@article{Lund_2025, title={Subverting Expectations of Stories and Environments in Terry Pratchett’s The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents}, volume={10}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.22161/ijels.102.17}, DOI={10.22161/ijels.102.17}, abstractNote={In The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents, Terry Pratchett subverts expectations about story, fantasy, and the environment. The novel features intricate stories within stories. An overarching narrative framework comes from a gentle parody of Victorian children’s literature. Due to magical pollution in a city, rats and one cat have become fully sentient. The rats are guided by a children’s book which, written in a style parodying the talking animal genre, serves as the rats’ cultural lodestone and guide for navigating human society. The rats struggle to reconcile the book’s idyllic world of mostly happy interactions between animals and humans with their experiences. Not content with parodying somewhat cloying children’s literature, Pratchett also dissects the idea of story, including fairy tales. Throughout, the environment and interactions with it are important motifs. The sentient animals hail from the largest city in the world and journey through the countryside grifting the rustic population. The juxtaposition of city and country shows both environments in nuanced lights. The rats’ goal of finding a desert island paradise reflects the desire for nature shown in Victorian Era reform movements. This goal is subverted showing the ironic superficiality of perceptions of nature while encouraging appreciation for whatever environments in which people find themselves.}, number={2}, journal={International Journal of English Literature and Social Sciences}, publisher={AI Publications}, author={Lund, Carl A.}, year={2025}, pages={100–105} }