"Of course, without people like us Marstens, there wouldn't be anybody to do the manual labor that makes this country run. Without penal workers, who would work the production lines, or pick the melons and peaches, or maintain the streets and parks and public lavatories? Our economy depends on prison labor. Without it everybody would have to work -- whether they wanted to or not."
In the late twenty-first century Bo Marsten is unjustly accused of a causing a rash that plagues his entire high school. He loses it, and as a result, he's sentenced to work in the Canadian tundra, at a pizza factory that's surrounded by hungry polar bears. Bo finds prison life to be both boring and dangerous, but it's nothing compared to what happens when he starts playing on the factory's highly illegal football team. In the meantime, Bork, an artificial intelligence that Bo created for a science project, tracks Bo down in prison. Bork has spun out of control and seems to be operating on his own. He offers to get Bo's sentence shortened, but can Bo trust him? And now that Bo has been crushing skulls on the field, will he be able to go back to his old, highly regulated life?
Pete Hautman takes a satirical look at an antiseptic future in this darkly comic mystery/adventure.
Peter Murray Hautman is an American author best known for his novels for young adults. One of them, Godless, won the 2004 National Book Award for Young People's Literature. The National Book Foundation summary is, "A teenage boy decides to invent a new religion with a new god."
My immediate thought after finishing Rash: Huh. For it is a peculiar novel. And I'm still not entirely sure what to say about it. I enjoyed it, but didn't love it. However, I think its target audience would love it. That audience is teen and preteen boys, and heaven (aka Barnes and Noble) knows there aren't enough books out there for them.
The novel is set in the not too distant future of the United States, which is now known as the USSA (United Safer States of America). In this dystopian-lite future, anything that is dangerous to one's safety has been outlawed: no drinking, no smoking, no contact sports, no fast food, no foul language. Children can't play outside without the appropriate safety gear. Most of the populace is taking a cocktail of drugs to maintain their health and well-being (including Levulor, which dampens the instinct toward anger). The reason for the emphasis on safety is that it has significantly increased the lifespan of the average human. The trade-off is that one really can't enjoy that extra-long life. (And if you think this future is a ridiculous hypothesis, look at national, state, and city legislation attempting to yank toys out of Happy Meals, make walking and using an electronic device illegal, implement Body Mass Index requirements at public schools, etc.)
In this society, even the most minor of infractions can be a criminal offense that sends you to a prison work farm. These work farms perform the potentially "dangerous" (by this futuristic society's standards) jobs no one else wants to do. They produce goods and produce, and they also maintain the nation's infrastructure. Bo Marsten's famously short-tempered family knows this first hand: his father (convicted of road rage) works at a shrimp farm and his brother works on a road crew. It's only a matter of time before Bo's own temper gets the better of him and he's sent to a production facility in the arctic that is run by a football fanatic who arranges illegal sporting events for his own entertainment. Because of Bo's ability to run faster than anyone else, it isn't long before he's recruited to the team and learns first hand what pain really feels like.
There are a lot of draws here for teenage boys: very short chapters, rapid fire pacing, frequent changes in topic (you'd almost think Hautman himself is ADD as frequently as events and settings change), a futuristic society whose ridiculousness makes it simultaneously frightening and funny, and, of course, football.
In this dystopian satire, the USSA (the extra S is for safety or socialism) has criminalized most marginally unsafe activities. For example, you must wear a helmet and pads to walk down the street. This may seem silly, but it does not appear that law abiding citizens work. And the government has eliminated its prison system. Instead, it contracts out its prisoners to companies. Thus, criminalizing behavior has become a good profit center for the government, and it can increase safety while securing a cheap labor force, and while putting its thumb on the mostly young male population who might step out of line with the norm. Sound far-fetched? It is, but I'm not sure by how much.
