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The Ramtops are a fictional mountain range appearing in Terry Pratchett's Discworld series. Terence David John Pratchett OBE (known to some fans as Pterry, following the convention he used in his book Pyramids where characters were given names such as Ptraci and Pteppic) is an English fantasy author (born April 28, 1948, in Beaconsfield, Bucks), best known for his Discworld series. ...
The Discworld is a series of over 30 novels by Terry Pratchett set on the Discworld. ...
The Ramtops are a range of jagged peak, upland lakes, dense forests, and little river valleys so deep that the daylight barely ever touches the bottom. The Ramtop Mountains stretch from the Hub all the way, via a lengthy archipelago, to the Rim. Raw magic can sometimes be seen crackling between the peaks and earthing itself in the mountains because the range lies across the Disc's magical wave like a bar on the third rail of a subway. It is so saturated with magic, anything can happen. Leaves move with no breeze, rocks stroll in the evening, even the land seems alive. Therefore, it is not surprising that most of Discworld's great witches and wizards were born there. There is plenty of flat land in the Ramtops.... vertically flat. There are little kingdoms everywhere; every valley or ledge is a kingdom. One of the biggest and best known is Lancre. The Discworld is the setting for all of Terry Pratchetts Discworld series of novels. ...
Lancre (pronounced Lanker) is a fictional country from Terry Pratchetts Discworld novels. ...
The Ramtops have very definite weather. Winter is a straight gateway to the primeval coldness that lived before the creation of the world. Winter in the Ramtops includes several yards of snow, leaving the forests mere collections of green tunnels under the drifts. Ramtoppers have eighteen words for snow, none of them appropriate. No Ramtopper would start a winter without logs reaching to the roof on three sides of their house. They never let their fire go out.... out of pride and neccessity. After the snow melts the rain begins. The rain is almost as bad as the snow.... wet, pelleting, and thundering. The summer and autumn are hot, dry and pleasant. They are also very brief. |