Cheap DVDs, books, CDs & Games

Search:

Lords and Ladies (Discworld Novel)

By: Terry Pratchett
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Corgi Books
ISBN: 0552138916
ISBN-13: 9780552138918
Released: 04 Nov 1993
RRP: £7.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Do not meddle in the affairs of wizards, especially simian ones. - By: cluricaune, 25 Nov 2008
Terry Pratchett's first novel, "The Carpet People", appeared in 1971. "Lords & Ladies" is the fourteenth novel in his hugely popular Discworld series & was first published in 1992. It's also the fourth book (after "Equal Rites", "Wyrd Sisters" & "Witches Abroad") to feature Granny Weatherwax, the Discworld's greatest witch.

Granny Weatherwax is joined by the two other members of her coven - Nanny Ogg & Magrat Garlick - & begins as the trio return home from a lengthy trip in foreign parts. Nanny Ogg is the raucous head of the Ogg clan based in Lancre town, & is pretty much Granny's oldest friend. Magrat is a much younger witch, & she has a few fanciful ideas about magic that Granny doesn't altogether approve of. Where Granny prefers Headology, Magrat has always been fond of dancing, occult jewellery & runes. However, she's also the closest thing Lancre has to a medical expert. Before the coven's trip abroad, Magrat had been romanticallly involved with Verence, Lancre's King. She had been a little worried about where she now stood, having been away for so long. However, it comes as something of a shock when she Verence has made alll the plans for a Midsummer Day's Wedding...without having ever actuallly proposed to her.

The trouble, however, isn't caused by either the Royal Wedding : the Elves are trying to break through again. When Granny & Nanny see their first crop circles appearing, they know immediately what the trouble is...but they're initiallly reluctant to explain it to Magrat. They know that Magrat would see elves as lovely, wise & kind - when, in reality, they're cruel & vain. Eventuallly, Magrat storms off in her frustration & resigns as a witch to start being a Queen. However, she has a great deal to learn about being a Queen...though it's Queen Ynci & the castle's bees she learns the most from. (Bees are famous for hating chaos...and Lancre's bees are very worried).

For many years, the Elf Queen & her followers have been kept in their own world by the Dancers - eight standing stones, arranged roughly in a circle. However, the circle's power has been getting weakened recently - thanks to a group of young girls, who have been dancing around it - & the Queen will soon be able to return. While it's the two senior witches who lead the fight against the invaders, they do have some help. There is a group of wizards in town for the Royal Wedding - the Archchancellor, the Bursar, the Librarian & Ponder Stibbons - who do what they can, while Lancre's crack squad of Morris Dancers also provide a little help. (They're also working on a play, as part of the wedding-related celebrations - but that, unfortunately, causes more trouble than it's worth). Casanunda also returns, a dwarven count & the Discworld's second greatest lover. Being particularly smitten with Nanny Ogg, he's naturallly very keen to help her out...

