Troublesome Rat and goody Angel
"First grade babies! Second grade cats! Third grade angels! Fourth grade rats!" Splendid, funny, believable, Fourth grade rat by Jerry Spinelli leaves you wanting more. The author makes the book flow because of the themes of the book, descriptions of the characters unique personality, and their thoughts.
The theme, peer pressure, from the book Fourth grade rats, happens a lot to Suds. Suds, the main character, just want to be a third grader again so that he can stay an angel. But Joey is proud to be a rat. Tired and Angry, Joey teaches Suds to be a rat, impatiently. He has been really stressed out of being a rat because of overcoming his fear of everything. To me being a rat seems to be like a gangster. Being a rat to Suds seems to be the hardest thing to do since he doesn’t have the right fit of a rat. Joey has been training him by doing things that rats are suppose to do as well like not being afraid of spiders, don’t cry like baby, and etc. If I am a rat I wouldn’t try to change myself to act like one because I am who I am and people can’t change me by peer pressure.
Jerry Spinelli has a good description on his characters in his book. The character, Suds is like a goody, sweet person inside and outside of school. Joey is like the opposite of Suds, which he acts poorly outside and inside of school like a rat. By acting poorly, Joey has been bullying other smaller kids and talks back to his mom. The way the characters act expresses there feeling and what they think inside. Even though both have different characteristic they can still be friends.
The author also shows unique thoughts of the character. In the book Suds have been telling his emotions every time since the beginning of the book and the end. The thought of the character helps us understand what the character wants to do and feel. It helps me understand what the main idea of the book is. Suds from the beginning want to stay as an angel and Joey wish he was a rat forever. In the book Suds expresses his feeling by saying that he can’t be a rat for the things he is afraid of.
Fourth Grade Rat is like a teen problem because everyone in that age once acts somewhat like a rat and an angel. It also shows two different ways of acting/personality can still be friends with each other. This book has taught me that if you are told that you are suppose to be acting this way, you don’t have to listen, and just follow your own thought.