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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Three years in the life
What has caused the descent of Steve York, verbally gifted high school student, once a straight A student, now an apathetic drug user?

A few months before graduation, Steve's guidance counselor intervenes, arranging for Steve to complete a failing English credit by composing a 100 page story.

Steve decides to write about his sophomore and junior year of high school,...

Published on May 27, 2001 by Krista

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Rats Saw God is relatable but not real
In order for senior Steve York to pass English and graduate he has to write a 100 page essay about anything, he chooses to write about his own life. Rats Saw God tells his story from being a Texas freshman to a California senior. Rob Thomas does an accurate job of depicting high school life through the eyes of his characters. Thomas uses humor to create a more...
Published on March 9, 2000 by Micki White


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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Three years in the life, May 27, 2001
This review is from: Rats Saw God (Paperback)
What has caused the descent of Steve York, verbally gifted high school student, once a straight A student, now an apathetic drug user?

A few months before graduation, Steve's guidance counselor intervenes, arranging for Steve to complete a failing English credit by composing a 100 page story.

Steve decides to write about his sophomore and junior year of high school, when he became involved with a group of non-conformists and formed the Grace Order of Dadaists (GOD) club. Also during that time, Steve met his first love and experienced the worst kind of heartbreak.

As Steve relates the sometimes wonderful, sometimes painful story of those years, he alternates with commentary on his senior year in San Diego: his academic recovery, fueled in part by a new love interest, and his reconciliation of long time tension with his father, a famous astronaut.

The novel's structure highlights the downward trajectory of Steve's Houston years, contrasted with the upward swing of his year in San Diego. Thomas tells Steve's story with a mix of clever humor, engrossing early-90s trivia, and non-sentimental, realistic teenage emotions. Highly recommended.

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars In search for meaning, June 25, 2002
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This review is from: Rats Saw God (Hardcover)
I was assigned this novel for a master's class in teaching the adolescent learner. Thomas writes from the true perspective of a teenager in search of a meaning in his life when things seem hopeless and lost. Steve York displays all the characteristics of a high schooler looking for his identity. Although he protrays himself as a cynic and misfit, York represents all teenagers who simply seek acceptance and a place to fit in. York experiences the highs and lows, including his first love and the battle of appeasing a disappointed father.

Through writing, York finds that meaning and is able to mend fences and realize that only you can truly choose the right path for yourself. Steve eventually does that, makes up with his father and uses his intellect for construction and not destruction.

This is a solid YA novel that many teenagers should be able to associate with.

