'd read, on average, a couple of books a month. (The reality is that I'd have periods where I'd devour book after book after book and then have a month where I only read my book club assignment.) For this year, I've decided not to bother keeping a record, since toward the end especially I was half-assing it anyway.
Still reading, though! I have a definite queue, including the about-once-a-month book club book.
BY THE WAY holy crap is it hard to sell Terry Pratchett to a bunch of people who have never read Terry Pratchett. Last Bookaneers meeting was the third time where my turn came up and I included a Discworld novel (Guards! Guards! specifically) in my three choices for the next club read, and K and I could just sense the reluctance from everyone else. Granted, I am fucking awful at persuasion (when I was an adorable little girl in a Brownie uniform, I couldn't even sell GIRL SCOUT COOKIES to anyone outside my own family), but K is much better at talking and even he had trouble explaining why Terry Pratchett is 100% worth reading.
Anyway, I kind of played a little dirty this time and gave them a choice of a) Discworld novel Guards! Guards!, b) Discworld novel Moving Pictures, c) an intimidating historical novel by not-Terry-Pratchett that K has been (only half-jokingly) trying to get the group to read called The Cruel Sea.
And you can bet I would 100% read that third one, because K really wants to read it and even if he reads it on his own, I'll read it too. <3
So the group picked Moving Pictures which I am enjoying the heck out of, but some of the rest of the group are kind of having trouble with it. Then again, at least one of those is an audiobook person, and K has wondered aloud to me whether or not Pratchett comes across well in audio, or if his prose is too confusing (plus, what about the footnotes??!?). So it will be interesting to see what people think at the next meeting and how it correlates to reading with eyes or ears.
(I mean, one of our group is not into genre stuff AT ALL so she's going to be an extra-hard sell, but that's basically the case with every genre Bookaneers book.)
I won't be suggesting Guards! Guards! again after this -- three times and it's out -- but I plan on reading it on my own. It's on the list with several other books, including T. Kingfisher's The Twisted Ones which I got for Christmas.
Still reading, though! I have a definite queue, including the about-once-a-month book club book.
BY THE WAY holy crap is it hard to sell Terry Pratchett to a bunch of people who have never read Terry Pratchett. Last Bookaneers meeting was the third time where my turn came up and I included a Discworld novel (Guards! Guards! specifically) in my three choices for the next club read, and K and I could just sense the reluctance from everyone else. Granted, I am fucking awful at persuasion (when I was an adorable little girl in a Brownie uniform, I couldn't even sell GIRL SCOUT COOKIES to anyone outside my own family), but K is much better at talking and even he had trouble explaining why Terry Pratchett is 100% worth reading.
Anyway, I kind of played a little dirty this time and gave them a choice of a) Discworld novel Guards! Guards!, b) Discworld novel Moving Pictures, c) an intimidating historical novel by not-Terry-Pratchett that K has been (only half-jokingly) trying to get the group to read called The Cruel Sea.
And you can bet I would 100% read that third one, because K really wants to read it and even if he reads it on his own, I'll read it too. <3
So the group picked Moving Pictures which I am enjoying the heck out of, but some of the rest of the group are kind of having trouble with it. Then again, at least one of those is an audiobook person, and K has wondered aloud to me whether or not Pratchett comes across well in audio, or if his prose is too confusing (plus, what about the footnotes??!?). So it will be interesting to see what people think at the next meeting and how it correlates to reading with eyes or ears.
(I mean, one of our group is not into genre stuff AT ALL so she's going to be an extra-hard sell, but that's basically the case with every genre Bookaneers book.)
I won't be suggesting Guards! Guards! again after this -- three times and it's out -- but I plan on reading it on my own. It's on the list with several other books, including T. Kingfisher's The Twisted Ones which I got for Christmas.