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When mutant rats threaten to take over Staten Island, which has become a huge landfill, 14-year-old Sarah and her younger brother Mike try to figure out how to stop them.

176 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1999

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About the author

Paul Zindel

104 books298 followers
Paul Zindel was an American author, playwright and educator.

In 1964, he wrote The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds, his first and most successful play. The play ran off-Broadway in 1970, and on Broadway in 1971. It won the 1971 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. It was also made into a 1972 movie by 20th Century Fox. Charlotte Zolotow, then a vice-president at Harper & Row (now Harper-Collins) contacted him to writing for her book label. Zindel wrote 39 books, all of them aimed at children or young adults. Many of these were set in his home town of Staten Island, New York. They tended to be semi-autobiographical, focusing on teenage misfits with abusive or neglectful parents. Despite the often dark subject matter of his books, which deal with loneliness, loss, and the effects of abuse, they are also filled with humor. Many of his novels have wacky titles, such as My Darling, My Hamburger, or Confessions of A Teenage Baboon.

The Pigman, first published in 1968, is widely taught in American schools, and also made it on to the list of most frequently banned books in America in the 1990s, because of what some deem offensive language.

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5 stars
67 (19%)
4 stars
103 (29%)
3 stars
110 (31%)
2 stars
58 (16%)
1 star
12 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 37 reviews
Profile Image for Eileen.
255 reviews5 followers
May 16, 2022
2.5⭐️ the beginning of this book was really promising, it had a fair amazing of body horror and gore in it for a young adult book. It gave me kinda Goosebumps vibes, but obviously not as good. When I got to the halfway point I just didn’t care about the plot anymore or the characters. But the body horror is what saved it honestly.
Profile Image for Dan C..
99 reviews
February 10, 2011
Think of the things that would make a perfect book. Mutant rats? Check. Mutant MAN-EATING rats? Double check. Mutant man-eating rats headed from a dump on Staten Island towards Manhattan to feast on limitless flesh? Triple effing check. How could a book like this go wrong, especially when it's written by esteemed Pulitzer Prize winning young adult author Paul Zindel?

Let me count the ways.

As I alluded to, Rats is all about gigantic mutant man-eating rats that bred underneath a Staten Island dump that had been sealed over with asphalt. I guess it was the buildup of methane that caused them to mutate, but they escape and much calamity ensues. I'll admit that I picked up Rats partially because it is a paltry 203 pages, but I thought that with a set up like that, I couldn't miss. I'd have an easy entry into my 25 books AND have an enjoyable time. It sure starts out with a bang as a landfill operator on his last day on the job decides to take his BB gun out to kill some dump rats. Like something out of Creepshow, the rats descend on him until he is nothing but pieces. All of this is described in great gory detail as if this were a Stephen King or a Brian Keene novel.

Then the main characters got introduced and it was all downhill from there.

Because this is a young adult novel, the main characters are teenagers, the son and daughter of the widowed landfill director. When the rats start coming up through toilets and other pipes, they know something is wrong. What follows is a confusing and nearly unreadable mess that I'm not sure I would have even been terribly interested in as a 14-year-old boy. Plot lines show up and then are dropped. Things are never adequately explained. There's some business with their pet rat Surfer - does he or does he not communicate with the rats? The world may never know.

There is the inevitable meetup with the king rat but at that point, the book is so cartoonish I half expected him to be wearing a crown and holding a scepter. The ending is nonsensical and abrupt and left me scratching my head.

Needless to say, I don't recommend this book at all to anyone of any age. The gory parts were cool, but the parts with the whiny kids and the ineffective adults more than canceled that out.

I expected much more out of the man that gave us The Pigman.
Profile Image for Brendan.
Author 21 books172 followers
July 21, 2018
I had this in my classroom library 20 years ago, and it literally got read to death. Kids who never picked up a book would devour this in a day. I remember reading and liking it then, so I decided to read it again.

Hoo boy, this does not hold up well. There are some good things going on, such as fantastic, unapolagetic gore that's still kind of shocking in a book for this age group, and some brilliant, horrifying images that are both gross and disturbing.

Unfortunately, there's really nothing holding it together. The characters barely exist, and the writing is bad.
It's bad.
Bad.
Like this.
And then there's the part where the kid calls the rat "my best pal!" People, I am here to tell you that nobody has talked like that since probably the 1960's. I was in elementary school in the 1970's, and I have a clear memory of a bunch of kids in my 2nd grade class using "pal" ironically.

So, yeah. Some decent horrific images, but not much of a book.
Profile Image for Kelsi - Slime and Slashers.
386 reviews238 followers
November 10, 2021
This book doesn't seem like it has the highest reviews here. But I'm a sucker for animal attack stories, so I knew I was apt to like and enjoy this one. I was correct in my thinking. This book had some really gory and graphic descriptions for being a middle grade book. I loved that! And after reading a particular passage contained in this book about catching and processing tuna, I may never eat tuna fish again. The ending could have packed an even bigger punch for some, but I personally wasn't disappointed. The one criticism I can give is that one of the main kid characters isn't very likable. Otherwise, I really dug everything about this book.

