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Eric (Discworld Novel 9) by Terry Pratchett Review: A Brief, Parodic Discworld Romp

Eric is Pratchett's compact, Faust-skewering ninth Discworld novel, reuniting the hapless wizard Rincewind with a fourteen-year-old demonology hacker whose three wishes send them careening through time, mythology, and the dawn of creation — a slim but sharp satirical comedy with a genuinely divided reception.

LuvemBooks Verdict

Best for

Existing Discworld fans — particularly those already fond of Rincewind — who want a fast, funny, mythologically irreverent audiobook listen with a standout three-narrator cast (Colin Morgan, Peter Serafinowicz, and Bill Nighy).

Worth it if

You've already met Rincewind in The Colour of Magic or The Light Fantastic and are happy to treat this as a compact comic interlude rather than a full-weight Discworld novel.

Skip if

You're new to Discworld, prize plot density and deeper satirical ambition, or are hoping for something on a par with Pratchett's richer later novels — the book's origins as an illustrated novelette leave it noticeably slimmer than its neighbours in the series.

Reception has been genuinely divided: Wikipedia's entry on the novel records that science fiction editor Gardner Dozois called it "downright bad, the only Discworld book he actively disliked." Fantasy Literature (rating it 3.5) notes the text is "more simplistic than is usual for Pratchett" because it was originally intended as a showcase for Josh Kirby's illustrations, and that later editions without those illustrations worsened the book considerably.

Sources: Wikipedia – Eric (novel), Fantasy Literature
4.4from 5,960 Amazon ratings— reader ratings, not a LuvemBooks score
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In This Review
  • What Works & What Doesn't
  • What the Book Is and What It Contains
  • Publication History and Format
  • Strengths: Satirical Wit and Cast Quality
  • Reception: Divided and Notably Short
  • Who This Is For

What Works & What Doesn't

What Works
  • Features a high-profile three-narrator audiobook cast — Colin Morgan, Peter Serafinowicz, and Bill Nighy — well suited to Pratchett's theatrical comic style
  • Reunites fans with Rincewind and the Luggage in a self-contained, accessible Discworld adventure
  • Sharp satirical targets, skewering the Faust legend, Homeric epic, and cosmological creation myths simultaneously
  • Recognized by the Gollancz 50 anniversary series as a notable entry in the science fiction and fantasy canon
  • At under four hours, the audiobook is a low-commitment entry point for curious listeners already in the series
What Doesn't
  • Notably slimmer than most Discworld novels — a product of its origins as an illustrated large-format novelette — which some readers find unsatisfying as a standalone work
  • Reception is genuinely divided: genre editor Gardner Dozois described it as the only Discworld book he actively disliked, and some fans consider it one of the series' weaker entries
  • Without the original Josh Kirby illustrations present in the 1990 edition, later formats including this audiobook lose a dimension the book was originally designed around
  • Prior familiarity with Rincewind's earlier adventures adds significantly to the comedy, making this a poor starting point for Discworld newcomers
A brisk, parodic riff on the Faust legend, Eric is one of the shorter and more singular entries in Terry Pratchett's forty-one-book Discworld series, and its charms come bundled with real limitations that even devoted fans acknowledge.
Eric: (Discworld Novel 9)_main_0

What the Book Is and What It Contains

Eric centers on Eric, a fourteen-year-old Discworld resident billed as the world's first demonology hacker. His attempts to summon a demon go predictably sideways: instead of infernal assistance, he accidentally conjures Rincewind — the series' defining figure of magical incompetence — along with the Luggage, described in the book's own promotional copy as "the world's most dangerous travel accessory." The setup is a direct comic inversion of the Faust myth: Eric wants his three wishes granted — to live forever, to rule the world, and to meet the most beautiful woman who ever lived — and Rincewind, entirely against his will, becomes the instrument of wish fulfillment. The pair end up marooned at the dawn of Time, tangled in the creation of the Discworld itself, and forced into encounters with what the synopsis describes as "history's most embarrassing god." The novel's satirical targets include Homeric epic and the mechanics of cosmology as much as the Faust tradition.
downright bad, the only Discworld book [he] actively disliked and found a chore to read

Publication History and Format

Originally published in 1990 under the title Faust Eric, the novel had an unusual launch: it was issued in a larger format than the other Discworld books and illustrated throughout by Josh Kirby, Pratchett's cover artist at the time, which led the publisher to market it as a "Discworld story" rather than a standard novel. It was later reissued as a conventional paperback without illustrations — in some editions with the title shortened simply to Eric. In 2011, the novel was selected for inclusion in the Gollancz 50 series, which marked that publisher's fiftieth anniversary by reissuing works it considered seminal to science fiction and fantasy. The audiobook edition under review was released by Transworld Digital on July 7, 2022, with a listening length of three hours and fifty-eight minutes, and features a notable three-narrator cast: Colin Morgan, Peter Serafinowicz, and Bill Nighy.

Strengths: Satirical Wit and Cast Quality

Pratchett's comic architecture is fully operational here: the novel systematically deflates both the grandeur of the Faust legend and the conventions of epic fantasy, with Rincewind's constitutional cowardice serving as the engine of the plot. The audiobook format suits the material well, and the casting is a genuine draw — Colin Morgan, Peter Serafinowicz, and Bill Nighy bring distinct voices to what is an inherently theatrical, dialogue-driven text. For listeners already invested in Rincewind from earlier Discworld entries, the novel offers a satisfying continuation of a well-established comic dynamic. The book's inclusion in the Gollancz 50 anniversary series reflects its standing as a recognizable entry in the broader Discworld canon.

Reception: Divided and Notably Short

Critical and reader reception has been genuinely split in a way that sets Eric apart within the series. Wikipedia's reception summary records that science fiction editor Gardner Dozois called it "downright bad, the only Discworld book [he] actively disliked and found a chore to read" — a notably harsh verdict from a major genre figure. Some readers and reviewers have pointed to its origins as an illustrated large-format novelette as context: the book was designed around Kirby's artwork, and stripped of those illustrations in later paperback and audio editions, it reads as unusually slight compared to the novels surrounding it in the series. A BBC Radio 4 audio serialization in March 2013 — broadcast in four episodes — suggests it translates reasonably well to the audio format, which is relevant for those approaching this Transworld Digital edition.

Who This Is For

Eric is best approached as a compact, standalone comic interlude rather than a full-weight Discworld novel. Readers and listeners new to the series would do better to start elsewhere — Rincewind's backstory from The Colour of Magic and The Light Fantastic enriches the comedy here considerably. For existing Discworld enthusiasts, it offers a fast, funny detour with an unusually strong audiobook cast, while managing expectations around its brevity. Those who prize plot density or the deeper satirical ambition of Pratchett's later work may find it insubstantial; those after a nimble, mythologically irreverent romp will find it punches at a reasonable clip within its under-four-hour runtime.

Sources & Further Reading

The key facts and claims in this review are grounded in the retrieved, verified sources listed below.

  1. Cited in this review
  2. 1
    Eric (novel) - WikipediaHigh-authority source

    en.wikipedia.org

  3. 2

    tldr.business-english-success.com

  4. 3
  5. Further reading
  6. 4

    Terry Pratchett, Wikipedia

  7. 5
  8. 6