The main character is a kid who gets sent up for several heinous crimes. He forgot to take his anger medicine. He didn't wear his protective knee pads during a running race. He insulted a fellow student. He attempted, but failed, to beat up that same student. And my favorite, he involuntarily caused an hysterical rash among the student body at his school. For these crimes, he gets three years working for a McDonalds pizza factory in the arctic.
The history of McDonalds is a hoot. It merged with General Motors. Then several years later, the merged manufacturer was taken over by the great Chinese retailer, Waltong. During the diplomatic wars with China in 2050, the USSA nationalized the company, then sold it to local interests. They, out of a sort of nostalgia, re-named the company McDonalds.
The prison/factory is a much different place. There's little concern for safety. The prisoners work 16 hours a day. All they eat is reject pizza pies. Anyone who gets out of line is liable to get put outside of the plant, where they would likely either freeze to death or get killed and eaten by polar bears. This would get written off as "died trying to escape."
The hero improves his position by winning a spot on the boss' pet football team. Football, of course, has been illegal for a long time. The boss, and the boss of a nearby Coke factory, keep teams on the sly, and arrange for a game between the two companies. It's a fiasco, lasting only about five plays, before the teams break into a riot.
This book is quite a bit of fun. The characters are very thin, but that's pretty much par for the course for most satire. The extrapolations are a bit over the top, but again, that's the stuff of satire. There are quite a few things that Hautman constructs quite well. For example, while the main character was at school, he worked on developing an AI as a computer project. In 2070, all high school students must show competence in creating an artificial intelligence which would pass the Turing test. The AI that he develops becomes one of the better characters in the book. In the end, this book falls more on the side of being clever, rather than being moving. Usually, that's a minus for me, but this one was done so nicely that it won me over.
Je croyais que c’était un livre de Noël à cause de la couverture ( lol). Finalement c’était un live d’obligatoire que j’ai lu au secondaire que j’ai retrouvé dans mon garde robe ( il était encore annoté ). Mais wow j’avais oublié que les profs du secondaire avaient des bons choix de livre. J’ai ADORÉ , très futuriste et captivant .
Rash is a brilliant piece of literature written by Pete Hautman because it shows what happens in the future and also shows on the behavior of what really does happen in the future. The book is really about a teenager boy named Bo who loves running. He wants to set a school record for the 100 meter dash in sprinting but obviously has other problems. Everything changed in the United States, even the name. Now in 2050 (present time) it is called USSA. Technology and all other health circumstances improved, life expectancy is now over 100 for people living in the USSA, and safety is at its highest. Now, students who are playing any sport are required to wear helmets, knee pads, and any other safety outwear that covers their entire body. They even have to take Levour, which is a pill that is supposed to slow your thinking down by a tenth of a second. This is supposed to give students a chance to think of what they’re going to do twice before actually doing it. However, Bo always finds himself in trouble and after his third warning; he is sent down to a prison camp where their punishment is to make pizzas and to deliver them to other restaurants. There, he meets other friends, and eventually, the person in charge of the camp teaches them to play football. Football is banned from the USSA, mainly because of the fact that it’s a contact sport, but the prison factory is in the middle of nowhere, so they might as just well play it. Bo becomes a great runner, but is eventually kicked out because his “lawyer” also a computer hoax that Bo himself created, threatened to reveal this case about American Football to the authorities if they don’t let Bo get released. So, that’s what happens, and Po has to walk 23 miles to the nearest city. And the story mainly has an ending there, but it keeps on going with his father coming back and Bo being able to go back to school. I believe that it’s a really great book, and everyone should read it because it’s so exciting and you would also have the temptation to find out more especially because of the ending. When I was reading it on my I-Pad, I didn't even realize I was on the last page until I couldn't flip the page anymore. I continuously was swiping the screen from left to right, but eventually found out that the book ended. But in conclusion, I really think that it’s a great book and it’s also a book worth reading.