Another very funny book & - like "Wyrd Sisters" - some of the laughs are inspired by Shakespeare. Pratchett himself acknowledges that this is one of the few Discworld books where the reader would be better off knowing a bit of the back-story. (You could probably skip "Equal Rites", though you'd be better off reading at least "Wyrd Sisters"). While there's never been any mention of a Grandpa Weatherwax - let alone any children or grandchildren - "Lords & Ladies" does throw a little light on one of Granny's early romances...and the love-interest may come as a slight surprise. Totallly recommended, this is Pratchett on top form.
Lords and Ladies review. - By: , 18 Mar 2006
Lords & Ladies is a another spellbining book by Terry Prattchett.In Lords & Ladies the elves have come back & its down to Granny Weatherwax,Nanny Ogg,Magrat Garlick,the Lancre morris men & Shaun Ogg,Lancre's standing army,to stop them.If you like reading sci-fi,fantasy or fairy tales then read Lords & Ladies.If you enjoy this book then try books 3,6,12,18 & 23.
My favourite Witches book - By: E. Griffiths, 16 Jan 2006
I absolutely loved this book, everything about it is just perfect. It is perhaps one of the darker of Pratchett's witches books - the elves are actuallly quite a frightening adversary. I always hated Tolkein's high-handed elves, so effortlessly beautiful, so graceful, so noble, so eternallly young, bleuch! Smug b*stards. Here Pratchett explodes the myth that being beautiful means you must be good.
Nanny Ogg is - as ever - a joy to read about. Her exploits around the 'Long Man' & her date with Casanunda are comic gold, as is her rousing speech to Lancre's ragtag army.
Granny Weatherwax also gets a bit of a backstory and, as a result a more rounded character. We can see why she is like she is & some of what she's had to give up to be the most powerful witch of alll.
But it's Magrat who undergoes the biggest change - the scenes of her confrontation with the elves had me on the edge of my seat mentallly cheering her on. This is Pratchett doing a more conventional style of adventure than his usual & it's very good.
I could almost taste the night air & smell the snow.
No one is to do the Stick and Bucket Dance ever again - By: Daniel Jolley, 31 Oct 2005
The three witches, especiallly Granny Weatherwax, have always been my favorite denizens of the Discworld, & they do nothing to disappoint the reader over the course of Lords & Ladies. Add in a few of Unseen University's highest-ranking wizards, & you're guaranteed to have one wild time in the kingdom of Lancre. This novel wasn't quite as funny as Pratchett's earlier witch novels, but it shows Granny Weatherwax in a whole new light & makes for a very entertaining read alll the way around.

Lords & Ladies opens with the three witches returning home to Lancre after their encounter with the Godmother in the novel Witches Abroad. They arrive just in the nick of time. A group of young girls have started doing some witching of their own; dancing around (with or without their drawers on) some of the ancient stones up in the hills isn't good for anybody, especiallly when the barriers between the worlds are rubbing close together & beings on the other side are just waiting to pounce on anyone capable of weakening the borders a wee bit more. The Elf Queen has set her sights on crossing over into reality, but there just isn't room in this reality for Granny Weatherwax & the Elf Queen. Granny knows what regular people forgot long ago - alll that glamour & beauty that Elves project is just a mask. Elves are reallly nasty little buggers who care about human beings only insofar as they can torture them for their own amusement. Things are reallly nip & go here, as Granny Weatherwax isn't her old self these days - she can't even see the future anymore, & that doesn't bode well for anybody.

Of course, the citizens of Lancre are alll distracted by the upcoming nuptials of King Verence & Magrat Garlick. Wyrd Sisters tells the story of Verence's witch-assisted rise from the king's Fool to the King of Lancre, as well as the budding romance between Verence & Magrat. Magrat is of course the third member of the witches' trio, a young lass with eternallly plain looks, great interest in the traditions & proper ceremonies of witchcraft, & a naivety & generosity of nature that frequently drives Granny up the walll. She & Verence are as shy as the day is long, but they are to be married on Midsummer's Eve. Granny & Nanny Ogg tend to treat Magrat as a child, & she finallly gets so perturbed she abandons the coven & settles in to learning the ways of being a Queen - which mostly involves being incredibly bored.

All kinds of folks arrive for the royal wedding, including Giamo Casanunda, the world's second greatest lover ("he tries harder," a process which invariably involves the use of a stepladder), & a caravan of wizards from Unseen University. Archchancellor Ridcully is extremely excited about it because he used to live in Lancre. He goes on & on about this girl he once knew & wanted to marry, a girl who happens to be Granny Weatherwax. It's hard to imagine Granny as a young woman, but Lords & Ladies shows us a side of the old crone we've never seen before. Magrat reallly starts to come into her own, as well, after the Elves capture Verence. Of course, everything comes down to a big fight with the Elves, but that's the least exciting part of the novel, as far as I'm concerned. It's much more fun just watching Pratchett put alll his players in place for the ending.

