[go: nahoru, domu]

Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Stainless Steel Rat #7

The Stainless Steel Rat Wants You!

Rate this book
After saving the world, diGriz is called on to save the universe. Liberating his two, now teenage, twin' sons from a military boarding school and penitentiary, diGriz sets out to free his wife, who has been arrested by the tax men. But the family is soon fighting an enemy of a different sort, when the humans-only galaxy of the League is invaded by all manner of hideous aliens. The Rat, disguised in the most hideous combination of alien physical features, is sent into the centre of the aliens' stronghold, where he finds himself the object of desire among the aliens. His task is to stop the aliens, who plan to wipe out every human in the universe.

191 pages, Hardcover

First published September 4, 1978

Loading interface...
Loading interface...

About the author

Harry Harrison

1,164 books1,000 followers
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.

Harry Harrison (born Henry Maxwell Dempsey) was an American science fiction author best known for his character the The Stainless Steel Rat and the novel Make Room! Make Room! (1966), the basis for the film Soylent Green (1973). He was also (with Brian W. Aldiss) co-president of the Birmingham Science Fiction Group.

Excerpted from Wikipedia.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
2,166 (31%)
4 stars
2,666 (38%)
3 stars
1,806 (26%)
2 stars
247 (3%)
1 star
47 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 98 reviews
Profile Image for Paul.
2,224 reviews20 followers
October 10, 2020
Starship Troopers gets the Spaceballs treatment in this book, which is indubitably the silliest entry in the chronicles of Slippery Jim DiGriz (so far, anyway).

The eponymous Rat finds himself once more having to save the galaxy, this time from a rampaging horde of slimy, non-humanoid aliens... but is there more to their homicidal hatred of humanity than meets the eye? Of course there is... and Jim is just the guy to get to the bottom of it. Clad in a mechanical alien costume with his robotically disguised son by his side, Jim sets out to do just that.

Highly enjoyable if you don’t mind some silliness. Recommended for fans of Lone Starr and Barf.
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 5 books4,524 followers
March 17, 2021
On my furious re-read of the Stainless Steel Rat, this particular entry happens to be my personal favorite -- so far.

Alien invasion!

It works much better when you're working with a master thief in a rubber suit. Believe me. And then there are the Morality people. And J. Hova. :)

I'm totally rolling my eyes throughout this light read and loving every second.

Why?

Because it's CHARMING. James's wife and two precocious children are so naughty. But James himself? Nothing can keep a good Stainless Steel Rat down.

Profile Image for Juho Pohjalainen.
Author 5 books345 followers
June 1, 2020
This series was never the epitome of sanity and serious literature, but even then this one's several magnitudes more insane than those so far. Jim's kids are now grown-up - and Jim himself has a nice 'stache, according to the cover - and they all go out together to fight first taxmen and then aliens. Hideous, smelly, revelling-in-their-ugliness aliens. And then the greys, those assholes.

There's time travel and dimension hopping before we're through, several obstructive bureaucracies on both counts, as well as - the real crazy part - halfway profound notions on morality and goodness. And more still. It's good stuff as all of them are.
Profile Image for Martin Doychinov.
533 reviews33 followers
September 2, 2021
Човешката раса е нападната от съюз от извънземни и бързо започва да губи войната. Добре, че Хлъзгавия Джим, Анджелина и порастналите деца, наследили най-доброто и най-лошото от родителите си, са тук, за да спасят света!
Доста добро, тайнствените сиви престават да са енигма за човечеството, а макар и развръзката да е малко предобрена, книжката е по-добра от предипните 2-3.
Това е и последната преведена на майчин език книга, 100% това няма да се промени, така че четирите останали ще трябва да се четат на ингилизки :)
Разбира се, читателят получава това, което очаква - неангажираща и забавна фантастика.
4,5*
Profile Image for Wanda Pedersen.
2,090 reviews447 followers
January 12, 2015
I started this book this week because I had the post-Xmas-vacation blues really badly and needed something to make me smile. There was more than enough silliness in this book to achieve my aim.

Just like in War of the Worlds, Earth is being menaced by cephalopods of all shapes, sizes and degrees of sliminess. James Bolivar DiGriz (Slippery Jim, the Stainless Steel Rat) is called upon by the Special Corps once again to save the universe! First he has to break his sons out of jail, rescue his wife from the taxman and build himself his own slimy disguise to become "Sleepery Jeem."

