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KoomValley? That was where the trolls ambushed the dwarfs, or the dwarfs ambushed the trolls. It was far away. It was a long time ago.
But if he doesn’t solve the murder of just one dwarf, Commander Sam Vimes of Ankh-Morpork City Watch is going to see it fought again, right outside his office.
With his beloved Watch crumbling around him and war-drums sounding, he must unravel every clue, outwit every assassin and brave any darkness to find the solution.And darkness is following him....
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From the Inside Flap of the Audio Cassette edition

Title: e
Author: Matt BeaumontMatthew Beaumont
ISBN: 0452281881
EAN: 9780452281882
352 Pages
Publisher: Plume Books
Binding: Paperback
Publication date: 2000-10
Author: Matt BeaumontMatthew Beaumont
ISBN: 0452281881
EAN: 9780452281882
352 Pages
Publisher: Plume Books
Binding: Paperback
Publication date: 2000-10
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The idea of the first e-mail novel could have been a disaster but instead is a minor comic triumph thanks to Matt Beaumont's E. The novel of letters goes back to Richardson, of course, but things have moved on from Regency rape to the lethal office politics of an advertising agency. The beleaguered protagonists may appear to be concerned with pitching for the Coca-Cola account but their real problem is watching their backs: the knives are out and everyone from head honcho David Crutton downwards is well aware that their careers are on the line. Another part of Beaumont's lineage in this unputdownable novel is the This Life school of detailed interpersonal observation: no one character is allowed to assume centre stage; people screw, argue and discuss professional responsibility while the reader slowly makes his mind up about them from the information conveyed in the increasingly frantic e-mails.
Matt Beaumont, though, is primarily a sharp and witty observer of the social scene, with caustic humour that leaps out of his characters' electronic missives. And we're pitched headlong into the situation: it's impossible not to find ourselves riveted by Rachel, James, Harriet, Daniel and all the rest of Beaumont's at-the-edge characters as they strive to achieve a common goal and sink deeper and deeper in the waste matter. But did anybody ever send an e-mail like this one from Lorraine, a woman out to get her own way?:
Two days in London and I'm in advertising. I went to a temp agency last week and they got me into this place called Miller Shanks. They did those shite ads for Kimbelle--you know, the Artist Formerly Known as Ginger Spice bungee jumping, looking like someone shoved a high voltage cable up her arse. I'm working for the CEO (posh for managing director). One of the lads thinks he's on for a shag but he looks too much like Bart Simpson (overbite, spiky hair and slightly jaundiced). Mind you, after a few Stellas he starts looking like Brad Pitt, so who knows?--Barry Forshaw
2008-05-22 Fantastic, the best e:mail mickey take I've read
This book is side splitting fantastic. Better than 'Who moved my Blackberry'. The characters are superb, exagerated I agree, but all of us who've worked in Sales and Marketing organisations will have worked with / met various people in this superb piece of mickey take on 'E:mail' life in the office and 'Marketing Agencies'.In fact I liked it so much I've bought a copy for my Marketing Director, and if he doesn't like it I'll know for sure he doesn't have a sense of humour.
PS: The review of the person claiming this book to be sexist and inappropriate is clearly from an individual who has had a sense of humour bypass.
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