In Rash by Pete Hautman, the main character, Bo, lives in the author's interesting perspective of late twenty-first century America. Being kind-of a rebel, Bo spends most of his life running: From being caught doing something robot controllers won't like, being in trouble with his family, being in trouble with his girlfriend, avoiding trouble he's already in and avoiding trouble he knows is yet to come. He spends most of his life running, physically and metaphorically, and in a way, so do I. I've always ran away from troubles so that I don't have to face them. I know that's not healthy. Whenever I know somebody is angry at me, I avoid any sort of contact with them. Once, a girl I am no longer friends with was going to confront me about how she thought I was lying when I said I had plans. (I was, but that's not the point of the story.) The point of the story was that I was so afraid of confrontation that I literally ran from her from three days. I had people whisper to me that she was coming,and I made up excuses for my constant need to use the bathroom. In the end, all that running just gave me more to deal with than if I had let her confront me in the first place. Hopefully without sounding too mean, this girl was a girl who nobody really likes, and who I did not want to be friends with anyways. When I remember her chasing after me, I am reminded of a scene in Rash. Bo had just escaped his factory/training camp in the arctic wasteland of Canada. He was being chased by robot polar bears who he had heard would tear him into tiny pieces before they ate him. The way he kept running and running as the polar bear viciously drew nearer and nearer to him, well, as I said it kind of reminds me of my experience with that girl. I think running is something we all do. I think we all try to run away from our problems, and in doing so just make the problem bigger. I mean, don't you run away? Running is the easiest way to have peace, even if it is only short-lived. Running provides sort-of a safe haven, where you can pretend everything is happy and peaceful. I have a friend who has been running away from her feelings toward her friend for the whole year, and is only now starting to realize how much that friend terrorizes her. She is only now defending herself. My other friends and I had known for the whole year how mean the girl is, but our friend just kept pushing these thoughts away. This is what I think everybody does. Short term, you are happiest if you push your problems away from you. Long term, it just hacks away at you. In Rash, Bo was safe for a while as he hid from his girlfriend, Maddy. She was angry at Bo for yelling at a guy who he thought was being too flirty with her. Although he had time to plan out how he was going to act, he succeeded in making her only more angry by hiding from her. While running is a bad idea, I don't recommend stepping up and facing your problems either. It's kind of a lose-lose situation. Remember the girl I ran away from? Well eventually I let her confront me. I let her tell me all about how she thought I didn't like her, and how sad it made her feel inside. I knew it was bullshit, and I knew that when I apologized, she would continue to be mean to me. So i told her that I didn't want to be her friend, that I felt like she pressured me into doing everything with her and that she was unkind to me. What good that came out of that was that now I am no longer friends with her. But much more bad came out. I felt like the meanest person in the world because of what she said to me and what I said to her. When Bo finally outran the Polar bears, he still faced the trouble of the eskimos he had heard to be unkind, and if he avoided the eskimos he would face starvation. A lose-lose situation. I hate that that can happen. I hate that there are problems we all face that just can't be resolved. It just reinforces the idea that the world is unfair. But you know what, that's a problem that can't be solved either.
Can you imagine a world where safety procedures rule…literally? Dropping fruit, failing to take medicine, and walking without a “safety helmet” is actually illegal is the late 21st century U.S.S.A. (The extra “S” stands for safety.) Not surprisingly, up to one-third of adult citizens are in corporate-owned prisons at any one point of time. After all, someone has to do the “dangerous” jobs that keep the country and economy going. (Did you ever realize how dangerous it is to produce frozen pizzas? Factories with unprotected cement floors, sharp cornered-walls, rivets that stick out—a total death trap!)
Bo Marsten is rash—easily angered and impulsive. He inherited this from his father. Combine this with a miserable high school experience, spreading hypochondria, unrequited love and a teenage bully, and Bo’s fate is sealed. He ends up in the frozen, polar-bear inhabited, tundra of Canada, making pizzas with other juvenile delinquents. Of course his experience would not be complete without a masochistic jailer, named, what else, the “Hammer.”
