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Rat

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Of The Furies, Fernanda Eberstadt’s last novel, Alexandra Jacobs wrote in the New York Observer that it “veers pretty close to genius . . . Eberstadt is an expert, sensual, and at times truly breathtaking conjurer of New York City.” With Rat, Eberstadt has found a new setting she knows well, the South of France, and the story she tells is original, powerful, and heartrending—about a child’s search for a father she has never known.

Rat is fifteen-year-old Celia Bonnet, who lives with her unmarried mother, Vanessa, a free-spirited local beauty, in a farmhouse compound with other single-parent families in the Pyrénées Orientales, a gorgeous but forlorn Mediterranean no-man’s-land just north of the Spanish Catalan border. Rat is the result of a one-night encounter between Vanessa and Gillem, the son of a London model from the 1960s, who used to spend summers in the area and whom Rat has never spoken to or met. But when Vanessa’s current boyfriend starts preying on Morgan, the orphaned nine-year-old who is Rat’s adopted brother, she decides to take Morgan and run away to her father in London. As the novel unfolds, the two children undertake a difficult journey to find the man who might finally explain to Rat who she is and where she belongs.

This is an enthralling novel with a luminous sense of place—both physical and emotional—and, at its core, a bold, engaging young heroine for our times.

304 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2010

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Fernanda Eberstadt

12 books21 followers

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5 stars
49 (22%)
4 stars
84 (39%)
3 stars
73 (33%)
2 stars
6 (2%)
1 star
3 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 31 reviews
Profile Image for stillme.
2,430 reviews7 followers
April 29, 2011
Gorgeous. I loved it from the start, and then wasn't sure I was going to like it closer to the end. Then all of the sudden the last few pages took me by surprise (ideas, not plot) and I loved it again.
Profile Image for Sara.
179 reviews
July 20, 2010
This isn't a book I would usually pick up, but something about it intrigued me so I did grab it. The writing was particularly interesting to me - it was different, but good. I liked how it was modern (in terms of incorporating relatively recent events). The book also gave me an interesting glimpse into the life of a girl who is poor (in terms of money) but rich (in terms of experiences). At times, you feel bad for Rat (or maybe more for her "brother" Morgan) but then you read the next line containing Rat's response, and you don't feel bad for her anymore because SHE doesn't feel bad for herself!
Really great book.
Profile Image for Sophia Lattof.
82 reviews
August 14, 2024
This book was nothing like i anticipated but i'm very happy it didn't have the idyllic ending i thought it'd have! Straddles hopeful and desperately sad and remains mysterious even tho all the information was handed to you in the first chapter. i love it a lot
6 reviews
December 6, 2025
That was a great book. GREAT main character. l love you Rat. You are so strong, so cool, so independent, so you. I want to be like Rat
Profile Image for Jennifer.
60 reviews
May 5, 2011
I can't decide on three stars or four. I really enjoyed it but there was something "off" about the narrative's voice that I didn't like and about halfway through the book a huge "mystery" was revealed that I didn't want to be revealed. It should have all been from Celia's perspective, her story, her adventure. I guess I made up my mind, three stars. Thing is, it was a really good story; interesting and engaging; honest, not all "Hollywood-y" and cliché. It's worth reading; it's probably just my pickiness that got in the way of full enjoyment.
Profile Image for emma morris.
44 reviews1 follower
May 3, 2024
“Somebody irritating, interfering, and infinitely familiar” UGH THIS BOOK. LITTLE RAT.
Profile Image for Lynette.
340 reviews2 followers
March 11, 2016
I had a hard time getting into this book because I could not keep track of the characters. It was hard to tell what was going on at first and to know which people the author meant for me to keep track of because they were going to reappear in the coming pages. It seems like the reader gets dropped into the middle of a movie, so it's hard to know where you are or what precisely is going on. But once I decided I was going to stick with it, I did get it all sorted out and began to care about what happened to Rat, her mother and her brother. Once I got into the meat of the story, there were many details I would love to discuss with other readers, such as talking about Rat's mother and her refusal to believe the truth of what Rat reported to her. Was the main character justified in leaving home? Was the ending satisfactory? Was it plausible? I liked the characters, as far as feeling like they were truly drawn, and I was interested in the plot, but the other elements of Eberstadt's writing were a little harder to pin down. I can't say that any of the writing was impressive as far as the language used by the author. The descriptions of the setting were OK but not outstanding. I had read a review in which the reviewer loved the winds that were described in this novel, so I was expecting to blown away (ha ha) by that detail of the writing, to be more engrossed in the setting, to get a real feel for the place where the events occurred. But I found instead that I was more impressed by the reviewer's fascination than I was by the original text in the book. Anyway, I guess I expected more from this read.
Profile Image for DoctorM.
842 reviews2 followers
January 8, 2011
"Rat" is a lovely little coming-of-age novel by Fernanda Eberstadt, whose "Low Tide" has been a favourite of mine for many a long year. It's not as lovely-sad and evocative as "Low Tide", but it makes a lovely read and is obviously a novel that needs to be filmed.

