Stowaway: The Disreputable Exploits of the Rat
By (Author) Joe Shute
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Wildlife
30th July 2024
11th April 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Animals and society
Social and cultural history
599.35
Hardback
272
Width 135mm, Height 216mm
A cultural and social history of the rat, examining how one creature achieved total world domination and has inspired such love and loathing. Rats represent the worst of us or at least, thats 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.
An intelligent and enlightening book Here is a new take on rats, acknowledging the shudder, the revulsion, but enlightening us, asking us to think again. Rats, like it or not, are our neighbours. We need to learn about them, how they live and how to live with them. Read this book and you will never look at a rat the same way again. They are complex like us, intelligent like us. Read this book and youll shudder no more when you see a rat. Thats what Im telling myself anyway. * Michael Morpurgo *
Rats are far from the dirty vermin that we all love to deride; indeed, they are acutely intelligent and thoroughly fascinating. Joe Shute eloquently puts us right about the world's most common rodent and throws in some great facts and theories too. * David Lindo *
Joe Shute is an author and journalist with a passion for the natural world. He writes for The Daily Telegraph and is the newspapers long-standing Weather Watch columnist. He is currently a post-graduate researcher funded by the Leverhulme Unit for the Design of Cities of the Future at Manchester Metropolitan University. His other books include Forecast: A Diary of the Lost Seasons and A Shadow Above: The Fall and Rise of the Raven. He lives in Sheffield with his wife (and rats). @JoeShute