- cross-posted to:
- technews@radiation.party
- cross-posted to:
- technews@radiation.party
There is a discussion on Hacker News, but feel free to comment here as well.
- The world is a better place with more of his stories in it. - GNU Terry Pratchett 
- This is the best summary I could come up with: 
 - He left behind three completed novels: the final Discworld book, The Shepherd’s Crown, and the last two volumes of the science fiction series he had been writing with Stephen Baxter, The Long Earth. - Most are a few pages long, riffing briefly on one or other ludicrous situation – comical cave people, a haunted steamroller, a hundred-yard pie, UFO aliens on holiday mistaken for invaders. - The better of these, Wanted: A Fat Jolly Man with a Red Woolly Hat, contains the story germ of the marvellous Mort, the 1987 Discworld novel in which Death resigns his position. - The Fossil Beach starts from the premise that putting a fossilised seashell to your ear enables you to hear a prehistoric ocean, spinning a neat and funny little time-travel comedy from that notion. - It opens in “Morpork” – not exactly the Discworld’s Ankh-Morpork, but a more thinly rendered “evil, ancient, foggy city” – where a disreputable wizard, Grubble the Utterly Untrustworthy, sends the none-too-bright warrior Kron on the titular quest. - He likens them in style and vibe to Norman Hunter’s Professor Branestawm tales, “knowing and accessible for children with raisins of wit tossed in for adults”. 
 - The original article contains 838 words, the summary contains 192 words. Saved 77%. I’m a bot and I’m open source! - The important bit is that these were short works published under a pseudonym in the 70s and 80s. They are not cobbled together from unfinished drafts and notes, which he expressly forbid before his passing. 
 
- He’s riding the Clacks as we speak; GNU Terry Pratchett 🤘 




