Le Père Porcher

400 pages

French language

Published March 8, 2002

ISBN:
978-2-84172-223-5
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

View on Inventaire

4 stars (3 reviews)

La nuit du père Porcher… Neige, rouges-gorges, chorales et sapins décorés… Mais le gros bonhomme de rouge vêtu, celui qu’on attend en cette nuit de fête… a disparu. En lieu et place, faisant fonction, un autre bonhomme de rouge vêtu, dans son traîneau tiré par des cochons sauvages, avec sa hotte, sa fausse barbe et son oreiller pour simuler un ventre qu’il n’a pas. Un bonhomme plus habitué à manier la faux qu’à descendre dans les cheminées distribuer des jouets par milliers. Mais quand le devoir appelle… Car certains préméditent l’assassinat du père Porcher. Et s’ils arrivent à leurs fins… … le soleil ne se lèvera pas.

9 editions

reviewed Hogfather by Terry Pratchett

Holiday reading

5 stars

A few years back, I added this to my list of Christmas reads - books I reread (or at least think about rereading) every year during the holidays, books that get me in the mood, because of content (this one, obviously) or past associations (Lord of the Rings) or because somehow they seem to me to suit the season, in the same way that fires, green branches inside, lights, rich food and so on do, that contribute to the hygge.

Hogfather is set in Discworld, where most of Terry Pratchett's books are set. Like most of his books, it riffs off some aspect of our world - in this case Christmas - in a satirical but loving and insightful way. In this book, the Hogfather - a Santa Claus/Spirit of the Solstice figure - is incapacitated by some creatures who are opposed to human creativity. And Death has to step …

Review of 'Hogfather (Discworld)' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

The unthinkable has happened: the Hogfather is gone on Hogswatch night. But it's not just the spirit of the celebration that is at risk, maybe all humanity is at risk...

This may be my favourite of all the Discworld books. It's the only one I've read more than once (so far) and it's just so filled with wisdom that sometimes it reads like poetry. It is also extremely funny and quotable. I particularly enjoy the fast pace and the way we keep jumping between characters in the same timeline, but it may be confusing to some. This book is and will always be a Christmas treasure to me.