In prison, no longer shielded from the “dangers” of the world, Bo makes friends and enemies. He also learns about himself, freedom of choice, and the brutal realities of 20th century football. With his athletic skill, wits, and a school-project-gone-wrong, Bo manages to survive. The question is, however, will he continue to be so rash?
Welcome to the future: a United States so safe that it's been renamed the USSA (United Safe States of America). Here everything from football to skateboarding to drinking has been banned. Walking down the street requires protective pads and a safety helmet. Everyone's safe and happy. Or at least that's the theory. Rash by Pete Hautman tells the story of Bo Marsten who doesn't exactly fit into this cowardly new world. He causes a skin rash outbreak at his school and finds himself packaging pizza for McDonald's Corp. in Alaska as part of the penal industry that serves as the labor force for this dystopic society. Combining humor, social criticism, and a likeable protagonist, this novel was another one that I absolutely ripped through in a day, barely pausing to eat.
Personal Response: I really liked Rash by Pete Hautman. I liked this book because it was interesting the way that it predicted the future. Most books imagine a super technologically advanced world where everything is perfect. In this book, the future is very advanced; however, everything is not perfect. The U.S.A. is now the U.S.S.A (The United Safety States of America). America has basically become overinvested in everyone's safety.
Plot Summary: The book starts out in the United States but then travels to Canada. A kid by the name of Bo is in high school where he runs into multiple problems. First, he is a hot head; this is a problem because he can get sent to jail for just calling someone a bad name. He also is in track, which is a problem because he gets upset easily when he is exercising. He takes his anger out on one kid after he sees him talking to the girl he likes. After getting arrested, he is sent to a prison work camp. He has to spend the next 30 years making pizza on a production line. A couple of weeks later, he gets recruited to play football for the prison’s illegal, secret team. He's played on the team for a while and he uses that as an excuse to get out of prison early, saying that if he doesn't, he will tattle on the illegal team. The head of the prison lets him go, and he is now forced to try to fit back into the super safe society, after playing illegal football, in an illegal prison.
Characterization: Bo is the main character. He is a high school boy who has anger issues. This is a big deal because society is very cautious about anything that is dangerous. Bo works on all his anger problems throughout the book showing extreme character development.
Fragger is the quarterback of the football team. He is a cocky bully. He is tall, muscular, and “good looking.” He leaves the story halfway through the book after suffering an injury in a game.
Rhino is a 400-pound 16-year-old boy. He is very strong and quick for how big he is. He is Bo’s cellmate at the prison. Bo and Rhino start off hating each other but end up becoming best friends.
Setting: The setting is in the future in the year 2150. It takes place in the United States but then moves into Canada. The U.S. is very advanced while Canada is not. The U.S. is where people who are not in prison live. Canada is mostly just factories for people to work in while they are in prison.
Thematic Connection: The theme of this book is that things that seem like a big deal, often are not. This is shown multiple time throughout the book. Before he goes to prison, Bo is in love with a girl who doesn't love him, and he is obsessed with breaking the school record in the 100m dash. When he gets back from prison, he does not care about the record or the girl whatsoever.
Recommendation: I recommend this book to high schoolers. This is because the book is at a high school reading level and has many high school aged characters. I think boys and girls can read this book because everyone can relate to the story. I think boys would like it because of all the action and adventurous parts of the book. I think girls would like it because of the romantic and comedic parts.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Personal Response I liked this book because there was never a dull moment. The story is told well, and gets its point across clearly. The plot is easy to follow, and fun to read.