Pratchett is absolutely on fire in a number of passages here, especiallly when young Ponder Stibbons tries to explain his theory of paralllel universes & multiple forms of existence to Archchancellor Ridcully. Granny & Nanny Ogg are always hilarious, the whole makeup of Lancre sets up many a joke, & Verence's dependence on book knowledge sets up one of the funniest bits in the whole Discworld series. Lords & Ladies is enough to get a new reader hooked on Pratchett's unique genius, but you won't truly appreciate this novel unless you read Wyrd Sisters & Witches Abroad first.


Where'd all these Elves come from? - By: David Roy, 20 Oct 2005
Lords & Ladies, the 14th novel in Terry Pratchett's Discworld series, is a wonderful return to Pratchett form for me. It is laugh-out-loud funny & a wonderful parody of Shakespeare's Midsummer Night's Dream. The Shakespeare alllusions aren't quite as bewildering as they were in Wyrd Sisters either, which makes it a bit more accessible for the non-Shakespeare fan.

This book was fantastic. It was a very interesting blend of comedy & grimness. In fact, it was probably the most mainstream plot that I've seen Pratchett produce. The conflict between the Elves & Magrat (and the Elf Queen & Granny) is very straightforward & almost chilling. The Elves are relentless in their pursuit of their victims. Magrat has to do some very harsh things to save herself from them. The Elves are almost unstoppable. Then, there is the Granny's confrontation with the Queen, which is very much like other confrontations between heroes & villains. Granny is captured & the Queen is just playing with her. They discuss what's going to happen to Lancre when the Elves take over. The Queen threatens her life. That sort of thing. These scenes are almost terrifying, & that's the first time I can ever say that Pratchett has done that to me.

However, that doesn't take away from the comedy. There are some truly funny scenes in this book that will make you laugh hard. The Archchancellor of the the Unseen University of wizards decides that he should come to the wedding along with a few colleagues (including the Librarian, an orangutan that used to be human before a magical accident). The scenes with the wizards, as usual, are just hilarious. This includes everything from attempting to hire transport (they don't have enough money, so they have to say that the Librarian is a pet) to the Archchancellor's attempts to woo Granny. As they say, hilarity ensues.

The characters are simply wonderful. It is such a difference between this book & Equal Rites. Not only are they very funny, but you start to care for them as well. Great strides are made in character development. Magrat finallly learns what she can do when she's pushed, when she stands up to the Elves. Granny learns to respect Magrat just a little bit. Nanny learns about Casanunda, the world's second greatest lover ("I try harder"). All of the witches seem a bit less testy, but still well within the character established for them in earlier books. Even the wizards get some development, which doesn't happen very often. You learn a bit about the Archchancellor in this one as well. Usuallly, the wizards are just around for comedy relief.

Probably the best character, though, is Simon. He's one of Nanny Ogg's sons, & he's basicallly everything at the castle. He's the army, he's the servant, he's the herald, etc. His attempts to get his mother & the other witches to follow royal protocol (like letting him announce their presence to the King) are very funny. Even he gets some development, though, as he learns what it is to be a leader when he has to lead a rag-tag band against the Elves.

There is only one thing wrong with this book. The ending, again, is a bit lack-luster. This time, it's also a bit anti-climactic. It doesn't exactly come out of nowhere, as there is a bit of a set-up. However, I think it still needed a bit more. I applaud Pratchett for trying to turn the clichéd ending to something like this on its head, but I think it needed a little more support.

As far as the characters & the plot go, though, this was a classic book. Not quite as good as Reaper Man (I don't know if he'll ever be able to top that), but still very high up on the list. And ignore what Pratchett says at the beginning of the book. While it does continue straight on from the previous book (which I haven't read), it is still very understandable without that. In his little blurb at the beginning, Pratchett gives you alll of the information you will need to understand this one.

If you can't find Reaper Man, this one also makes an excellent entry into the Discworld universe.

David Roy