Overall, I thought this read was a bloody good time, and because it's clearly geared towards younger readers, it was also a simple and fast paced read as well. I would recommend The Rats to any fans of animal attack or animal revenge stories who may be looking for a quick and easy read.
Profile Image for Mandy Watson.
18 reviews
October 13, 2022
I have just read this book before giving it to my daughter (age9) to check to see if I thought it would be suitable for her and I’m glad I did because I personally do not think it’s for younger readers!

I was a bit shocked to see the mention of vodka and cancer used in a story for the age it is aimed at however those words are only used once.

Other then that the animal attack scenes that are in the book I did really enjoy and some times had me on the edge of my seat but these are quite gory…maybe a bit too gory for the intended age.

The only thing that really let the book down for me was the description of navigating the boat the children own through all these different areas I found myself zoning out and had no clue what was happening.

If you like animal attack books then I definitely think that this is worth reading as it’s a fairly quick read. I would also recommend that if your looking at it for a younger reader to maybe read it before giving them it to see if you think it would be suitable for them.
Profile Image for Ezekiel.
107 reviews2 followers
June 7, 2023
So I'd read this back in middle school and remember being affected by how gnarly it gets--since it's ostensibly meant for a YA-and-under audience. Happy to report that the descriptions are still pretty raw. Might be a stretch, but I'd wager to say they'd affect even a sensitive adult. I wasn't surprised that I could no longer find the book on the shelves of the library where I'd initially checked it out all those years ago. The death scenes, in terms of sheer gross-out factor, is likely the best thing about this, though (in addition to a robust fascination on Zindel's part with the icky and rancid), as everything else is rather ordinary and cliche. Quick skim through memory lane.
740 reviews3 followers
March 2, 2018
Very disappointing book. It reads like something an 8th grader would write, filled with blood and gore and no story line. Giant, mutant rats come out of the landfill and eat everything in their sight--including humans. The story goes from the description of one person being eaten alive to the description of the next to the description of the next. I wouldn't recommend it to anyone.
Profile Image for Scott E.
344 reviews1 follower
May 11, 2021
Rubbish. No urgency or real high stakes. Characters had no characterisation and just existed to move the terrible plot along
Profile Image for Nate.
16 reviews
May 22, 2024
I read this book in 7th grade and it got me into reading always have a soft spot for it
Profile Image for Brenda Osborne.
164 reviews
August 30, 2024
As an educator, I would recommend this book for those boys who are not that interested in reading. Large killer rats wreaking havoc in New York? What’s not to love?
Profile Image for Madi.
493 reviews21 followers
Read
September 28, 2017
I wasn't scared of rats until I read this book (when I was young). A great horror read for preteens.
Profile Image for Joe Newman.
40 reviews
February 25, 2024
This is primetime Zindel, this is my go-to reference when it comes to gruesome and gory terror by one of my favorite authors growing up. The violence is tremendous and the stakes feel truly apocalyptic, especially when you have mountains of man eating rats flipping several tons of garbage trucks.
Our protagonist, always one of Zindel's strengths is a grounded and relatable teen. Something that Paul always nails so well is having a protagonist who is capable and competent without ever feeling god tier or plot armored. Their decisions make sense for their age, they're never pulling some 4D chess maneuver, and are easier to root for because of it.
That's definitely the case here in Rats with Sarah and her younger brother Michael. The pacing is nonstop from the first page, literally no filler, just rats coming from the drains and people being eaten alive. There are several scenes I remember reading when I was like 11 or 12 and they are exactly as visceral then as they are now.
Profile Image for Krystl Louwagie.
1,507 reviews14 followers
August 29, 2010
Rats-Paul Zindel (audio book)

This was an audio book gotten for cheap from a library book sale. I got it because I think rats are cool. I assumed it was a YA-ish book because the cover had drawn rats on it, and the two main characters were like 13 and 10. But this book was flippin' gory and extremely detailed about it! It's about a neighborhood that is situated near a garbage dump that contains bad chemicals that just keep getting covered over with tar mounds-there are a lot of rats that live at the garbage dump. They become a little mutated, and very, very angry. So they go on a killing spree.

The 13 year old girl and her brother living there have a pet rat that they love, and she's studied rats for a lot of school projects, including science fair. Somehow because of this studying, she knows more about rats and how to fix the problem than, like, anyone else in the world. Which is just stupid, because yeah, she's done some research, but the people who wrote the research's she's reading probably know more than she does, duh. Also, I think this book's message was not to have pet rats, and I didn't like that. Also, either I was just day dreaming too much and didn't understand what happened, or the solution to the problem didn't make any sense at the end of the book.