Plot Summary In the late 21st century, the United States of America has placed a high emphasis on safety, and many ordinary tasks are either deemed illegal or heavily changed to be much safer. Because of this, a large percentage of the population is incarcerated for committing acts deemed dangerous. These prisoners are then forced to do labor that keeps the economy going. One of these prisoners is Bo Marsten’s dad, as the Marstens have always had anger issues. Bo’s anger eventually gets the best of him as he gets shipped off for punching his rival, Karlohs Mink, for talking to his girlfriend, Maddy Wilson. Bo gets sent to a pizza plant where he works sixteen hours a day. Bo rises within the ranks however, after a successful football tryout that results in him becoming a goldshirt. As a goldshirt he only works eight hours, but has to practice football. After several days of practicing, the goldshirts travel to a different work plant to play a game of football. The team is taken to their room and everyone except Bo falls asleep. Bo sneaks out and finds a computer which happens to have been hacked by a computer program Bo made in school. The program is named Bork and claims it can free Bo by pretending to be a lawyer who will sue the pizza plant for playing football, as football is too dangerous to be legal. The plan works, but Bo is forced to walk home after he is released from the plant.
Recommendations I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys dystopian stories. The overly safe gimmick can be a nice alternative to other dystopian books that are overly violent. The book would also be a fun read for athletes, especially football players since football is discussed a lot.
Characterization Bo Marsten At the beginning of the story, Bo tries to fight his natural instincts by suppressing his anger. Throughout the story, he becomes more and more aggressive, but never to the point of being mean or cruel. His desire and willingness to walk home shows he wanted to be with his family very much.
Karlohs Mink It’s very easy to tell that Karlohs enjoys pushing Bo’s buttons. Karlohs enjoys making Bo mad, and especially likes to get Bo in trouble. Karlohs likes people to see him as tough and cool, but he is actually a bit of a pansy.
Maddy Wilson Maddy seems nice in the beginning, but this can be questioned as she regularly hangs out with Karlohs, her boyfriend’s archenemy. She spends a lot of time with Karlohs and tells him things that Bo wishes would be kept private. This isn’t Maddy being a backstabber, however, as she is simply a friendly and over-talkative person.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Personal Response: I read Rash by Pete Hautman. I really liked this book because it took place in the future. I also liked how the book described the difference between the future and the past. I also liked how the author added Bo’s grandpa in the book. Bo’s grandpa was a person from our generation and he was a very interesting character.
Plot Bo was a 16 year old who was not a tough person in school. He was always nervous about getting in trouble due to the fact that his family had a record for getting in trouble. Bo’s worst enemy was Karlohs Mink. He hated his smirky grin. It was later in the book that Bo said some very bad stuff to Karlohs and Karlohs later reported him. The future was much softer than the past and that's why verbal attacks were taken seriously. Bo was later left alone with a warning to never get in trouble again for the next two years. It was at the mall the Bo saw Karlohs hanging out with Maddy, Bo’s girlfriend. Bo got into a fight with Karlohs that got him in trouble and he was sent to a pizza factory were he would work. It was before he left to work that a rash started spreading throughout the school and Bo was to blame.
Setting: This book took place in a future USA and in the late 2000’s. Throughout the book the setting later changed and shifted to a pizza factory in the middle of Canada. The setting had a huge impact on the plot of the book because it showed the reader what Bo is going through. The book being in the future also had a huge impact on the plot because it showed the differences of how the future is different from the present.
Characterization: The main protagonist in this book was a boy named Bo. Bo’s family had a history of getting in trouble and that’s why Bo was scared that he was going to get in trouble too. In the beginning of the book, Bo was not that strong and kind of scared. He later got in trouble which led him to work in a Pizza factory. After coming home from the pizza factory Bo was much bigger, stronger, and more confident.
The closest person to an Antagonist was Karlohs Mink. Bo hated Karlos due to the fact that he was always talking to Maddy, Bo’s girlfriend. It was also because of Karlohs that Bo had to go to a pizza factory to work. Karlohs made Bo lose his temper and he was sentenced to work in a pizza factory. Karlohs overall character did not change throughout the book because he wasn’t really that big of a character.
