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3.5 

Rat Rule 79

By Rivka Galchen & Elena Megalos
Rat Rule 79 by Rivka Galchen & Elena Megalos digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

“Rivka Galchen delivers joy and cleverness reminiscent of The Phantom Tollbooth, Alice in Wonderland, and Hayao Miyazaki movies” (NPR, Best Books of 2019) in Rat Rule 79, a brain-twisting adventure story about friendship, growing up, and peanut-butter-pickle sandwiches.

Fred and her math-teacher mom are always on the move, and Fred is getting sick of it. She’s about to have yet another birthday in a new place without friends. On the eve of turning thirteen, Fred sees something strange in the living room: her mother, dressed for a party, standing in front of an enormous paper lantern—which she steps into and disappears.

Fred follows her and finds herself in the Land of Impossibility—a loopily illogical place where time has been outlawed by a mad Rat Queen, along with birthday parties and, most cruelly, peanut butter. Fred meets Downer, a downcast white elephant, and Gogo, a pugnacious mongoose mother of seventeen, who help her in her quest to find her mom. Together they must brave dungeons, Insult Fish, a Know-It-Owl, Fearsome Ferlings, and ultimately the Rat Queen herself—and solve an ageless riddle to escape certain doom.

Gorgeously illustrated and reminiscent of The Phantom Tollbooth and The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Rivka Galchen’s Rat Rule 79 is an instant classic for curious readers of all ages.

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Rat Rule 79 Reviews

3.5
“Very weird book.”
“As a Child, my favorite types of stories were imaginative, creative and adventurous. Books like the Wizard of Oz by Frank L. Baum, Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll, and The Pagemaster by David Kirschner. Rat Rule 79 is a book I would've devoured as a child and reread each year. Oh heck, let me be honest this is still my favorite type of book. When an author builds a world that, like the Wizard of Oz, travels from real to imaginative you don't fall in accidentally, you willingly jump into the well, or in this case, walk through the paper lantern. This book is about a girl named Fred who has moved too many times due to her mother being a mathematical professor. She is fed up with moving and being unsettled. No matter where she moves to at least, she has her "Unwritten Rulebook for Living's Truly Great Meals in Life": Peanut Butter and Pickles on Raisin bread sandwiches, and takeout Lo Mein Noodles. The latter for noodles being "ultra-scrumptious" but also because they came with fortune cookies. Fred and mom open their fortune cookies holding the strangest fortunes. One read "THANK YOU FOR GETTING ME OUT OF THERE!" and the other read, "LIFE IS TWO LOCKED BOXES, EACH CONTAINING THE OTHER'S KEY." Those fortune cookies according to Fred shows how pathetic the town is that they moved to. After much discussion about Fred's birthday the next day. Her mom suggests after going to school for a while maybe they could have a party for Fred. Fred tells her she wants nothing to do with her birthday, nor a party ever. Fred's mom tells her that after a night of sleep things will be better. Fred thinks that nothing can be solved by sleep as it is a whole bunch of nothingness. This is one of the "Two Most Useless Solutions" in her "Unwritten Rulebook for Living". The other useless solution is "knowing that you are loved." Fred says that she isn't tired and that her mom is ignoring the elephant in the room. She basically has nothing in her life and doesn't know anyone. Fred furies into her room. This is where the adventures start! Rat Rule 79 has the greatest random chapter headings. Chapter names like Chapter Red, Negative Numbers, and A Normal Chapter. There are four colors ribboned throughout this book. There is a comforting fabric pattern that threads through the adventure keeping Fred tethered to home and again like the Wizard of Oz, there is a desired to find the one thing that returns her to where she belongs. Fred makes friends along the way who are full of character. They are well developed -- some lovable and others you want to hate. Each character has a place in Rat Rule 79 and none make you wonder why they even exist. As in Alice in Wonderland the world that Fred enters is filled with irrationality, silliness, curiosity, and oddities that help Fred along the way. Rat Rule 79 is truly a love story between mother and daughter and the journey it takes to come back to each other. I had deep reactions to this book as a mother whose children are now all out of the house and the rules that The Rat implements, although unfair to children and those who live a life filled with joyful fun, makes a whole heck of a lot of sense when reading it as an adult. Elena Megalos' illustrations are fresh, riveting, and happy. Jewish Canadian- American author, Rivka Galchen's debut novel for children will go down in history as one of those books that you fall in love with, and can't help but recommend to your family, friends and children around you. Like my copy of Rat Rule 79, I truly believe that other People’s copies (whether old or young) of this book will be worn in and worn out. Rat Rule 79 will be considered a classic decades from now. I, myself, have bought three hardcover copies (although I already own a soft-cover given to me by publisher Restless Books for my honest review) just so I can send one to each of my sister's families to read either by each child or by their family as a whole”

About Rivka Galchen

Rivka Galchen is an award winning fiction writer and journalist who loves noodles and numbers and modest-sized towns where her dad might have worked. Her work appears often in The New Yorker, Harper’s, The London Review of Books and The New York Times. She is the author of three books: Atmospheric Disturbances (Novel, FSG, 2008), American Innovations (Short Stories, FSG 2014) and Little Labors (Essays, New Directions, 2016). She has received numerous prizes and fellowships, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Rona Jaffe Fellowship, The Berlin Prize and The William J Saroyan International Prize in Fiction. In 2010, she was named to The New Yorker’s list of 20 Writers Under 40. Galchen also holds an MD from Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Rat Rule 79 is her first book for young readers.

Elena Megalos

Elena Megalos was raised in the City of Angels. When she was twelve-going-on-thirteen she dreamed of writing the cookie fortunes for her beloved neighborhood Chinese restaurant, The Unicorn. That, or illustrating a book for children. This is her first one. See more work at elenamegalos.com.

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