by SamSavage (Author)
Firmin is the runt of a litter of rats born in the basement of Pembroke Books, a ramshackle old bookstore run by the equally shambolic owner Norman Shine. Forced to compete for food, Firmin ends up chewing on the books that surround him. Thanks to his unusual diet, he acquires the miraculous ability to read. He subsequently develops an insatiable hunger for literature and a very unratlike sense of the world and his place in it. He is a debonair soul trapped in a rat's body But a literary rat is a lonely rat and, spurned by his own kind, he thinks he recognises a kindred soul in Norman. Firmin seeks solace in the Lovelies of the local burlesque cinema and in his own imagination. But the days of the bookshop and of the close community around it are numbered. The area has been marked out for urban regeneration and soon the faded glory of the bookshop, the low-life bars, loan agencies and pawn shops will face the bulldozers. Brilliantly original and richly allegorical, Firmin is brimming with charm and wistful longing for a world that treasures its seedy theatres, one-of-a-kind characters, and cluttered bookshops.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 192
Publisher: W&N
Published: 14 Aug 2008
ISBN 10: 0297854585
ISBN 13: 9780297854586
Book Overview: 'Firmin' is one of the most enjoyably surprising books I've read for a long time. It's held together by the character of the narrator himself, a rat of deep humanity and intelligence, and the final impression is one of delicate tragedy. This really is a book like nothing else. PHILIP PULLMAN Ratmania! Number one bestseller in Italy; top ten bestseller in Spain; rights sold in 14 countries Delicious. Firmin is a book that is written for readers, that is, for people who have the book passion and for whom books are as real as anything else in life DONNA LEON A rat's life may be brutish and short, but not necessarily without style. Kirkus Review