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Ratz Are Nice (PSP): A Novel
 
 
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Ratz Are Nice (PSP): A Novel [Paperback]

Lawrence Ytzhak Braithwaite (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 1, 2000
The Way Things AreOr Are Ratz Nice?
a conversation with author Lawrence Ytzhak Braithwaite

Let's start with the title. Ratz are Nice. What the hell?
Rats survive and adapt; they run together in the lower parts where nobody wants to go, eat what nobody else wants to eat. Like the poor and lower classes, like Edison and the other characters in the book. Since that's the way things are, I say rats are nice.

Your first book, Wigger, was about co-opting someone else's culture, but the characters in Ratz seem more directed toward their own.
Ratz starts the way Wigger did. But this time Edison is deciding on stuff about his life with the "Dumbdumz." He realizes you can be a part of something without it stealing parts of yourself to be there. So it's about kids deciding to make this decision in life. They want to make that adult decision, right or wrong, and deal with the consequences.

Tell us about the world your characters inhabit.
We are in another failed "Reconstruction Period." There was the Civil War and the exploitation and lost hope of civility and equality. Then we had the overhyped civil rights movement followed by the big '80s Pomo divisive cultural revolution. The people in Ratz are the bastard children of all this. The have-nots are the only ones who've never gotten a voice, and everyone keeps saying they're speaking for them. What else could we get from the kids who grew up during this period, but them running a power move on things?

Some of them are pretty evil in a lot of ways.
I do think there is evil out there. They say that Victoria is the occult capital of North America, that it's the center of the pentagram and that there are places here which are right on the crossroads. You can call up evil or goodness in the middle of a crossroads. I think people have called up some wickedness. It's the underlying theme in the novel. The "Dumbdumz" reflect that. How distorted and twisted they have become. Edison knows that we don't have a "Buffy" to slay baddies nor do we have "Hellboy" or a John Constantine. Todd McFarlane is from around here. He created Spawn to fight that stuff but really it's up to an in


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This Victoria, British Columbia, author's second novel is one of the riskiest books yet from Alyson, publisher of cutting-edge gay titles. (His excellent debut, Wiggers, appeared in Canada in 1994 and, unfortunately, received almost no critical notice.) It is difficult to read, with typographical symbols and codes, forward slashes, idiosyncratic spelling, acronyms and self-invented slang meant broadly to indicate the radical and transgressive nature of the voice serving up the narrative: "Wot'z Sparker'z subjet: Killer//ras enuff to be on that tree of life of hiz n hiz familiez', buddiez absorb'n light." The unconventional text follows several mods, skinheads, hardcore punks and other socially dissonant young men on the streets of Victoria. Sex is a connective tissue among them all, and--amid the drugs, drink, slam dancing and violence--there are even quixotic expressions of tenderness and love. Neo-Nazis mix dangerously with racially mixed punk scenesters; the protagonist, Edison, is a black skinhead. Edison describes the rivalry between two gangs that form the core of the culture called PSP (Pure Street Punk). These guys aren't straight, but neither are they gay, and their edgy sexual mutability underscores their daily lives in the musical, social and emotional zones of PSP. Fearlessly experimental and antiestablishment, Braithwaite's story is too disjointed for clarity; the lives of the punk boys get tangled up in a knot rather than interconnect expressively. This is a tough read, but hardcore, punk rock kids and souls sympathetic to the down-and-dirty street lifestyle may recognize something meaningful in all the distortion. Regional author appearances. (May)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

"Ratz Are Nice (PSP) is incredibly good. Lawrence Braithwaite's writing is so original, gorgeous, propulsive, and alive that it almost seems to reinvent fiction before your eyes. Novels just don't get any more exciting than this one. It gave me hope."

-- Dennis Cooper, Author of Closer, Frisk, Try and Guide

"[Braithwaite] has not only been in the Pit, he's still in there. Armed with a thorough knowledge of his subject, [Braithwaite] makes other youth cult fiction writers look like the posers they are. Makes me want to turn up the Hardcore, get in the Pit and kick some Nazi scumbag ass. Sex, Drugs, Punk, and Guns, what more could a reader want?"

