Listen up, anthropomorphic kidsâ book nerds. You know who you are: those of you that are re-reading Redwall start to finish for the six thousandth time, referencing Bunnicula, and rehashing the minute differences between Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH and its surprisingly classic movie remake The Secret of NIMH.
Thereâs a new kid in town, and weâve got your exclusive cover reveal here for New York Timeâs Bestselling Author Josh Liebâs Ratscalibur.
The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon producer follows up I Am A Genius of Unspeakable Evil and I Want to Be Your Class President with this ratty reimagining of the King Arthur tale, and it promises to be a hoot. Or whatever sound rats make.
Itâs Ratatouille meets A Kid in King Arthurâs Court. A seventh-grader gets bitten by an elderly rat and finds himself rodent-ized and rodent sized, navigating the city streets and smells from his newfound three inch-high stature. But when he pulls the spork from the scone, he finds himself contending with fulfilling ancient rat prophecy.
âIf you love rats, youâll love the book,â Lieb said. âRats have a kind of freedom that children can aspire to. Theyâre already so low and dirty. They can hide in the walls.â
Lieb liked the idea of an epic quest on a smaller scale, in the tradition of Lord of the Rings or Game of Thrones, but scaled down for rats. âAll this middle grade and YA stuff, itâs all about a normal-ish human boy or girl being plucked and trains to be a specialized assassin or something,â Lieb observed, adding that whatever useless thing there is about him always turns out to be an asset. âLike if the way I cracked my knuckles drove ogres insane,â or something. Thatâs the kind of story he wanted to tell in Ratscalibur.
âThe Sword in the Stone is such a pure version of the âboy plucked from obscurity,ââ Lieb said. With so many sweeping, massive versions of that story for kids to turn to down the line, he felt it would be fun to write a similar quest, but on an introductory level for kids. âSecond-graders are probably reading Lord of the Rings already, but this is a fun reimagining of a story,â he said, for kids and the adults reading it to them.  âI write for kids and emotionally stunted adults equally,â Lieb added, appealing to fantasy fans with a âpastiche of pastichesâ from all their favorite authors. Itâs all in there, from Tolkien to the Pendragons, âall jammed together in rat form.â
Lieb was a latecomer to fantasy fiction, jumping on board in his 20s. âI enjoyed the Arthurian stuff, the stuff that really feels ancient,â he said, referring to everyoneâs favorite medieval legend. âI donât enjoy âfunny fantasy,â that relies heavily on fantasy puns,â Lieb said. âIâm not going to name names, but they know who they are-â those fantasy authors trading exclusively in wizard word play.
Lieb doesnât take such distasteful shortcuts, just tells a great story for kids, adults and rats. âJust a story about a normal boy who turns into an extraordinary rat, which most normal boys probably could.â