There are LOTS of bad jokes, like aliens named Sess-pul. The aliens, it turns out, speak many different languages, but have settled on Esperanto to communicate amongst themselves and Jim of course knows Esperanto. Things get complicated when the Moralty Corps shows up and put the kibosh on several of Jim's slippery plans. Some very irreverent antics ensue!

I probably read this too soon after The Stainless Steel Rat Saves the World, and I think Harrison was running out of good ideas at this point, so I didn't find it quite as much fun as previous books. But it still helped me lift a very grumpy mood,
Profile Image for Thom.
1,686 reviews67 followers
May 11, 2017
The fourth book originally published in the Stainless Steel Rat series, this one has plenty of humor and a plot that bounces around a bit.

Angela is kidnapped by the galactic IRS, then rescued by the Rat and their sons, James and Bolivar. Then Slippery Jim is waylaid into finding out why a satellite full of admirals disappeared, and uses time travel (again) to help. This takes our heroes across the galaxy and eventually to the home world of the evil Gray Men, Kekkonshiki. Whew!

In this tale we consider Moral Philosophy, male chauvinism, parallel dimensions and three overarching control groups (the IRS, the Morality Police and the Time Cops). Most characters are fairly flat, and while the story isn't predictable, it is pretty quick. The time travel gimmick is now officially overused, and I hope that the sole responsible scientist manages to escape for a long vacation. I prefer my capers to stay local and current.

Did Harrison have an agenda with the Japanese connections in this book? If so, it wasn't obvious to me.

Worth reading, but not quite as good as the previous book. 3½ stars.
Profile Image for Ray.
303 reviews21 followers
March 9, 2022
Liberating his two twin sons -- now teenagers thanks to the time war from the previous book -- from a military boarding school/penitentiary, diGriz sets out to rescue his wife, who has been kidnapped by (gasp) tax men!

This diversion is soon played out as a more serious threat to humanity and the entire galaxy emerges in the form of a league of hideous aliens who find humans too repulsive to be tolerated. Slippery Jim goes undercover as a mutant T-rex and uncovers a more sinister enemy embedded within the allied aliens.

This one is a ton of fun. A bit silly, sure, but if you haven't made your peace with that yet why are you still reading SSR books? For my money, BTW, this is book FOUR [4], not seven. Goodreads, for some reason, is numbering them by fictional chronology rather than publication order. The swirl of endings (yes, plural) will definitely keep your head spinning.
Profile Image for Newly Wardell.
474 reviews
February 2, 2019
This is my first of the this serial and it's okay. It has some humor and it retains a roguish charm even though it's kinda missing a rogue. Love the bad guys tho. Super emotionless with hearts as cold as the planet they were abandoned on.
Profile Image for Timothy Boyd.
6,942 reviews47 followers
February 1, 2019
Another in the stainless steel rat books. They are all quick reads with alot of humor in them. The stories remain fresh and new. Very recommended, especially to teen readers or someone new to SiFi
972 reviews4 followers
January 19, 2023
After ‘Slippery’ Jim diGriz’s beautiful and dangerous wife Angelina is kidnapped by the Interstellar Revenue people (the taxmen), he is forced to seek aid from Inskipp, head of Special Corps. Once there Jim finds that the Universe has bigger problems than unpaid taxes, as a shipload of admirals has vanished, and after using Professor Coypu’s time-helix, the SSR (Stainless Steel Rat) uncovers an imminent invasion by a conglomerate of the galaxy’s most loathsome, icky, slimy and tentacled intelligent species. Disguised as one of them, Jim infiltrates the cabal and finds to his dismay that it is being run by other disguised humans, the dour and evil gray men. Captured and transported to the freezing home planet of the gray men, it is up to Jim to once again save the galaxy and perhaps cure the gray men of their plans for conquest once and for all. Ok…you know the drill here. Jim wins after some farcical romps from Harry Harrison. Good for an afternoon’s light entertainment. :)
Profile Image for deilann.
183 reviews24 followers
July 12, 2015
Originally posted on SpecFic Junkie.

If you've read any of my other Stainless Steel Rat reviews, you'll know the drill: this is larger-than-life, over-the-top pure skiffy goodness that's a self-aware parody of Golden Age Science Fiction. Needless to say, though, they have their problems. This one is one of the more problematic books in the series due to the way it's handled, however, it didn't ruin the enjoyment... at least for me.

When I say it's over-the-top, I'm talking dialogue that's way too witty and always sets up the next line. I'm talking how no one gets in a jam unless they've got some amazing way to get themselves out of it. The protag isn't pure, but he's a gentleman who's really just a criminal because he's bored and it's good for the economy.

