"Arresting to read . . . Completely fascinating."
— James Fleming, Spectator
"Superbly illustrated, this is the perfect book for the rat fancier in your life."
— P.D. Smith, Guardian
"Engaging. . . . An excellent example of how cultural history can entertainingly cross borders."
— BBC History Magazine
"Burt's absorbing and highly readable story gnows into the labyrinthine, deep-rotted psychological terror that these tenacious creatures engender."
— Glasgow Herald
"His account of the natural history of the black rat and the brown rat is thorough. . . . The range of geographical and historical detail provided . . . is impressive and necessary. . . Rat is a good account of the many different manifestations of this animal, and a good place to start for those new to critical animal studies."
— Kevin de Ornellas, Times Literary Supplement
“As Burt writes in his excellent book Rat—part of the Reaktion series on animals in culture—our phobia of rats is intimately tied up with our own self-image as humans. We despise rats for the very things we despise in ourselves: their filth, their lust, their disease, their destruction, their pointless, unbounded, never-ending consumption. Their ingenuity. Their hypocrisy—rats make everything else dirty but keep themselves extremely clean. Rats, he argues—not apes—are what humans fear we will devolve into in the event of societal collapse.”
— Richard Godwin, Observer
"A highly useful reference source for the history of rat-human relationships. . . . The book's theme is that the rat mirrors the human: and the book itself, in being the history of that connection, provides a compelling, albeit often disturbing, look into the human mind."
— Anthrozoös
"This book represents an altogether very impressive effort of drawing on examples from the arts, science, religion and folklore of the six continents that rats have colonized. . . . [A] lovely book."
— Animal Welfare
"A fascinating read, even for those a bit squeamish about Rattus."
— British Journal for the History of Science