"Rat" reminds me a bit of "Hideous Kinky"--- the vagabond-hippie mother and the daughter looking for stability. But it's not set in the era of hippies and communes. "Rat" is a post-2001 tale, set in a harsher, darker, more suspicious world. Rat at fifteen grows up watching race riots and drug deals in provincial SW France and knows all about the less pleasant sides of her neighbours. And there at fifteen Rat travels across France to England in search of a father she's never seen, accompanied by her Moroccan stepbrother, a boy she's helping escape the paederastic intentions of her mother's latest Bad Boy boyfriend.

Eberstadt's writing is fluid and spare and incisive and she gives Rat a native intelligence as well as a deep streak of romanticism. "Rat" is a fine little coming-of-age tale (though the coming-of-age is as much her mother's and her father's more than her own) and well worth a read.
Profile Image for Xindi H.
24 reviews5 followers
December 12, 2019
Borrowed this book from the local district library after I went to a reading by the author. It's written in beautiful language and reminds me fondly of how self-righteous and invincible I used to feel as a kid. But I can't help but feel too much is packed onto the pages: illegal immigration, the welfare system, London underground bombing, etc., to the point of excessively intentional. And that's probably why the ending, while qualifying as a somewhat satisfactory resolution, feels a little hasty. Also, I was bored by the long chapters of Rat and Morgan trying but failing to get over the border and almost abandoned the book...
Profile Image for Betsy.
342 reviews
May 18, 2010
What is life like for modern-day teenagers living on the coast in southwest France? Not as idyllic as you might think - as this story about a free-spirited 15-year-old growing up in a commune-like home with a single mum suggests. It's an interesting story - although the writing is a little uneven - about a girl in search of her other self, with her long-lost dad in London. Reminded me a bit of some of the kids I met when visiting my sister during her high school junior year abroad living in a village in southern France.
Profile Image for Tiffany Poremba.
4 reviews3 followers
October 5, 2010
I wanted to like this. Runaway girl in french countryside, looking for her father and wandering around Europe. This is just the stuff I love-- girls on the road, hitchhiking, trouble, drifters-- but this just fell flat. It's decent enough, I didn't toss it across the room or growl like I do at most books I dislike, but the writing is from the point of view of a fairly uninteresting teen, and, well, that sums it up. A story that should be interesting and isn't. Read Valencia or Rose of No Man's Land if you're looking for great-- if rowdy-- coming of age stories.
Profile Image for Lorra.
207 reviews13 followers
November 27, 2011
I LOVED this book - the characters were all vibrant and vivid - the family dynamic was realistic and the story flowed well. Sometimes the writing was a bit awkward but it was infrequent enough to ignore. The runaway journey of Rat and her adopted little brother to London from France to escape their mother's new boyfriend is riveting and delightful. Rat is a spunky and tough character, someone who I definitely would have been friends with as a teenager. The relationship she has with her brother is seriously beautiful to read.
Highly recommended - one of the best novels I've read in a while.
790 reviews
August 18, 2015
A scrappy girl lives in the south of France with her mother, a big-hearted "brocanteuse" who makes a meager living selling used goods in a local market. She grows up with the knowledge that her father was the son of a famous British model, and after she realizes her little brother is endangered by an abusive stepfather, she takes off with him to London to find her father, finding in addition his tolerant wife and, more realistically, his snotty little son. We root for little "Rat" all the way, and hope her mother comes to her senses.