But Harry Harrison seems perfectly aware of what he's doing. It's more of a parody of the books written like this that take themselves oh so seriously. No, he doesn't attempt to justify anything with impressive sciency sounding technobabble. Everything's named something completely ridiculous and has no explanation whatsoever.

I mean, they all speak Esperanto, for god's sake.

The problematic issues of Golden Age SciFi come up too, but for the most part, Harry Harrison seems to recognize this. Frex, with sexism, which comes up the most, he at least attempts to subvert it or cross the line twice. He's trying to show how ridiculous these tropes are. Now he doesn't always succeed, but it at least feels like he tried.

However, he really, really misses the mark in this one. And to explain, I'll need to spoil a bit, so if you want to read this without spoilers, just know that there's some weird racism in it. Otherwise, read on:

The premise of The Stainless Steel Rat Wants You! is that terribly ugly, gross, disgusting aliens have discovered humans... and they think we're just as nausea inducing, without dry skin and lack of eye-stalks. And the natural response here is, of course, to try and destroy us.

Although, no, that's not really what's happening. The Grey Men that we've run into before are really the masterminds behind this operation. This time, we get to learn a lot more about them.

Now, I really didn't pick up on the weird racism involved with the Grey Men as a kid, probably because well, it's subtle. But it's not addressed at all. We find out that their race have, as a survival method on a bleak and barren planet, eliminated emotion for the most part. They have a code of "moral philosophy" that teaches them that this makes them superior. Hence, they are trying to destroy all other human civilizations because they are weak and unfit.

Basically, they're Daleks.

But what makes this problematic? All of them have Japanese names. Because, you know, the Japanese are cold, authority-driven, and have a huge superiority complex.

Now, I think Harry Harrison might have attempted to subvert this a little because the grey men end up being the key to the human race's salvation (but of course they are the ones who set up said destruction) but it ends up being a white savior plot. They themselves are too unimaginative to see what they could do to fix it. The Stainless Steel Rat (actually, his wife) has to point it out.

And it just felt icky because it was sitting there without Harry Harrison poking fun at it.

At least there's a lot of fun with shadowy groups that are even higher up the food chain than the Special Corps who show up and do some really silly, lovely things that made me laugh aloud.

So, even though the book was honestly enjoyable on the surface and it was a hella fun ride, it's really only three stars instead of four. And if I'm going to be entirely honest with myself, it's probably the nostalgia glasses bumping it up from two.

However, next is The Stainless Steel Rat for President, which is already waiting for me at the library...
Profile Image for Kat  Hooper.
1,588 reviews413 followers
January 6, 2011
ORIGINALLY POSTED AT Fantasy Literature.

I’ve been enjoying Harry Harrison’s Stainless Steel Rat series, especially the superb audio versions produced by Brilliance Audio. Slippery Jim DiGriz is a con artist who’s been forced to work undercover for the Special Corps, an intergalactic investigating agency. Each of these short novels starts with him (and now his family, too) hiding out from the Special Corps and living it up on other taxpayers’ money. Each time, the Special Corps traps him and sends him off on a fast-paced, dangerous mission that usually involves saving the galaxy in some way.

This time aliens are invading, so Slippery Jim, with the help of his beautiful and deadly wife and their delinquent teenage twins, infiltrates their lair by disguising himself as an alien who wants to join their army. How could he possibly know that his alien costume is so sexy that he’ll have to fight off male suitors while he’s trying to save the galaxy?

The Stainless Steel Rat Wants You is another entertaining offering from Harry Harrison and narrator Phil Gigante. It was fun to see Jim and Angelina’s twins grown up and following the family traditions. Unfortunately, this story relies on some of the same plot elements that we’ve seen before — it seems fairly simple to save the world when your enemies are all brainwashed by outdated moral philosophies, you’ve got a time machine on hand, and the laws of physics bend at your will.

Still, if you’re willing to overlook all that, then these stories are definitely entertaining, especially with Phil Gigante reading them.
Profile Image for Carl V. .
94 reviews21 followers
January 4, 2015
James Bolivar diGriz, alias “Slippery Jim” is no longer a stainless steel rat in the wainscoting of society…well, at least he is no longer solely a stainless steel rat. Though his thieving ways are not yet behind him, Jim diGriz is firmly entrenched as the top agent in the Special Corps, that feared branch of the law headed by the most notorious criminal of all time, Harold P. Inskipp.

