Mummenschanz. Ein Roman von der bizarren Scheibenwelt.

Paperback, 314 pages

German language

Published Oct. 1, 1997 by Goldmann.

ISBN:
978-3-442-41593-9
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
75909250

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4 stars (4 reviews)

The story begins with Agnes Nitt leaving Lancre to seek a career at the Opera House in Ankh-Morpork. When Granny Weatherwax realizes Nanny Ogg has written an immensely popular cookbook but has not been paid by the publisher, the witches also leave for Ankh-Morpork to collect the money, as well as to attempt to recruit Agnes into their coven, to replace Magrat Garlick who left the coven when she became Queen of Lancre (in Lords and Ladies). This has the side benefit of distracting Granny from becoming obsessive and self-centered, or so Nanny believes to her great relief. Agnes Nitt is chosen as a member of the chorus, where she meets Christine, a more popular but less talented girl. The Opera House Ghost, who has long haunted the opera house without much incident, begins to commit seemingly random murders staged as "accidents", and also requests that Christine be given lead …

24 editions

reviewed Maskerade by Terry Pratchett (Discworld series)

Yes and No

3 stars

Content warning plot/characer spoilers maybe?

reviewed Maskerade by Terry Pratchett (Discworld, Book 18)

Everything I wish “The Phantom of the Opera” was. A seriously good detective story.

5 stars

It’s almost impossible not to spoil this one by reviewing, but I’ll say that when I was watching the Phantom of the Opera, I was hoping for non-mystical resolution.

This book is an exemplar detective story, Mrs. Plinge could have just as well be written by Dame Christie and screenplayed by Mr. Horowitz.

Maximum points for detective story and half-a-point extra for, again, keen philosophy and cinematic writing.

avatar for abominabledrh@ramblingreaders.org

rated it

5 stars
avatar for calliope

rated it

5 stars