Stowaway The disreputable exploits of the rat

Joe Shute

Book - 2024

Rats represent the worst of us or at least, that's what we tell ourselves. They are rapacious, over-sexed, pestilent and, on occasion, cannibalistic. But, as with all 'vermin', rats are in fact a mirror species, reflecting back to us our worst excesses. They are also a creature to which we owe a lot. Arguably no other animal has done more for the advance of human medicine than the rat. In Stowaway, Joe Shute unpicks this complex relationship between human and rat, documenting the arrival of the brown rat in the West during the expansion of global trade and how it has pushed our black rat species to the brink. Joe charts its course through history from diaries kept by soldiers in the trenches, to present day where an estimated... 10 million rats are believed to live in Britain alone. As well as tracking rats in the wild and meeting experts to help unpick rat intelligence and social structures, Joe attempts to overcome his own aversion to these often reviled rodents even adopting two pet rats to better understand them. Stowaway is a tale of rat catchers, crumbling buildings and back alleys, taking the reader into a part of the natural world they normally hurry past. It is also a story of the human condition, asking why we deem some animals acceptable and condemn others to the shadows.

Saved in:
1 copy ordered
Subjects
Published
[S.l.] : Bloomsbury Wildlife 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Joe Shute (-)
ISBN
9781399402507
  • Chapter 1. Devil's Lapdog
  • Chapter 2. Rat Tails
  • Chapter 3. Tunnels
  • Chapter 4. Ratopolis
  • Chapter 5. Heroes and Villains
  • Chapter 6. Quarry
  • Chapter 7. Prey
  • Chapter 8. Borders
  • Chapter 9. Fancy
  • Chapter 10. Rat Island
  • Chapter 11. Burrows
  • Acknowledgements
  • Further Reading
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this entrancing report, Daily Telegraph columnist Shute (Forecast) considers humanity's complex relationship with rats. In Paris, Shute reports on a public health project mapping the city's rodent population, which found "the distribution of rats is... very patchy and tightly associated with human activity," with few living in parks because of the presence of such predators as herons and foxes. Rats often serve as scapegoats for human failings, Shute contends, suggesting that Alberta, Canada's pride over having successfully eliminated the rodents distracts from the ways in which the province's oilfields and syringe-littered parks sustain the "environmental destruction... and municipal decay" that killing rats was supposed to solve. Elsewhere, Shute discusses how Britain's National Fancy Rat Society seeks to improve the rodent's reputation by hosting Westminster-esque rat shows, and how a Tanzania-based charity has successfully employed rats to sniff out land mines and identify tuberculosis in saliva samples. The trivia surprises (rat incisors grow continuously, so the animals have to constantly gnaw on things or risk their teeth fatally extending upward into their skull), and Shute emphasizes rats' unheralded capacity for empathy and loyalty in an oddly moving account of how one of his pet rats brought scraps of food to her ailing companion and laid "immobilised by grief" for days after the other rat's death. This will change how readers see the much-maligned animals. (June)

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