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Rats Saw God (2007)

Rats Saw God (2007)

Book Info

Author
Rating
3.82 of 5 Votes: 1
Your rating
ISBN
1416938974 (ISBN13: 9781416938972)
Language
English
Publisher
simon pulse

About book Rats Saw God (2007)

So my Mom and I had a conversation the other day that went very much like this:Mom: Honey, I put a book on hold for you at the library. It’s by Rob Thomas! He wrote a teen book!Me: Wait, really? Really?! Rob Thomas wrote a teen book. Are you sure?!Mom: Why are you so confused by this? I mean, it’s not that surprising, is it?Me: Why are you not so confused by this? I mean, like, Madonna I could maybe understand, but Rob Thomas?Mom: What? What about Madonna?Me: She’s a singer? Wait, who the hell are we talking about?And at that point, of course, we realized that while I had been thinking of Rob Thomas, lead singer of Matchbox Twenty and heartthrob of my teen years, Mom had been referring to Rob Thomas, creator of the amazingly kick-ass television series Veronica Mars, who Mom and I had just days before contributed embarrassingly large amounts of money to via Kickstarter so that we could hopefully someday revel in a Veronica Mars Movie. Then things made more sense.Because yes, I can definitely imagine this book as a precursor to VMars, sassy teen dialogue and all.And much like Veronica Mars, it was enjoyable, as long as (much like Veronica Mars) you could accept that no high school ever was actually like the one portrayed in Rats Saw God, and that no one ever actually speaks with that much sassy teen dialog in real conversations. Anyway, the story follows Steve, genius almost-drop-out extraordinaire, as he tries to save what’s left of his senior year by writing a paper explaining why he’s failing senior year. Steve’s writing is, naturally, filled with the aforementioned Sassy Teen Dialog (“My one explosion of insanely brilliant creativity came in the form of a title for a story about a young bohemian relishing his first taste of life on the highway: Roads Scholar, a novel by Steve York.”) but also with drama and mystery and a metric fuckton of romantic angst. In flashbacks, everything in Steve’s life seems to be going so well! He and his best friend Doug have founded their school’s newest and most esoteric club, The Grace Order Of Dadaists! Thanks to careful scheduling, he doesn’t have to make eye contact with The Astronaut (also known as his father, loathed these many years for the fallout of his parents’ divorce)! And he’s dating Dub, the greatest most wonderful most specialist most sassy most manic pixie dream girl ever in the history of the wooooooooorld!!(Dub, with her jet black hair smothered in dye, her makeup-free face, her oversized blue jeans, and her massively baggy sweatshirt, looks nothing at all like the girl being hoisted upon our hero’s shoulder on the cover of the new edition. But what can you do?)And the world is awash in Doc Martens and Chuck Taylors and Pearl Jam and skateboarding and Kurt Cobain and plaid (alas, a music and fashion time period that I just missed out on) and everything is perfect and nothing hurt.So how could it all have fallen apart?Viewers of Veronica Mars know, because viewers of Veronica Mars will remember the Worst Episode Of VMars Ever. It’s the Worst Episode Of VMars Ever because of the way Rob Thomas The Writer/TV Producer took an actor from another of my favorite television shows and TURNED HIM INTO A SEXUAL PREDATOR goddammit.Ben, whyyyyyyyyyyy??So much sadness.But there’s a startlingly heartwarming wrap-up, which made me feel better about the whole thing. (No, Jesus Christ, not heartwarming as it relates to (view spoiler)[the teacher who is fucking his students, eew (hide spoiler)]

Cover art:Let me just note that this is the latest edition of the book (book was published in 1996) so it already knows how to attract its target market SO: Ooh, such art! Such mystery! Such plaid! Such hipster!In a nutshell:Senior high school dropout Steve writes a 100-pager on his tell-all of why he is flunking out of high school.Spirit animal:I read this, like, two weeks ago and now I’m all WHERE DID MY MEMORY GO?And what does that say about the characters, let alone the whole book?ANYWAY. Okay, so practically every one of them was SNARKY as in HELLO, PREQUEL TO VERONICA MARS is what it all felt like. I had no problems with that primarily but when it all appeared like each character was going to be like the smartass VMars, STOP. STOP, ROB THOMAS, STOP. I mean, I do love me some Marshmallow but too much sweet can hurt the tooth.Magical moments:It is probably because I’m a daddy’s girl that I enjoy father-child reunions but I felt like Steve was SO unfair in shutting his astronaut dad away. He didn’t even realize he had wrong notions of his father until his sister (OMG I forgot her name! Let’s call her MAC), Mac, pointed them out to him. I liked that in the end, he started opening up to his dad, wanting to attend his (dad’s) wedding to his new fiance and letting him into his life again.Words to live by:"I swear, you are the only person I know who makes decisions based on what will provide the best material for a diary."Ahem.Boo!:Let me tell you something about Rob Thomas. Even though he is on-point with the angst, pangs and, um, joy, of coming of age and writes feelings and situations intelligently and heartfeltingly, there is that nagging feeling inside of my brain that says, “THIS IS PERFECT TELEVISION.” You know what I mean? (You’re probably confused.) It’s like I CAN believe these things happen in real life but they would be better imagined instead. And the internal monologues Steve had, I felt like I was hearing it on VO.Yes, Maybe or No?:I WANTED to like this so much, as much as I do VMars but I couldn’t. Maybe it was the time of day that I read it, maybe I was too happy to let the snark in the book get to me, maybe it just didn’t click with me. Maybe.