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Review of Rats Saw God, November 13, 2001
By 
Jordan Enyeart (North Bend, OR United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rats Saw God (Paperback)
The way that this book is written, you can't really say that you are going to stop "at the end of this chapter." There are no actual chapters. Taking place in two different years- one of which is the present time of the book, and one the essay that the main character is writing- it goes back and forth, sometimes with as little as two paragraphs in a section.
The book is mainly about Steve York, a San Diego senior in high school, who is failing, bummed out about life, and at the beginning he has a constant high. It goes back and forth between him in the present, and him as a sophomore student in Houston, Texas, who is popular at school, and is liked by everyone, who has a great girlfriend, and a lot of close friends- the only bad thing about his life, is that he lives with his father, Alan York, who is a world famous astronaut. Steve almost always calls his father "the astronaut".
A no-nonsense counselor, Mr. Demouy, tells him that if he writes a hundred page paper on the topic of his choice, that he can graduate from high school, and get his missing English credit. Through out the book, Demouy and Steve become close.
The book takes place in two different times and places, the late eighties, in Houston, Texas, and about nineteen ninety, in San Diego, California. In Texas, Steve lives in a suburb, in a large house, that has boxes that were never unpacked scattered through out it. And in San Diego, he lives with his mother- who is never home, for she travels with her husband (a pilot) almost all the time- and his sister, who turns out to be a major part of the story. Steve hates it at his dad's house, and doesn't care- mainly because he is (or was) high all the time- about where he lives in San Diego.
I loved this book, but it isn't for everyone. With the many sexual and drug innuendos, some people wouldn't be able to handle it. The book goes by quite fast, I read it in two days, and I'm not the best of readers. It is definitely written for teenagers in mind, although some adults may like it.
I learned many lessons from the book. One of which is that for two people to truly have a connection, words don't have to be a major thing in their relationship. As Steve finds out, a person who you might say a few words to on an occasional basis, and who your conversations never last more than a few sentences, may have one of the biggest connections to you out of any one in the world. Sometimes words aren't needed to have a connection.
The author developed the plot very well, although not in the most conventional of ways. The characters were also developed very well. I felt as though I truly knew Steve and his family. The situation is something that could definitely happen in the real world.
The book mixes humor, romance, life learned lessons, and serious subject matter all into one big web that somehow all fits together perfectly. I highly recommend every one to read it.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A new classic- READ THIS ITS GREAT, August 20, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Rats Saw God (Hardcover)
In this latest novel, Rob Thomas presents an authentic portrait of high school life in America. Essentially structured as an autobiographical account of the life of one young self-proclaimed iconoclast, this book deals with typical episodes in the life of a high schooler in modern times; homecoming floats, semiformal dances, Pearl Jam concerts. But more importantly- it delves into the psyche of teenagers and the varying approaches to these events. From the stereotypical rite of passage types who go to football games on Friday nights and drink at parties afterwards to the self-proclaimed nonconformists whose dogmatic insistence on "standing out" borders on hypocrisy, the author employs poignant characters that the reader identifies with closely and a vivid first person narrator to paint realistic portrait of the social infrastructure of the American high school. Thomas has a powerful contemporary voice that today's youth will relate to and which other teen authors often lack; his obvious familiarity with the modern American teenager (stemming from five years as a high school journalism teacher) manifests itself in authentic depictions of the ubiquitous social intricacies found in high schools across the country. From the "low-maintenance Marcia Brady trend girls" and their "long, straight, center-parted hair, poufy, midriff-baring tops, bell-bottom jeans with ragged hems and cork-soled clogs" to the reaction over the death of demigod Kurt Cobain and his "It's better to burn out than fade away philosophy," this book captures the essence of a generation. Also of note, Thomas' protagonist, Steve, a young man with potential but harboring the anarchistic slacker mentality of modern youth, strikes a chord with readers through candid narration of clashes with his famous astronaut father, the anxieties of relationships and the irritating nature of many facets of high school. Definitely one of the best young adult books to come out in years- realistic, captivating and complete- this is an exceptional read.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My favorite book, June 7, 2005
This review is from: Rats Saw God (Paperback)
My mom found this book in a box of her old stuff after a move. She told me to read it, and I did. And then I read it again. And again. And again. I've read Rats Saw God probably 30 times now. It's such an excellent book, I was surprised to realize that it's not on any of my summer reading lists or recommended books lists. I love the wit and irony that the main character, Steve, uses in describing his life and generation. His family and friends are realistically flawed, 3-dimensional characters. As someone who was born in but missed out on much of the 90's, I don't find the pop culture references dating but rather interesting, like vague allusions that I could recognize but still be new to.
I made my boyfriend borrow this book a week ago, and, like me, he read it in a day and loved it. He even wanted to borrow it again and reread it.
I would and have recommended this book to any teen who feels outcast, to find a kindred spirit in Steve.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Rats Saw God, June 12, 2006
By 
This review is from: Rats Saw God (Paperback)
Do any of you sometimes have problems understanding your parents or do some of your parents have problems understanding you? If the answer is yes, I think you'll be able to relate to 18 year-old Steve York in this book titled Rats Saw God. Steve's parents divorced when he was a freshman in high school and his perfectionist straight-laced astronaut father gets custody of him. Steve's mother gets custody of his sister and moves to San Diego. One day, just out of the blue after finishing his junior year at his Houston, Texas high school, Steve drives 27 hours non-stop to the Pacific Ocean in San Diego to live with his mother and sister, unannounced. Steve begins to finish out his last year of high school at his new high school in San Diego, Wakefield High. Steve's a self-described pothead so he wasn't all that surprised when the principal summons him to the guidance counselor's office one day. Steve just thinks his drug problems were going to be discussed. Mr. DeMouy turns out to be this cool, professional and unflappable guidance counselor, and he informs Steve that he's one English credit short of graduating. DeMouy gives Steve the option of writing a 100-page paper on any subject he chooses to earn that credit. Seeing that Steve was awarded National Merit finalist and obtained a 4.0 GPA in his Houston high school along with earning other academic honors, DeMouy feels Steve could be up to the challenge if Steve sets his mind to it. At this point, the story really takes off. Steve's journals his current year in high school and his previous three years of high school before arriving to San Diego. But I'm going to let you each find out the meaning behind the title of this book for yourselves so you'll have to read the book, Rats Saw God.


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Review for 266 of Rats Saw God, July 16, 2003
By 
"cordesone" (San Bruno, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rats Saw God (Paperback)
Thomas, Rob. Rats Saw God. New York: Aladdin Paperbacks. 1996. 202p.

