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The Wee Free Men

By: Terry Pratchett
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Corgi Childrens
ISBN: 0552549053
ISBN-13: 9780552549059
Released: 29 Apr 2004
RRP: £5.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

A great read for children and adults alike - By: T. R. Alexander, 28 Dec 2007
Although supposedly a book for younger audiences, the Wee Free Men would be enjoyable for any Discworld fan no-matter what their age. The book follows Tiffany Aching, a young farmgirl who must deal with an invasion of nightmare creatures, the disappearance of her younger brother & her own burgeoning power. All she has to help her is a frying pan, a book on the Diseases of the Sheep & the Wee Free Men, tough & drunken pictsies who enjoy a good fight.

Although the book does get off to something of a bad start it does pick up as you read & it turns into a greatly entertaining story. Terry Pratchett is a brilliant righter & this book is a great exposition of his strengths being funny, thoughtful & inventive alll at the same time. The book does have the feel of both Alice in Wonderland & the David Bowie film Labyrinth but this is only a background & the book does a great job of forging a path of its own. Anyone interested in the Discworld would love this book & it goes without saying that this would be a great entry level book for younger readers.
If nothing can make you smile at the moment- read this book! - By: Cheryl Brassey, 17 Dec 2007
This book will make you smile....and laugh....it's great! It's got everything you could wish for in a book :- Hilarious swearin' stealin' fightin' heroic, tiny blue men - nasty rotten 'boo' creating baddies - a lovely, brave, imperfect, modest heroine in Tiffany, and, best of alll, 'shocked' sheep being carried backwards at great speed......imagery I defy you not to find funny.
Terry Pratchett has a brilliant way of bringing a little bit of magic into everyone's life.
Read this book, it's a great adventure :-)
This is a Childerens book? - By: E. Perkins, 22 Sep 2007
After reading this book the first time, I found it to be a sweet & quircky book inteneded for childeren.

I read it a second time & almost had to take a step back, literallly.

This book is obviously intended for childeren, but some of the concepts are so very deep (dream within dreams within dreams) or so very complicated that you almost need a child-like simplicity to work them out (literal mindedness helps)

I feel that this book has alot to offer for both childeren & adults.
Read it to your little ones, & you will both get the benifit.
Children's novel - By: Airportchick, 01 Aug 2007
This is a good children's book. I give a 3 star rating regarding it's enjoyability as an adult reading this. There were a few instances in this book where the storyline felt like re-hashing of another story I'd read somewhere else.
smallerthanbigjockbutbiggerthanweejockjock - By: froggi, 07 Dec 2006
I reallly enjoyed this book. I can't remember where I was, but I first read it on holiday. One thing I do remember is reading out bits to my brother. The Nac-Mac-Feegle are some of the most origonal & hilarious characters I have met, stuff J.K.R's coppied creatures, the brawling, theiving, loyal, drunk, rowdy, headbutting, drunk, impossible to argue with, feegles, who would headbutt you if you left them a saucer of milk are a completely different take on faries. And a welcome one. They aren't exactly stupid, they just think that discworld, with it's pubs, creatures to fight & stuff to steal, is heaven & therefore are not afraid of 'dying' which is pretty impossible anyway.