Profile Image for Alicia.
77 reviews
December 17, 2010
Although at first, I thought I wouldn't love this book, it gently drew me in and took me along the journey of a young teenage girl in France. It is a nice take on the classic identity finding story - a young girl who goes on a journey to find her father. I like how the book also brought contemporary France to life and touched on issues of class and society. The author captured the essence of young adolescence and the struggles of poverty without overdramatizing to make a point.
Profile Image for Sally Anne.
601 reviews29 followers
September 9, 2010
I did read it, so that means something. This is a good second draft of a book that would have been a good book rather than an okay one, had she worked on it more. There are a few repetitions of non-essential information and the characters, particularly in the latter half could have used more development. If it is the only thing around to read, maybe give it a shot. Otherwise, move on.
Profile Image for Christina Lazic.
23 reviews1 follower
April 12, 2011
Interesting descriptions of the reality? of the underclass in Mediterranean France. A strong teenage girl with a flaky, needy mother takes responsibility for her unrelated brother and eventually finds some solace in her estranged father and his family. Odd inclusion of riots and London subway bombings, and the ending point is lame.
Profile Image for Jennifer Casey.
57 reviews
January 17, 2012
I was engrossed and read most of the book in one sitting so I could get to the end to see what happens to these interesting characters. I thought the story fell a little flat at the end. I enjoyed the story up until that point, though...loved the look into the Basque bohemian underclass, gypsies, vagabonds, and misfits.
Profile Image for Jill.
39 reviews3 followers
December 4, 2010
Wasn't really expecting to like this one much and was pleasantly surprised by how engrossing the story became and that I didn't want to put it down close to the end. I've tried some of her other books to no avail but this one hit a chord with me.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
23 reviews
April 15, 2011
Interesting setting to the story, Pyrenees-Orientales, which made me want to visit there. The main character, Rat, seemed mature and smarter than the adults. Her mother was useless and the father was clueless. Kept my interest.
Profile Image for Jasmine Smith.
32 reviews1 follower
January 15, 2016
This book stuck out on a shelf at my local library and I was immediately drawn to it's title, a namesake we use in our family. A book with a modern Cinderella twist. Eberstadt is a beautiful storyteller and easily engrossed me as the reader.
Profile Image for Terri.
22 reviews
April 14, 2010
Quick, though somewhat unbelievable story... or at least I hope so. Loved the backdrop of the southwest of France and mentions of the Basque Country. Thanks Allison!!
Profile Image for Kathidfsmc.
662 reviews1 follower
July 20, 2010
This was just an average book. Would not recommend it although it did hold my interest.
Profile Image for Audrey.
25 reviews1 follower
July 23, 2010
I really enjoyed this book with its scrappy self-sufficient characters.
Profile Image for Paul Secor.
649 reviews110 followers
July 7, 2011
I've read four of Fernanda Eberstadt's novels and have enjoyed them all. That said, I have no desire to reread any of them. Take that comment for what you will.
Profile Image for Tracy.
1 review2 followers
November 6, 2011
Loved - could have kept reading for the next month!
Profile Image for Laura .
168 reviews
March 3, 2013
Finally. It has been a long time since I've read something really good.
Profile Image for Michelle.
378 reviews
March 13, 2015
I really liked this book. The characters were real and the circumstances believable. Read this for book club and enjoyed it. Great pick.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 31 reviews

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