Rats Saw God

Rats Saw God  
Author(s) Rob Thomas
Cover artist Chris Raschka
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Young adult novel
Publisher Simon & Schuster
Publication date 1996
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 202
ISBN 0-689-80777-5
OCLC Number 34925126

Rats Saw God is a young adult novel written by Rob Thomas, published in 1996. It follows the main character Steve York, the son of an astronaut. Steve is a high school student who has had issues with marijuana and has found himself in the counselors office. The counselor tells him that he is flunking and if he wants to graduate he must write a 100 page paper about anything. Steve is reluctant to do so, at first, but eventually relents and begins the tale about the divorce of his parents, his prickly relationship with his father, and his first real relationship with a girl nicknamed Dub. Told in parallel timelines and bouncing back and forth from his senior year to his sophomore year, through writing the book Steve eventually comes to see his father as he'd never seen him before and understands that many of the things that he thought were true were completely wrong.

Contents

Characters

Structure

The story takes place over the four years of Steve is in high school. The narrative is interlaced between his senior year in San Diego, California and flashbacks his freshman to junior years in Houston, Texas. The time described in Houston is supposedly the 100 page essay written by Steve as his extra English class necessary for graduation. To set off the different parts of the story his time in Houston is presented in Gill Sans sans-serif typeface while his time in San Diego is shown in Industria.

Title

The novel’s title originates from a student group in the novel, the Grace Order of Dadaists, abbreviated to GOD, which used American Sign Language in their yearbook photo to spell out the phrase “Dog Was Star”, which reversed creates the anagram “Rats Saw God.” Rob Thomas later created the series Veronica Mars and called a season 2 episode “Rat Saw God” after the book.

Awards

An ALA Best Book for Young Adults (1997) [1]

References