Focusing on the dichotomies between fiction and reality, between the representation of good and evil in fantasy and beyond, Daniel Lüthi's Mapping a Sense of Humor explores the intrinsic mechanisms at work in Pratchett's secondary world. Lüthi's study offers new perspectives on the self-reflective nature of the Discworld novels that underline the importance- and the challenges as well as pitfalls- of creative imagination for the stories and spaces of fantasy along with narratives in general.
"The playful humor and humane philosophy of Terry Pratchett are here scrutinized through a variety of postmodern critical lenses- but don't let that scare you off. On the one hand, Daniel Lüthi's well-deployed command of theory illuminates the significance of Pratchett and fantasy in general- and on the other, his examples from Pratchett help the reader gain a firmer grasp of theory. If you take Pratchettian parody seriously, you have some fine reading ahead of you in Mapping a Sense of Humor."
- Janet Brennan Croft, Editor of Mythlore: A Journal of J. R. R. Tolkien, C. S. Lewis, Charles Williams, and Mythopoeic Literature