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Worlds Without End Blog

GMRC Review: The Stainless Steel Rat Posted at 11:28 PM by Carl V. Anderson

Carl V.

WWEnd Grand Master Reading ChallengeEditor’s Note: On his blog Stainless Steel Droppings blogger Carl V. Anderson reviews SF/F books and movies, conducts author interviews and even hosts his own reading challenge: The 2012 Science Fiction Experience. What better book for his first Grand Master review than Harry Harrison’s The Stainless Steel Rat?


The Stainless Steel Rat“Here’s to crime.”

James “Slippery Jim” diGriz is a master criminal, a stainless steel rat in the wainscoting of society, a society that is becoming increasingly devoid of crime thanks to the successful efforts of the galaxy’s infamous Special Corps. Cocky and self-assured, diGriz goes about his business with rare aplomb, each caper uniquely different so as to stay one step ahead of what passes for the law on whatever planet he happens to find himself located. When a particularly clever theft goes awry, Slippery Jim finds himself a cornered rat in a maze that lands him in the lap of the dreaded Special Corps.

And to make matters worse, the inmates are running the asylum, for the Special Corps is headed by none other than the most famous criminal mastermind ever: Harold Inskipp, aka Inskipp the Uncatchable. Soon DiGriz is presented with an offer he cannot refuse. As the old adage goes, “if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em”.

At any rate, it is better than having your mind wiped.

The first of Harry Harrison’s popular Stainless Steel Rat series was published in 1961, although portions of the story saw life in Astounding Science Fiction in 1957 and Analog: Science Fact and Fiction in 1960. Slippery Jim DiGriz is the prototypical anti-hero. Skilled in the art of crime and yet highly moralistic in his respect for life, DiGriz is a step nearer the heroic mold in comparison to those protagonists written by Alfred Bester, for example, in The Demolished Man or The Stars My Destination, and he is the precursor for loveable rogues like Han Solo or Malcolm Reynolds. In Jim DiGriz we see some of the vestiges of the chivalry and honor of the 1950’s coupled with the shifting changes in attitude about government that came about in the 1960’s. In addition The Stainless Steel Rat was somewhat prescient in showing a future where the free and casual use of drugs and alcohol was later born out in the late 60’s and in the 1970’s. In fact, The Stainless Steel Rat sits on a very interesting dividing line by including some of the older, now dated ideas that dominated science fiction in the 40’s and 50’s and other ideas about government and crime and the immensity of space that are relevant today.

In James DiGriz’s universe, a bank of psimen was used to send messages telepathically across light years and the future remained filled with a great deal of paper when it came to the wheels of bureaucracy. Computers used punch cards and destinations were laid into starships using course tapes. At the same time Harry Harrison envisioned space as the kind of massive place that even with largely populated galaxies an enormous warship could be impossible to find and envisioned a future in which women were every bit as clever and capable as men. All these things aside, what makes The Stainless Steel Rat a “vintage” novel that remains worth reading today is that it is a fast-paced, witty, fun story with just enough timely twists and turns that it remains satisfying from start to finish.

Grand Master Harry HarrisonSlippery Jim’s schemes are cunning in their planning and execution even when they do not work out entirely as orchestrated and he soon finds out that to be a really good cop in the Special Corps, it pays to keep the criminal skills in good working order. The Stainless Steel Rat is a quick read and I continue to find it absorbing enough that I wouldn’t hesitate to give it to any young boy or girl looking for a rollicking good science fiction adventure, nor to any adult wanting to read something fun with a hint of nostalgia to it. The story never flags, it is paced beautifully, and the dated elements never get in the way of the action.

I fell in love with the world of The Stainless Steel Rat as a pre-adolescent, when Slippery Jim and the lovely Angelina were the kind of characters who excited a young boy’s imagination and stirred his emotions. When I got older and picked up the book to read again I discovered that Harry Harrison did what many try to do and fail–he created an adventure/detective series set in a science fictional universe that has a timeless appeal because it is both smarter and better executed than many novels of the same mold that went before and have come after. Not all of the Stainless Steel Rat books are gems, but the first two especially (The Stainless Steel Rat and The Stainless Steel Rat’s Revenge) form a nice two-part tale that holds up well today from a pure enjoyment factor.

After 3+ decades of being a fan of his adventures, I readily admit to a bias towards (most of) Harry Harrison’s Stainless Steel Rat stories. Yet even in my fanatical devotion, witnessed by the title of my blog, I like to think that I have enough objectivity to see that there is really something here. There is a spark that good older science fiction stories have that keeps them popular to some degree today. Slippery Jim DiGriz will delight you with his escapades and you will walk away with a smile on your face, even if it is a wry smile.

4 Comments

Dave   |   14 Jan 2012 @ 13:01

Thanks for the review. I will definitely add The Stainless Steel Rat to my reading challenge now. It sounds like my cup of tea.

Emil   |   16 Jan 2012 @ 02:59

I’ve always wanted to read the Stainless Steel Rat saga. I can still fondly remember my father’s collection of most of these books, but at the time I was very into the Out of This World’s collections of short stories from Gollancz, very early in my sf reading career. I got stuck into most of the old masters and the Golden Age books and never thought of reading the Rat at the time – I think the book covers in the seventies were not all that appealing. Now, of course, my father’s collection have gone out of this world, and for the life of me I cannot find any of these books locally in SA. This is high on my priority list for future reading, especially after reading Deathworld and Planet of the Damned a short while ago. I like the Harrison voice. There certainly is that spark you refer to and I found both Deathworld and Planet of the Damned better examples of that older sf.

Carl V.   |   17 Jan 2012 @ 22:36

Not all the Stainless Steel Rat books are as enjoyable as the first 4 or 5 books are, but by and large even the lesser novels are fun. I highly recommend anyone who likes a good SF yarn to read The Stainless Steel Rat and The Stainless Steel Rat’s Revenge. They make a nice two-book series and if you aren’t hooked by then (what is wrong with you?!?!..lol!) you won’t like the rest.The Deathworld trilogy is excellent. The first is best but I liked books two and three as well.

Jeremy   |   02 Mar 2012 @ 21:11

Just wanted to add that I listened to the audiobook because of this review. It was great. I was so sad though that I wasted so much of my life having never read it… I already can’t wait to reread it so I can get the actual book experience although the audiobook was so well done it would be tempting to listen to again! Thanks for the great review.

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