After Terry Pratchett

4 recommendations for Terry Pratchett fans who loved Going Postal, Mort, The Color of Magic, The Long Earth.

Author Focus

After Going Postal

Cover of The Gone-Away World

The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway

Going Postal nailed that perfect balance: razor-sharp satire on corporate greed wrapped in genuine heart for society's underdogs. You loved Moist von Lipwig because he redeemed himself through cunning, not sermons—a trickster who outsmarted the system while Pratchett's wordplay and footnotes rewarded every reread. That blend of irreverent humor with hopeful humanism, where progress triumphs despite bureaucratic absurdity, is exactly why this next book will feel like coming home.

After The Long Earth

Cover of All Systems Red

All Systems Red by Martha Wells

You fell hard for The Long Earth's whimsical multiverse hopping, where loner explorers like Joshua chart infinite worlds with potato-powered gadgets and Pratchett's biting satire on bureaucracy. Now, dive into All Systems Red's snarky AI SecUnit navigating corporate absurdities and alien dangers, echoing that reluctant hero vibe with dark wit and philosophical twists. It's the perfect fix for middle-aged geeks craving clever sci-fi absurdity without real-world hassles.

After Mort

Cover of The Library at Mount Char

The Library at Mount Char by Scott Hawkins

Mort hooked you with its razor-sharp wit turning cosmic bureaucracy into laugh-out-loud absurdity, humanizing Death as a bumbling figure we can't help but root for. That perfect mix of dark humor, flawed protagonists fumbling through fate, and subtle musings on mortality without the preachiness—it's why we keep coming back to Pratchett's genius. If that resonated, you'll devour this follow-up's surreal world of god-like powers and ironic twists, echoing the same heartfelt chaos and clever comfort.

After The Color of Magic

Cover of Orconomics

Orconomics by J. Zachary Pike

Pratchett taught you to mock fantasy clichés with puns and chaos. Orconomics takes that irreverent wit and audits the genre's economics—turning adventuring guilds into corporate nightmares and dragon hoards into portfolios. Same flawed, broke heroes. Same whimsical absurdity. Zero epic stakes, all the smart laughs.