The Stainless Steel Rat Omnibus

The Stainless Steel Rat Omnibus

by HarryHarrison (Author)

Synopsis

A stainless steel rat for a stainless steel world ...

Meet Slippy Jim, aka The Stainless Steel Rat, aka James Bolivar DiGritz. A man of many names and many talents ... all of which add up to make one of the greatest con men of all time.

Charming, quick-witted, physically fit, a master of disguise, a skilled liar, an accomplished bank robber and exceptionally talented at breaking and entering, he's everything a master thief should be. He's also about to be caught, turned, and sent back out onto the streets as part of the Special Corps.

Join the adventure in this omnibus edition of the first three Stainless Steel rat adventures: The Stainless Steel Rat, The Stainless Steel Rat's Revenge, and The Stainless Steel Rat Saves the World.

$16.35

Save:$4.95 (23%)

Quantity

2 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 448
Publisher: Gollancz
Published: 20 Nov 2008

ISBN 10: 0575081716
ISBN 13: 9780575081710
Book Overview: Slippery Jim is back in one mega volume of his greatest ever adventures! .

Media Reviews
Fast-moving and very funny -- Evening Standard
The Monty Python of the spaceways -- Daily Telegraph
Truly breathtaking -- Times Literary Supplement
Endlessly inventive and studded end to end with laugh-out-loud hilarity. What Terry Pratchett has done for fantasy, Harry Harrison did resoundingly for SF. His Stainless Steel Rat storms the barricades of po-faced Golden Age SF with laughing gas grenades and rams an explosive charge right up its complacent rock-ribbed arse. -- Richard Morgan
Author Bio
Harry Harrison (1925-2012) Harry Harrison was born Henry Maxwell Dempsey in Connecticut, in 1925. He was the author of a number of much-loved series including the Stainless Steel Rat and Bill the Galactic Hero sequences and the Deathworld Trilogy. He was known as a passionate advocate of Esperanto, the most popular of the constructed international languages, which appears in many of his novels. He published novels for over half a century and was perhaps best known for his seminal novel of overpopulation, Make Room! Make Room!, which was adapted into the cult film Soylent Green.