When his wife is kidnapped by the revenue service out of their current home on the planet Blodgett, Slippery Jim leaps into action, gathering up his two teenage sons from their military boarding school (and penitentiary) to spring mom and wreak havoc on the tax bureau at the same time. As is often the case with his adventures, personal conflict often leads to bigger problems, and Jim diGriz soon finds himself commandeered to save humanity from galaxy-wide destruction.

Sounds simple, eh? It is for the Stainless Steel Rat…at least until his most feared enemy comes on the scene–the infamous gray men.

For my thoughts on this book, please visit me here:

http://www.stainlesssteeldroppings.co...
Profile Image for Linda Isakson.
431 reviews21 followers
April 23, 2011
Slippery Jim DiGriz is off on another interstellar adventure. This time, the Special Corps needs him to save the human galaxy from invading aliens. With the help of his now adult twin sons and his beautiful, and cunning, wife Angelina, Slippery Jim is able to infiltrate the alien ranks and undermine their masterminds. Unfortunately, success is not quite in reach when the Morality Corps, a super secret group that, apparently, has more authority than the Special Corps, continuously disapproves of all Jim's schemes to rid the galaxy of these pestilential aliens. In the end, a compromise is sought (in the do-first-and-ask-for-forgiveness-later spirit). As always, hilarious, witty, and downright fun. If you've already read the book, you must listen to the audio version. The narrator, Phil Gigante, brings Jim and gang to life like no one else can.
Profile Image for Andreas.
Author 1 book29 followers
June 9, 2011
SciFi humor. I quite enjoyed the first five books or so, but in the end the laughter starts wearing thin. I gave up after “The Stainless Steel Rat Goes to Hell”. Those I have read are:

The Stainless Steel Rat
The Stainless Steel Rat’s Revenge
The Stainless Steel Rat Saves the World
The Stainless Steel Rat Wants You
The Stainless Steel Rat for President
A Stainless Steel Rat is Born
The Stainless Steel Rat Gets Drafted
The Stainless Steel Rat Goes to Hell


http://www.books.rosboch.net/?p=817
Profile Image for Phillip Hall.
Author 21 books9 followers
February 9, 2011
I absolutely fell in love with the Stainless Steel Rat series. They are goofy, fast paced, and humorous sci-fi books. It was my first introduction to Harry Harrison and also my first time ever reading a comedic sci-fi book. I loved both of them immediately.
2,718 reviews38 followers
May 3, 2024
Slippery Jim diGriz is an extraordinary thief and con man operating in an advanced society where interstellar travel is common along with the ability to travel in time. He was given his alias of the “Stainless Steel Rat” for his criminal operations in a modern, highly technical society. In this story, he is ably assisted by his wife Angelina and his twin sons James and Bolivar as he tries to save the human population from being defeated by a reptilian species.
In a somewhat silly plot device, diGriz dons a suit that allows him to pass as one of the reptiles so that he can infiltrate their society in hopes of serving as a mole and rescue humans that they have captured. There is also involvement of the gray men, a society of humans that are utterly emotionless in their dealings with each other and other species.
While the dialog and storyline are unique to this tale, they closely follow what appears in the other Stainless Steel Rat stories. Harrison’s style in the diGriz stories is very distinctive and the experienced reader can identify it after only a few paragraphs. It is a fun story without a great deal of depth, the plot is simple and much of the action is predictable. The very definition of light, enjoyable reading.
Profile Image for Al "Tank".
370 reviews55 followers
June 23, 2017
The diGriz Family Turned Loose -- God Save the Galaxy!

"Slippery" Jim Bolivar diGriz, his lethal wife Angelina, and his twin sons James and Bolivar (following in their parent's less-than-legal footsteps) are off to save the universe (and enrich their own coffers when possible). It's the usual tongue-in-cheek fun that starts with Angelina being kidnapped and ends on a very cold planet where every hand is turned against our intrepid hero.

But a stainless steel rat can never be counted out until he's dead (and then don't count him out then).

I enjoyed the story as much as the other Stainless Steel Rat stories. I wish they'd republish the series or publish them in eBook format so more people can enjoy these timeless tales today. Mine sit in my library so I can take them out periodically and enjoy them over and over.
Profile Image for Luna.
835 reviews41 followers
June 23, 2022
A reluctant DNF, as I really did want to finish this book, but I just found the high sci-fi qualities just a little too tough for me to read.