The complaints being said, I found it quite impressive how descriptive and gory everything was. That was entertaining, at least. The book had a certain edginess at times that I liked. Plus, rats are interesting. So, the book kept me mostly interested. Still, it's being donated to the book sale.
7 reviews1 follower
April 17, 2014
I give up. I made it to page 98 and stopped. I could not read anymore. What I read was alright, and I imagine in middleschool I would have quite enjoyed it. The gore would have felt thrilling and forbidden and the fluffy writing would have gone undetected. As an adult I'm only left wondering how a book about GIANT RATS can be boring. The book feels almost like two individuals wrote it. There are these intensely violent death scenes interspersed with ineptly written segments with the children.

Although I said I would have enjoyed this in middleschool, I can't recommend it to anyone younger than sixteen (and only then if they are mature for their age) because of how absurdly graphic the violence is. It is the type of indulgent imagery that appeals most to younger individuals because it makes them feel more adult to be reading such things, but isn't good for them to read.

That said I can't entirely hate this book. The dynamic between Sarah and Michael is wonderfully refreshing after reading so many books where the siblings are at each others throats and some of the characters that die are given such nasty traits that it's rewarding to read their grisly fate. In the end the worse crime commited by this book is that it was not edited harshly enough for pacing and was allowed to become boring.
Profile Image for ØrionSof2014.
61 reviews
January 28, 2009
If you like a story with violence and gore this is your book. Rats is about two kids Sarah and Michael, their father works for the city dump and they have a rat named Surfer. Then comes the rats, the rats of the dumpsters are tired of being treated badly and getting killed by humans so they go out of the dumpsters and attack the humans.

I can really make a text to text connection to Sarah. In the book Sarah will do anything to protect her brother, also Sarah loves her family and will never talk bad about them. I would never say anything bad about my parents ether. I love my parents and my brother and Sarah does too.

I would rate this book three out of five stars. I liked the book a lot but there were some parts that went on and on. Also sometimes in the book I would get lost and not know what was going on. I would recommend this book to a person who loves horror.
71 reviews1 follower
August 27, 2014
I never knew Paul Zindel as the Pulitzer Prize winning young adult author. Nope, I knew him as the author of a handful of creature features which packed the gore and excitement that most YA horror material lacked (*cough* Fear Street*cough*). The Doom Stone is easily my favorites--hell, I still think it holds up pretty well--but Rats is the only one that genuinely frightened me.

Sure, it came about twenty years late and on the wrong side of the Atlantic to join the critter attack party that James Herbert kicked off with The Rats, but it has some of the nastiest stuff in YA fiction. It's not the gore so much as it is the fact that Zindel isn't afraid to show bad things happening to kids--to show them genuinely upset and in pain as they get attacked by these nasty little buggers. It packs a punch--and I highly recommend it as trauma material to budding young horror fans.
6 reviews
September 28, 2015
I think this book was ok. They author did a very good job with describing things like the rats or the main characters. This book reminded me about another book I read and I think they are very similar. I chose this book because the cover looked good. so I pulled it out and red the back, and that is why I red this book.
Profile Image for David.
53 reviews
April 19, 2008
RATS is a 3rd person narrative that centers around Sarah and her brother Michael. The main conflict of the story is when rats living in the city dump is mutated (from gases) and wreaks havoc on the citizens of the city.
It is up to Sarah and her brother to stop the rats...
21 reviews1 follower
October 27, 2008
If you like gory adventure stories Rats is your book. Paul Zindel gives delivers a hair-raising novel with a lot of suspense and excitement. When rats in town get infected it's up to Sarah and her brother to save the town from destruction. Will they succede or will it be too late? read to find out.
December 4, 2009
I liked the book rats because i like how they discribe a death with out looking at a picture or real life. I dont want to mess up the book for others to read but it's like reading a horror movie. The book is about rats that live in a dump but dont just rat trash and scraps.
Profile Image for Megan.
58 reviews1 follower
September 20, 2013
This book had the same thing happen every few chapters. I read it with my class and it was ok. It's story cloud have been better, if it didn't have the same thing happen every chapter. The ending was good though!
Profile Image for Kimberly.
239 reviews10 followers
Want to read
May 7, 2007
On my list. I am rat phobic. I am drawn to this. But I've heard it was good.
4 reviews1 follower
Read
September 27, 2008
this book was awsome! rats is a great book if u want trill if u want excitment....... but when u get a chance read it
Profile Image for Jennifer Daniel.
1,255 reviews
January 3, 2010
A gruesome teen read. I heard far more about rats chewing on human flesh than I ever wanted to. The pacing was good and this would appeal to a 12-15 year old boy.
Profile Image for Braxton.
7 reviews1 follower
Read
April 21, 2013
A gory, scary mutant rodent apocalypse! I used to have a pet rat, now I might think twice before getting another one! The way zindel wrote Rats made vivid pictures in my head.
Profile Image for Sara.
156 reviews1 follower
November 21, 2013
This book was really graphic in the blood and gory. I don't recommend this book to those who have a weak stomach.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 37 reviews

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