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Soul Music by Terry Pratchett Review: Rock, Death, and Discworld Chaos
Soul Music, the sixteenth book in Terry Pratchett's beloved Discworld series, is a fantasy satire that sends rock and roll crashing into the Disc's vaguely medieval world, while Death goes absent without leave and his granddaughter Susan must grapple with fate, duty, and a destiny she never asked for. Critical coverage called the Discworld novels "comic masterpieces," describing this entry as "unfailingly amusing and sometimes hysterically funny." Available as an unabridged audiobook from Transworld Digital, narrated by Sian Clifford, Peter Serafinowicz, and Bill Nighy, the recording runs eleven hours and twenty-two minutes and was released on October 27, 2022.
LuvemBooks Verdict
Best for
Discworld fans — particularly those following the Death sub-series — who want a funny, emotionally resonant satire of rock-and-roll culture, and newcomers looking for an accessible entry point into Pratchett's world.
Worth it if
You value Pratchett's blend of satirical invention and genuine emotional warmth, especially in the Susan storyline, and can appreciate the rock-and-roll parody as gleeful fun rather than thematic depth.
Skip if
You're a seasoned Discworld reader hoping for a novel that pushes the series forward structurally — both major plot threads reprise frameworks Pratchett had already used, and the Music With Rocks In storyline runs out of steam before the end.
What readers & critics say
Kirkus Reviews calls it "unfailingly amusing and sometimes hysterically funny," placing it among a canon of Discworld novels that are "comic masterpieces," while critics at reviews.metaphorosis.com and eyrie.org find it a relative disappointment — noting that the rock-music parody feels forced and that Pratchett seems uncertain of his goals, making it one of the weaker entries in the Death sub-series.
“Unfailingly amusing and sometimes hysterically funny — recommended for anyone with the slightest trace of a sense of humor.”
— Kirkus ReviewsIn This Review
- What Works & What Doesn't
- What the Book Is and What It Contains
- Satire, Parody, and Cultural Commentary
- The Death Strand: Susan and Deeper Themes
- Structural Strengths and Acknowledged Limitations
- The 2022 Audiobook and Who This Edition Is For
What Works & What Doesn't
What Works
- Critical coverage called the Discworld novels 'comic masterpieces,' describing Soul Music as 'unfailingly amusing and sometimes hysterically funny'
- Susan's storyline delivers genuine emotional depth, exploring fate, duty, and mortality with Pratchett's characteristic warmth
- The rock-and-roll satire is inventive, treating music's cultural power as a literal, world-threatening force in classic Discworld fashion
- The 2022 audiobook features an exceptional three-narrator cast — Sian Clifford, Peter Serafinowicz, and Bill Nighy — across an unabridged 11-hour runtime
- Accessible as a standalone entry: the publisher confirms Discworld novels can be enjoyed in any order
What Doesn't
- Both major plot threads — Death abdicating his role and a modern phenomenon disrupting the Disc — reprise frameworks Pratchett had already used in earlier Discworld novels, giving some readers a sense of structural familiarity
- The Music With Rocks In storyline is described by some readers as lighter and less thematically ambitious than the Death sub-series at its strongest

What the Book Is and What It Contains
Satire, Parody, and Cultural Commentary
The Death Strand: Susan and Deeper Themes
Structural Strengths and Acknowledged Limitations
The 2022 Audiobook and Who This Edition 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
bluejacketstudentnews.org
- 3
tldr.business-english-success.com
- Further reading
- 4
Terry Pratchett, Wikipedia
- 5
- 6
Open Library
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