
Dodger is more than a little disturbed at how he's treated as a monster in the press and in the stories of Dodger's fight with him Anti-Villain: Sweeney Todd, whose actions are caused thanks to extreme PTSD.And the Adventure Continues: How the book ends.Alter Kocker: Solomon, as an elderly Jewish watchmaker and a constant source of grumbly, down-to-Earth wisdom for Dodger, is is kind of a Victorian London version of the trope.

It's his efforts to 'fix' this problem which kick starts the plot.

Holland, who's Nanny Ogg if she ran a brothel with a side business in shanghaiing people. Simplicity is the only one who makes the connection. Turns out she is the Outlander and the men her assistants. Actually, That's My Assistant: Invoked by the Outlander, who is known as a man with wildly varying appearances always accompanied by a beautiful lady whom nobody seems to have given much attention to.

(At one point Dodger is outraged that rich people have started plumbing their cesspits into the sewers, which weren't designed for that at all.)

Absurdly-Spacious Sewer: As noted on that page, Truth In Literature for London, although they're technically storm drains.And Dodger’s tale of skulduggery, dark plans and even darker deeds begins."ĭodger is a non- Discworld novel by Terry Pratchett, about a tosher (young person who goes down the sewers looking for valuables they're young because it's not a job that leads to a long life), who rescues a girl from apparent kidnappers, and finds himself in a very complicated situation when some well-off do-gooder charges him with finding out what's going on. But when he rescues a young girl from a beating, suddenly everybody wants to know him. "Dodger is a tosher – a sewer scavenger living in the squalor of Dickensian London.