Recommendation: I recommend this book to any 8th grader to high schoolers that love a book of adventure. Anyone who is interested in the future would also love this book. This book can be read by any boy or girl because both genders would love this book.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I liked a lot about the book Rash by Pete Hautman but there were some events I dislike about the book but it was mainly just things in the book not about it. I like how something can always happen and I never know what will happen and it’s not all good endings in the book so it is realistic
It starters with him living a normal life then he goes to school and starts getting in trouble and he ends up getting in a fight with the kids that were getting him in trouble and it gets him sent to prison then when he is in prison he gets on a football team and he gets the chance to get out.
Bo got way more calm and mature in the book then there is bork who changed a lot he got smarter and more human-like and there is hammer he starts off really mean but he gets nicer in the book
It starts off in a nice city and they have a nice school but quickly moves to prison in Antarctica with polar bears
I recommend that a male or female that is 12 years or older reads this book because you would have to be that old to understand the book and the words are kinda big for anyone under 12
This book is very interesting but was a fun book to read. It's based in the USSA and is in the year 2074, and everyone there is obsessed with safety. They have a lot of advanced technology which makes for some interesting reading but nothing completely different or unique to what we have now.
I really enjoyed this book (even though it was a bit fast-paced for me) and I would read a sequel. It was interesting to read and made me want to keep reading it, had good foreshadowing. It kept theme the entire book, keeping up with the technological advancements and making them seem natural. They have a prison system where they contract prisoners to companies and let them work for them for cheap labor, which was interesting but could happen to nowadays world. Something I didn't really enjoy was that some of the events were too predictable or moved through them way too fast.
I would recommend this book to any teen or pre-teen who enjoys futuristic books about crazy dystopian things that could possibly happen.
Student Name: Kaleb Tedesko Date Submitted: 5/29/19 Book Title: Rash Lexile:730
Personal Response: I think this is a great book and very interesting. I wish the author made a second book. I like the way the author writes his books. I hope he writes more books like this one.
Plot: In the beginning of the book, Bo Marsten and his family is introduced. Bo really likes to run and he keeps trying to beat the record. He gets into a lot of trouble. He blames it on his family past. He is then accused of spreading a rash to other kids. He gets sent to a tundra prison to work. He learns how to play illegal football. His AI named Bork helps him escape.
Recommendation: I recommend this book to males or females ages 14+ because it is a very interesting and easy to understand book. I think a lot of people would like this book.
Personal Response I really enjoyed the book Rash. I liked that the plot was based in the future but had things related to today. How the characters developed through the story really caught my attention and made me want to read more.
Plot Summary Bo Marsten gets into a lot of trouble at school. He is in big trouble almost every day and has to talk to the principal all of the time. The principle says that Bo gets one more chance or he’s off to a work camp. Bo punches a kid and gets sent off to Canada to a McDonald’s work camp. He is sentenced to 36 months at the camp and has to work on a pizza production line. His roommate, Rhino, is a very big guy that’s intimidating. After a few weeks, Rhino and Bo join the gold shirts and get to be on the football team. Bo really likes the team and has fun playing and practicing every day. What Bo doesn’t know is that the football team is very illegal. Bo reduces his sentence by telling the head man at the camp, Hammer, that if he doesn’t let Bo go he will turn in the camp for having football. Hammer reluctantly lets Bo get out of the camp and go back to his regular life. It’s hard for Bo to fit back into a safe society after he comes out of a mean and hard work camp.
Characterization Bo Marsten is the main character. He has very bad anger issues, which is not good because the society he lives in is very safe and cautious. As the book progresses, Bo figures out all his issues and develops into a great character.
Rhino is a very big and mean boy for his age. He’s very strong and speedy for the size that he is. He is Bo’s cellmate at the camp. Rhino and Bo don’t like each other at the beginning of the book but by the end, they are best friends.