-- Craig O'Hara, author of Philosophy of Punk: More than Noise!


Product Details

  • Paperback: 152 pages
  • Publisher: Alyson Books; 1st edition (May 1, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1555835546
  • ISBN-13: 978-1555835545
  • Product Dimensions: 7.7 x 5.1 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,475,498 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Ratz Are Nice (PCP) Is Pure Garbage, April 5, 2004
By 
O. Nails "onails" (Brooklyn, NY United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Ratz Are Nice (PSP): A Novel (Paperback)
I started reading "Ratz Are Nice (PCP)" with an open mind right after finishing a great novel entitled "American Skin." That was my biggest mistake. Whereas Don De Grazia's "American Skin" was a cohesive, inventive narrative revolving around finely developed and believable characters within an admittably "fringe" subculture, "Ratz Are Nice" immediately climbs uphill with a narrative style that is incomprehensible, gimmicky and just plain boring. Quite frankly, Braithwaite's writing here is pure gibberish. Often it wasn't even clear to me who was who or why certain "characters" (for lack of a better word) were included in his story at all. The best three things about "Ratz Are Nice (PCP)" are (i) the front cover photo of a group of interacial skins and streetpunks, (ii) the entertaining (although sometimes inaccurate) "Author Notes" and (iii) the fact that the thing is short. Avoid at ALL costs!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Robert "Nerve" Miller, May 18, 2001
By 
This review is from: Ratz Are Nice (PSP): A Novel (Paperback)
In Ratz are Nice (PSP) Braithwaite exposes a generally little known and entirely misunderstood culture existing not in London or Toronto but in Victoria, B.C. Until now best known as the land of the newly wed and nearly dead, one feels as though a rock has been overturned in the pristine rain forest; underneath, a seething, alarming and complex world draws one downward for a closer look, triggering feelings which range from dismay to utter fascination.

Ratz are nice(PSP) is an intelligent, wild and at times unbelievable commentary on sub-society deserving of attention and understanding. Cheers to Braithwaite for taking on such a monumental project and for completing it.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lost Leader, August 15, 2008
By 
Kevin Killian (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Ratz Are Nice (PSP): A Novel (Paperback)
I've been in distress ever since hearing abut the death of Lawrence Braithwaite last month. Here's what I wrote way back when, in 2000, before Amazon allowed me to be myself and I was just "A customer." Or maybe I hid my own identity since, at the time, I had written one of the blurbs on the book and maybe I wanted it to seem as though his fans were pouring out in multitude. But anyhow I stand by my words,

RATZ ARE NICE (PSP) = THE NOVEL OF THE YEAR

Once you've got your mind around "Wigger," the previous novel by Lawrence Y. Braithwaite, you're spoiled for other books, other writers. That's how good he is. Now the new book is one I've been looking forward to for a long time, and it's finally here. Warning! The book contains some scenes of extreme violence and brutality, and it's not for everyone. That said, I don't hesitate to recommend it to everyone. Braithwaite's got a magic touch when it comes to telling a story, and gets so deeply into the minds of his tormented characters you feel you are slipping directly into their skins. Some people like to pigeonhole Braithwaite into a convenient niche: "he's a gay writer," "he's a black writer," "he's a punk writer," but on the evidence of WIGGER and RATZ ARE NICE that doesn't make much sense. Think of him instead as a grand novelist with the sweep and techincal bravura of Faulkner, Toni Morrison, Gunter Grass, the Joyce of "Dubliners," or someone like Don DeLillo. That's how good he is. Rarely have I read a modern novel with as much depth perception as RATZ ARE NICE. At first it's a bit confusing, but happily Braithwaite has provided a glossary of unfamiliar terms at the back of the book that helps to ground the reader (and all by itself it's a marvelous document, funny and ironic and touching by turns). He comes armed with madness! Get on the bandwagon, it's Braithwaite's world and we just rent space on his far corners!
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