Steve, an apathetic, unmotivated, pot-smoking senior is on the verge of flunking English when his guidance counselor offers him a way out - 100 typewritten pages on a topic of choice. By accepting the assignment, Steven begins the journey that will help him put his life back on track, understanding and coming to terms with the people in his life. The author's use of first person narrative allows us to see high school through Steve's eyes and feel the highs and lows of each new emotional experience. The story moves between the present and the past through the writing of the paper. Steve's very real issues of divorce, parent rejection, friendship, first love, first sex, drugs, and many others offer a complex character painfully discovering himself along the way. The author slowly unveils Steve's story and in a subtle way, we begin to see Steve heal. The process of writing his story ("write what you know") forces him to relive the good and the bad experiences of his life in Houston and confront his own mistakes. The book is both funny and sad, light and heavy and Steve is someone that most readers will identify with in some respect. The book does contain graphic descriptions of Steve's sexual experiences. The book is current and will be enjoyed by most young adults. Highly recommended for grades 9-12.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars If I could, I'd give it 10 stars..., August 30, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Rats Saw God (Paperback)
This is one of the best YA books I've ever read. Up til now, I've been very disappointed by the way most writers speak to teens as if they're half-wits. Thomas doesn't bother to condescend... he just gives us a great story that's all at once funny and heartwarming.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Finally a funny, yet real, young adult novel, November 5, 2005
By 
Mary Kay Hoffman (Florence, OR United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rats Saw God (Paperback)
Brilliant and a stoner, eighteen-year-old Steve Young is failing his senior year of high school. A National Merit Finalist and high scorer on the SATs, Steve has been given an ultimatum from his guidance counselor: write a typed one hundred-page essay, or fail English and not graduate. So begins "Roads Scholar", by Steve Young, and a witty, truthful autobiography about Steve's sophomore and junior years in Clear Lake, Texas, a wealthy suburb of Houston. Steve begins his autobiography explaining he lives with his father after his parents divorced, while his sister, Sarah, lives in San Diego with their mother and step-father. Steve and his father, the astronaut, live separate lives barely crossing paths, except for post-it notes and money. Steve gives a bit of background to their relationship, demonstrating his resentment towards his father's occupation and work-a-holism which Steve believes led to his parent's divorce. Steve also resents his father's attitude towards Steve to be the best he can be, living the expected life of an astronaut's son. Consequently, Steve pierced both ears, bought an old El Camino, works at the Cineplex Theaters, and underachieves, especially in sports. Still one of the smartest students at his high school, Grace High School, he and a friend Doug decide to start a new club: GOD, Grace Order of Dadaists. Finding every opportunity to defy conventional high school life, this new club provides new opportunities not only for its unexpected leaders, but its new club members. Steve meets his first love, Dub, a member of GOD, and together they become best friends and lovers.
Through his autobiography, Steve uncovers the joys and struggles of first love, living with a father you are angry with, and trying to balance the life of divorced parents. When Steve wins a writing contest his junior year and asks his English teacher to escort him to the ceremony, Steve's perceptions of love, family and his father begin to unravel, and he experiences his first heartbreak. Ironically, it was his English teacher who told him that in order to become an excellent writer, you have to have your heart broken. Immediately following his junior year, Steve drove to San Diego to live out his senior year, and consequently became a pot-head and academic underachiever.
Intertwining his new life in San Diego as a senior and his autobiography through "Roads Scholar", Steve begins to discover answers to questions about his parent's relationship, realize his expected accomplishment as a college-bound student, and pride in his father's accomplishments.
Finally a young adult novel that tackles serious issues such as divorce, sex, drugs and disappointment with laugh out loud realism. Thomas successfully enters the mind of an uncertain high school male dealing with divorce, separation from mother and sister, and the discovery of love. Providing humorous moments with float contests, club meetings at the local KFC, first dates, and yearbook photos, Thomas carefully unravels the complexities of high school life with genuine opportunities for reflection and healing. While his sincerity is appreciated, his detailed description of Steve and Dub losing their virginity might be a section that warrants scrutiny by an adult/parental audience. Some audience members might be shocked with its detail. Otherwise, suitable for both male and female audiences and an equally enjoyable, entertaining read.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My New Favorite Book, November 23, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Rats Saw God (Paperback)
I have to say, I have read many a teenage angst book, but this is the only one that has left a lasting impression on me. You will not be able to put this book down. It is short and to the point enough to hold attention but well written enough to describe everything in vivid, tear jerking detail. The book is about Steve, an astronaut's son living in California with his mother. he has left behind Houston, a place that pained him. There he found his first kiss (as a sophmore) and ultimately a real relationship, as well as several friends in a club whose purpose is to not have a purpose. He struggles with popularity, drugs, and grades, among other things, to find...whatever he finds. Trust me, it's a short book (I read it in a night) but will have you thinking about it for years.
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