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Carpe Jugulum by Terry Pratchett Review: Sharp, Dark, and Wickedly Comic
Carpe Jugulum is the twenty-third Discworld novel and the sixth entry in Pratchett's beloved Witches subseries — a satirical fantasy that pits Granny Weatherwax, Nanny Ogg, and a crisis-of-faith priest named Mightily Oats against a thoroughly modern vampire family who have talked themselves out of all their weaknesses. Released as an audiobook by Transworld Digital on April 28, 2022, with a full cast including Indira Varma, Peter Serafinowicz, Bill Nighy, and Steven Cree, this edition brings one of Pratchett's darker and more philosophically ambitious Witches entries to a new listening audience.
LuvemBooks Verdict
Best for
Fans of the Discworld Witches subseries — particularly those already fond of Granny Weatherwax — who want satirical fantasy that wraps genuine philosophical stakes about faith, mortality, and free will inside sharp, momentum-driven comedy.
Worth it if
You have some prior time in Lancre (or the broader Discworld) and want to see Pratchett push Granny Weatherwax to her limits while delivering one of the series' most propulsive and darkly comic plots.
Skip if
You are reading the Witches subseries in order and found Lords and Ladies' structure of sophisticated otherworldly villains invading Lancre already familiar — the central conceit here is close enough that the parallel may feel like diminishing returns.
What readers & critics say
Steelypips.org calls Carpe Jugulum "one of the best yet" in the Discworld series, singling out its darker plot elements for producing "terrific momentum," though it cautions the book is ideally not a reader's first Discworld. Douxreviews.com counts it among the favourite Witches entries, praising how Granny is "truly pushed to her utmost," while musewithmeblog.com highlights how Pratchett's existing ideas — particularly around faith and Omnianism — "came together especially well in this outing."
Sources: steelypips.org, douxreviews.com, musewithmeblog.com, patricktreardon.com, blog.mugglenet.comLook inside the book
Preview the actual pages, via Google BooksIn This Review
- What Works & What Doesn't
- What the Story Actually Is
- Significance Within the Discworld Canon
- What the Book Does Well
- A Genuine Limitation Worth Noting
- Who This Audiobook Is For
What Works & What Doesn't
What Works
- Features the debut of the Nac Mac Feegle, a significant and beloved addition to the Discworld universe
- Granny Weatherwax is central to the story's moral and emotional weight, widely regarded as one of Pratchett's greatest characters
- Darker than earlier Witches entries, with reviewers noting it generates strong narrative momentum through escalating stakes
- Parody of Hammer Horror films and vampire genre conventions is embedded in both character design and world-building
- Full-cast audiobook production includes Indira Varma, Peter Serafinowicz, Bill Nighy, and Steven Cree across nearly 12 hours
What Doesn't
- The central plot structure — sophisticated villains accidentally invited into Lancre battling the witches — closely mirrors that of *Lords and Ladies* (Book 14), a parallel some reviewers flag as a limitation
- Richest rewards are reserved for readers already familiar with the Lancre witches and the broader Discworld setting, giving newcomers less context for key character beats

What the Story Actually Is
Significance Within the Discworld Canon
What the Book Does Well
A Genuine Limitation Worth Noting
Who This Audiobook Is For
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & Further Reading
The key facts and claims in this review are grounded in the retrieved, verified sources listed below.
- Cited in this review
- 1
musewithmeblog.com
- 2
sheppertonplayers.org.uk
- 3
- Further reading
- 4
Terry Pratchett, Wikipedia
- 5
- 6
Open Library
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