"This isn't some sort of joke, is it?" he added hopefully.
I AM NOT KNOWN FOR MY SENSE OF FUN.
"Well, of course not, no offense meant. But listen, you can't die, because you're Death, you'd have to happen to yourself, it'd be like that snake that eats its own tail--"
NEVERTHELESS, I AM GOING TO DIE. THERE IS NO APPEAL.
"But what will happen to me?" Albert said. Terror glittered on his words like flakes of metal on the edge of a knife.
THERE WILL BE A NEW DEATH.
I had high hopes for Reaper Man, as I've really grown to love the character Death in Discworld, and as the book gets really high scores on Goodreads, but this is, sadly, my least favourite of the Discworld books I've read so far. In this book, Death is forced out of the job, and people in the Discworld stop dying, creating all sorts of problems, like undead wizards walking the Discworld, and excess life energy building up. Can Death regain his throne, or is the Discworld, coming apart at the seams, doomed in his absence?
It pains me to give this book three stars, because it introduces some characters that have become instant favourites for me. There's Windle Poons, the 130-year-old and now-undead wizard, Miss Renata Flitworth, the elderly, stuck-in-her-ways farmer who takes in the excommunicated Death (under the alias Bill Door) as a worker on her farm, and the band of wizards, led by Unseen University Archchancellor Ridcully, who try to right the wrong of the Discworld by hilariously (and repeatedly) trying to kill the undead Windle. In this respect, this book definitely has the strongest cast of characters of any Discworld book I've read yet.
I also really liked the storyline involving Death and Miss Flitworth, and wish the novel focused on it more. For me, the part of the story that followed the wizards fell mostly flat. They mostly just wander around and fight off the weird shopping cart-like enemies of the book. These parts are overlong and downright boring much of the time. They also don't really seem to add any value to the story, or at least I didn't see any value in them. I found the usual comedy of Terry Pratchett missing for much of this story arc.
In addition to this, I found the plotline around the snow globes and the shopping cart-like things they hatch into to be really weird. It's eventually somewhat explained near the end, but by then I didn't really care anymore, and still felt the whole thing was mostly confusing by the end of the book.
Overall, there are positives and negatives to this book, but the negatives slightly outweigh the positives. The characters are superb, the Death storyline is great, and the ending is strong, but those points just can't negate a meandering plot and the many pages of pointless filler that was the wizard storyline from the middle to the end of this book. I'm disappointed, but I also love most of the books I've read so far in this series, so I'm looking forward to my next Discworld adventure.