“Terry faced his Alzheimer’s disease (an ‘embuggerance’ as he called it) publicly and bravely. Over the last few years, it was his writing that sustained him. His legacy will endure for decades to come.”
Finlay went on to state: “The world has lost one of its brightest and sharpest minds.”
Any fan of his work will attest to that fact, as his novels touched the hearts and engaged the minds of so many people. Even though he has left this earthly plane, his legacy will live on in the words he so carefully chose to describe, the worlds that so many people’s minds choose to explore with a sense of intrigue and wonder.
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Celebrities also took to their online platforms to express their shock and sadness at the loss of a talented and creative man.
Neil Gaiman, famed author of American Gods and co-writer of Pratchett’s Good Omens said:
“There was nobody like him. I was fortunate to have written a book with him, when we were younger, which taught me so much. […] I will miss you Terry, so much.”
He was my friend for thirty years and a month. I miss him. Donate to Alzheimer’s research and make it so things like this don’t happen.