Reaper Man
Reaper Man is a comic fantasy novel by British author Terry Pratchett, comprising the eleventh entry in his Discworld series and the second to substantially feature the anthropomorphic personification of Death as protagonist.[1] Published in 1991 by Victor Gollancz, the book examines themes of mortality, the value of life, and the perils of bureaucratic interference in natural processes through Death's enforced retirement by cosmic auditors, prompting him to adopt a mortal guise as farmhand Bill Door while uncollected souls engender undead resurrections and explosive urban proliferation in the city of Ankh-Morpork.[2] The narrative interweaves Death's poignant rural sojourn—marked by his inept scything, rapport with a pragmatic widow, and emergence of the diminutive Death of Rats—with parallel chaos at Unseen University, where elderly wizard Windle Poons returns as a zombie amid poltergeist outbreaks and the rise of a sentient, predatory shopping development.[3] Widely regarded for its blend of satire on consumerism and mortality with heartfelt anthropomorphism, Reaper Man contributed to the Discworld series' commercial dominance, which exceeded 100 million copies sold globally by the 2010s, though the novel itself garnered retrospective acclaim including a 1999 Prix Ozone for foreign fantasy rather than contemporaneous prizes.[4]