Dyson's Review of Spacer and Rat
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Title: Spacer and Rat Author: Margaret Bechard Ages: YA Format: hardback Pages: 183 Publisher: Roaring Brook
Press Date: 2005 Retail Price: $16.95 ISBN: 1-59643-058-3 Reviewed by: Marianne Dyson,
October, 2007 Spacer
and Rat offers an engaging story of two young people, a boy born on Freedom
Station in the asteroid belt, and an illegal immigrant girl from Earth. The
spacer is Jack, an apprentice in food service at a restaurant/bar. He’s looking
forward to his last Perihelion party with friends before taking a new job on The
rat is Kit, a teen girl whose father died on the trip from Earth to Freedom
station. Determined to continue her father’s mission to deliver a special ‘bot
to a far-flung station, she must hide from security and steal to eat. She takes
some stolen goods to trade with Jack for food. A
“tinhead” named Silver offers to pay Jack for information about some baggage missing
from the Bradbury—the ship that Kit
arrived on. During the Perihelion party, Jack’s friends ask him to join in
chasing a rat—Kit. Instead, he leads Kit to safety, and discovers that the
baggage he was tracking is in her possession—and dangerous. Together, they
hatch a plan to get Kit and her contraband off the station in the midst of the
chaos of Perihelion celebrations. The
author does an impressive job of creating a fictional world complete with holidays,
music, slang, and expressions, and that’s a “true fact.” The background to the
story reveals a human population spread throughout the solar system. Jack is
one of the lucky ones, born in space where power and resources are more
abundant. The economy and government are run by “the company” that assigns children
to their vocation based on aptitude tests. With more people than jobs, and
continuing violence among human sects, robots and computers are carefully
monitored and restricted to maintenance functions, providing an interesting
twist on the future of artificial intelligence and the human interface. I
have rarely felt so immersed in a new environment. After reading this book, I
can’t wait to attend my first Perihelion parade, watch a space-adapted version
of Shakespeare, play some freefall games, see the constellations through the
floor of the chapel, and take a ride on a space scooter. It would be “stellar!”
Spacer and Rat is marketed
for young adults. Though the book contains no sex, violence, cursing, or adult
situations, the reading level, because of the terms and jargon, may be too high
for upper-elementary readers, but not by much. The story comes to a satisfying
conclusion, but there is room for a sequel, and I do hope there will be one! I
highly recommend this book to anyone wanting to visit a space colony. I
give this book 6 points, my top rating! |