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Lords and Ladies (Discworld, #14) - Community Reviews back

by Terry Pratchett, Nigel Planer
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XOX
XOX rated it 5 years ago
Stones circle, witches dancing naked and barrier between dimensions. Barrier between other world is thin in some areas and stones circles were put up as barrier for things to get through. So when crop circles appear on unlikely places, Granny Weatherwax is on the case. Young witch Magrat is...
YouKneeK
YouKneeK rated it 8 years ago
Lords and Ladies is the fourth book in the Witches subseries of Discworld. I enjoyed it, but not as much as the previous two Witches books. I thought the humor, while present, wasn’t nearly as strong as it was in the last two. I think the humor seemed weaker because our main characters (Granny W...
mattries37315
mattries37315 rated it 9 years ago
The Lancre coven return home in time for Magrat Garlick's wedding, which is a surprise to her, and to find certain "Lords and Ladies" wanting to crash the event. Terry Pratchett returns to Discworld as the witches face off with faeries trying to make their way back into reality as Magrat tries to fi...
Kythe42's Astral Library
Kythe42's Astral Library rated it 10 years ago
In Lords and Ladies by Terry Pratchett the witches of Lancre return from their travels to find that a lot has been going on in their absence. Magrat finds that her boyfriend, the king, has been arranging their wedding before even proposing to her. There's also a new group of young witches who are ex...
Kaethe
Kaethe rated it 10 years ago
July 9 2007ahhh. That's a good un.***July 15 2014What we have here is: A Midsummer Night's Dream, an impending apocalypse (by elves), a young, rather soppy, witch's efforts to find a place for herself as a Queen of Lancre, the courting of Nanny Ogg, and a romantic backstory for Granny Weatherwax. A...
Brian's Book Blog
Brian's Book Blog rated it 10 years ago
The final book in the Witches trilogy, set in the Discworld.This time, the witches come back to Lancre, where Magrat discovers she is about to be married to the King, while the elves try to make a comeback...These aren't the elves of Tolkien or countless other authors, being wise and kind. These are...
Philosophical Musings of a Book Nerd
Philosophical Musings of a Book Nerd rated it 11 years ago
This book is very, very loosely based upon Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night Dream, and to be honest with you if he had not told me at the beginning of the book and at the end of the book I probably would not have realised it. The reason that I say that is because when I say loosely I mean really loos...
XLeptodactylous
XLeptodactylous rated it 11 years ago
Pratchett has an unbelievable knack for taking an idea that has been around for centuries, stretching it out with a rolling-pin and kneading it into something majestic and full of such originality you wonder how any could have missed it beforehand.Those Witches are at it again. Granny Weatherwax and...
Oliviate
Oliviate rated it 12 years ago
One of my favorite re-reads: I love the parody of Midsummer Night's Dream, the witches (of course), and the wasp/bee imagery.
davdittrich read
davdittrich read rated it 12 years ago
http://pro-libertate.net/20120815/190-read-lords-and-ladies
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