New Years Resolutions

Jan 01, 2007 13:24

New Years Resolutions:

1: Eat more cheese.This one is a little deceptive, as I actually have been eating plenty of cheese. Unfortunetly most of it's been cheddar, and sometimes mild or medium at that- the shame! I really feel I've been neglecting the better cheeses, particularly goat; I used to love goat cheese, but I feel we've grown to far apart ( Read more... )

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Comments 5

bladegryphon January 1 2007, 22:10:02 UTC
-=laughs=- Love the quarter thing. And Sluggy = <3

There's a few other webcomics you should check out too (I'm too lazy to post the addresses, just google them)
- Friendly Hostility
- Aoi House
- No Pink Ponies
- Full Frontal Nerdity

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darkerline January 2 2007, 01:03:54 UTC
This makes me glad I'm far away from... uh... wherever it is you are.

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freakycheeseman January 2 2007, 01:06:26 UTC
Kentucky. And what scared you, the erotica or the thought of me eating lots of blue cheese?

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darkerline January 3 2007, 01:18:56 UTC
I'm fine with both of those (as well as the others) in themselves, but it's the combination of all of those resolutions that's terrifying.

That being said I have a question. I want to start systematically reading Terry Pratchett novels. Is there any particular order I should stick to?

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freakycheeseman January 3 2007, 01:31:29 UTC
Not too much, but I'd go chronilogical by series (there are different character groups in Discworld, which can be thought of as series).

Death
Mort-Reaper Man- Soul Music- Hogfather- Thief of Time

Vimes
Guards Guards- Men at Arms- Feet of Clay- Jingo- Fifth Elephant- Night Watch- THUD

Witches
Equal Rites- Wyrd Sisters- Witches Abroad- Lords and Ladies- Masquerade- Carpe Jugulum

Nac Mac Feegle
Wee Free Men- Hatful of Sky- Wintersmith

Rincwind
Colour of Magic- Light Fantastic- Sourcery- Eric- Interesting Times- Last Continent- Last Hero

There are also quite a few standalone books- Pyramids, Monstrous Regiment, The Truth, Going Postal, Moving Pictures, Amazing Maurice and his Educated Rodents- but I don't know what order they come in.

Personally I'd go with the Vimes series, but it depends on what you're looking for. Rincewind is more light fantasy, death is heavy into the philisophical, and Vimes is social commentary (all are fun to read, mind- he doesn't take himself too seriously).

Oh, and read Good Omens while you're at it.

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