I did enjoy parts of it, though. I liked how tongue-in-cheek aspects of the satire were, and despite being written in the 70s, the genderqueer, LGBT-leaning aliens were written in such a casual light. Hell, I'd expect some modern writers to be more homophobic in their responses. I also liked that Jim, our Stainless Steel Rat, adores his wife, and despite being a bit of a known flirt, still remains faithful and committed to his wife.

But while I liked these parts of the book, I just don't have a head for hard sci-fi. And yeah, this may not be classified as 'hard sci-fi', but it's a little beyond what I typically read.

While I tend to rate DNF books a one star, I liked this enough to give it two.
51 reviews
March 6, 2021
(same write-up exactly as I did for the first book in the series)
I could understand someone giving a 5 rating for this and I could understand a 1 rating too. It's not a deep book in any way but it neither wants to be nor does it pretend to be. It's a great comedy sci-fi romp, completely intended to make you giggle your way through a summer holiday on the beach. Its real selling point (to me) is that I think it's a pretty unique writing style and I don't know whether it was intended for a teen audience in the 60s but I think that's the likely audience now. You're unlikely to remember the story a couple of years from now but you'll enjoy reading it and have fond memories of having read it too.
Profile Image for Rick Brindle.
Author 6 books30 followers
March 22, 2018
So, in this chunk of Stainless Steel Rattery, Slippery Jim must battle hordes of aliens bent on eradicating mankind. Leaving to one side whether or not mankind actually deserves it, this is a very humorous romp through space in much the same way as Jim's earlier adventures. This hit my funny bone a lot more when I read it as a teenager, but it's still highly enjoyable. HH tells his story in a light hearted, irreverent way, supported by his wife, Angelina, and now adult sons.
Now re-reading the entire series start to finish, this one is the best of the older novels, and much better than the newer prequels.
Profile Image for Ian Banks.
949 reviews2 followers
November 24, 2018
Great fun adventure with the rat and his family as they try to stop an alien invasion. Some standard rat shenanigans with the added loop being that he's now working with his family and has the to look out for which adds some wrinkles to his escapades, although he circumvents this for a large chunk of the book by going off and having solo adventures. Some great parodic elements of Golden Age SF with some more modern elements thrown in.
55 reviews2 followers
September 13, 2021
The Stainless Steel Rat meets alien invaders, and the series becomes slapstick comedy. Unfortunately, not a very good one. "Slipper Jim" diGriz is still the same cool loveable rascal (he'd tell you so himself), but he works best when he's doing capers, not Independence Day. Granted, his methods are unchanged, but I ultimately couldn't muster much interest in the story. It was OK (2/5 stars) but that's it.
Profile Image for Frank McGirk.
787 reviews6 followers
August 23, 2021
I often want light, fun fantasy/sci-fi, but I don't often find it.

The fourth star is really for succeeding in that genre more than its inherent, ahem, literary merit, but although I spaced out my reading of this slim book I never tired of Slippery Jim's schtick, which kept rolling along with the interesting and occasionally clever plot.

Would definitely try another of Harrison's SSR books.
Profile Image for Robert.
1,342 reviews3 followers
January 18, 2022
I am slowly working my way through this light weight series of comedy scifi. I read a couple of these 40 years ago, and was more impressed then than I am now. Nevertheless, these breezy reads require no deep thinking, unlike the more biting satire of the Discworld series, so they are good bedtime reading.
Profile Image for Redsteve.
1,216 reviews20 followers
May 22, 2018
Meh. I felt like Harrison was really phoning it in on this one. Basic SSR storyline - humorous science fiction with the usual plug for Esperanto. Also, the additional layers of secret organizations seemed played only as a plot device/comic relief.
Profile Image for Sean Randall.
2,016 reviews47 followers
May 6, 2021
Another typical escapade, but I still enjoy them. My 4 star rating is probably more nostalgia than any real literary merit. Interestingly, I have a great desire to read the President story but can't remember too much about the later books.
Profile Image for Chris Cowan.
97 reviews
February 9, 2023
Another comic romp in the Stainless Steel Rat universe, fun but very much by the numbers. The introduction of Jim's children seems irrelevant to the plot and other characters but it has some good fun moments.
Profile Image for Steven Davis.
Author 28 books9 followers
April 24, 2024
A fun one, far less sexist than some previous ones (the Stainless Steel Rat series, for me, is more about fun and derring-do than being holier-than-holier). Reading it, I realised I've got them out of order and have missed at least one ..
Displaying 1 - 30 of 98 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.