Do You like book Rats Saw God (2007)?

4.25 Stars. Whether you're an old hag like me who grew up watching 90210 or you're a young'in "liking" anything to do with TFiOS, this is one to add to your "to read" list. Steve is a pot-head who is about to fail his senior year. If he can complete a supplemental writing assignment for English, he'll pass. The only limitation to the assignment - write about something he knows. After a severe case of writer's block, Steve chooses to write the history of his high school years. He tells how he has survived his parents' divorce, experienced first love and first loss and went from an honor student to a burnout. This was recommended to me by the library and made pretty clear I should love it because of my age/reading preferences/the 90210 connection, but this was so much deeper/just flat out BETTER than shows like that. It was a superfast read and proved (yet again) that I would choose a PG-13 love story over "Grey" any day of the week.
—Kelly (and the Book Boar)

Rob's debut novel seems to get all the attention; it's the one teachers will use in their classes if they do that sort of thing. And it's definitely a good book. It follows two timestreams: Steve York's senior year in San Diego, and his sophomore and junior years in Houston, when his life went horribly, terribly wrong. We get his first-person narration of the present; the story of Houston is his English project.It took me fifty to eighty pages to really get into it, honestly. I was having trouble imagining these words coming out a seventeen-year-old boy's brain. And the narrative drive was...slow. It's carried along by the strength of the prose, whether or not something actually interesting is happening.Another strength is best described by Chris Lynch, who gets a quote on the back of the book: "Rats Saw God does something special—it treats teenagers as if their lives are complex and interesting....Thomas brings to the party one more thing that YA lit can never have enough of: attitude." I never read a lot of YA lit, so I don't really know how much more complex and interesting Rob's characters are than the norm, but he does do a good job of making the characters people. Which is necessary since the basic story is nothing extraordinary, even though it has its quirks here and there. It's a kid in high school, doing high school things. So in that respect, I was a little disappointed and didn't see what all the hoopla was about. It was competently done, and I was satisfied with the way things ended up and were resolved, for the most part. One thing I really liked was how Steve would make throwaway references to things people had said to him in the past, and then later on, as we read about the past, we get the context of the scene. The narrative was pretty tightly held together, and I appreciated that.
—Sunil

4.5.Steve, despite being a National Merit Scholar, is in danger of not earning the last English credit he needs to graduate senior year. But his counselor makes him an offer: write his story. Explain what's going on. Get to the truth. After initial hesitance, Steve starts to write.This is an older book (1996!) but it's so relevant and still speaks to the teen experience today. Steve has an authentic and believable male voice and one which reminded me of so many of the boys I used to work with. Everything that's been bothering Steve and causing him to quit caring about school is testament to that time when you realize you're not a product of other people but in fact, you're an independent, thinking, feeling person. This is the quintessential bildungsroman, in that as readers we get to see Steve "come of age" right before us in more than one way. We get him at the point where it seems he can't be redeemed, but through the essay he writes, we watch as he has his huge growth and experiences his moments of clarity. We watch as he's feeling okay about his lot in life in Houston, but then as he navigates the tricky territory of making and keeping friends of his own, of falling in love and experiencing intimacy with a girl, of having his heart trampled on by that self-same girl, of determining what his parents are to him, of having adults just plain let him down or give up on him completely. As he starts figuring these things out, you can't help but love him just a little bit more and hope nothing but the best for him. Even if Steve is so far removed from his feelings and his experiences (he chooses to get high and not do work for a reason), we know it's because he's working through so much alone. But it's that essay and that reaching out from his counselor -- the first adult to actually care about him and not give up on him in years -- that helps him through. At least, that's what we're led to believe because that's how Steve feels; but as the back story develops and the current story progresses, we learn that there were many more allies in Steven's life than he was aware of. But this is precisely the teen mentality (and hell, it's the human mentality, isn't it?). It all comes to a head when Steven learns the truth about his parents, about his father and mother's divorce, about how, despite feeling like his father has been worthless, he's actually just been reading and treating Steve the way he felt like Steve needed and wanted to be read and treated.There are drugs and there is sex in this book. I was actually a little surprised how detailed the sex scenes were, but (view spoiler)[ they were tasteful and important to who Steve was and why his heart was so shattered over Dub. I'd go as far as to say maybe Thomas's exploration of losing one's virginity is one of the most honest and candid I've read. I was simultaneously happy for and sad for the characters at the same time, in the same way that Steve was happy and sad about it. (hide spoiler)]
—Kelly

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