Impact of Setting The book takes place in the year 2150. Bo doesn’t wear his padding, which makes him be sent off to one of the camps. In the future, they are more strict about safety by making people wear padding and banning physically contacted sports. In the beginning, the book takes place in the United States but moves to Canada at the work camp. This is important because the US after many years has turned into a very safe and easygoing environment, unlike Canada. The US is where most of the people live their safe lives while Canada is where all of the factories are for bad people.
Recommendation I would recommend this book to people 15-19 because the reading level is a little harder, and I don’t think younger people would comprehend it well enough. I think boys would enjoy this book more than girls because the book is very physical and has bad habits. If people like reading about the future and crime, this would be the book for them.
I thought this book was really interesting and fun to read I thought the protagonist Bo Marsten character development was very interesting i can kinda relate to him a lot but this book was very interesting and i thought it was just right for me the Action,Adventure, and just a really good story plot in all but what I've learned most in this book that even when things seem at the very worst and is not working out even the littlest things can make a huge difference.
I read this one to see if I could use it during my utopia unit as an option for students. It was weird but also super relatable. I completely agreed with the idea that people were thrown into jail just to further an agenda and that the idea of being safe wasn’t all it was cracked up to be.
Personal Response: I thoroughly enjoyed reading Rash by Pete Hautman. I, however, did not like the ending to this book. The author left the reader hanging. Bo’s final decision was never addressed, which frustrated me. Overall, the author did a splendid job at writing this book. I was hooked onto the thought-provoking and suspenseful plot line. This book was thought-provoking because Pete Hautman portrayed the perspective of the antiseptic future. It made me open my eyes to what could happen based upon society’s current trends. Sadly, I believe that if we continue down the same path, our society may end up facing similar aspects to those described in the book.
Plot: In a futuristic setting, Bo Marston did not fit in. Bo suffered from a low temper that he obtained from his father. His low temper affected the way he interacted with individuals. Additionally, he was surrounded with a psychotic society. Based upon the society’s standards, his behavior was perceived as threat full and unacceptable. Bo quickly was placed with a third strike, meaning he had to be punished in prison. The government ended up sending him into one of the multiple prison system branches. His was known as the Mcdonald’s Rehabilitation and Manufacturing. He worked in one of there pizza factories. It was located in the middle of Canada where there was no civilization. Escape seemed impossible, as hungry polar bears roamed the outside gates and a heartless administrator ruled within the factory. Luckily, prior to his arrest, as a school science project, Bo created a robot. This artificial intelligence creature was referred to as Bork. Surprisingly, Bork was able to self-operate after Bo was arrested. Through his shocking intelligence, he was able to shorten Bo’s sentence. Although, Bo did not seem fit enough or mentally prepared to be able to go back to his highly-regulated old life. He had to decide what to do with his future. He could either go back to the preposterous society or follow his father's footsteps by staying prisoner for the rest of his life.
Characterization: As the story progressed, Bo did lots of character development. In the beginning, he did not have control over his low temper. Bo reacted poorly to every complication that came his way. This was the leading cause of his arrest. His entire life took a turn when he was put in prison. Fragger, Nuke, Gorp, and lugger were individuals who brought several troubles into Bo’s life. These previously mentioned individuals were companions of Bo at the prison. They would constantly harass Bo and try to get him into trouble. As a result, Bo had to think before acting in order to avoid further troubles. Another major antagonist would be Bo’s ruthless administrator, Hammer. He would force Bo into acting with greater maturity. Hammer did not tolerate any misbehavior or disrespect. In the long run with the help of his friend, Rhino, he was able to modify his behavior. Bo was able to gain characteristics that helped him keep his short-tempered behavior under control and confront troubles with maturity.
Impact of Setting: Bo’s environment had a huge impact on his life. The 21 century he lived in was not just overprotective, but also ruthless. People were being sent to prison for all the wrong reasons. Any mistake civilians would make was considered a threat to Society. Bo’s first two strikes were caused by his “unsafe behaviors.” These “unsafe behaviors” consisted of: throwing a pencil in class, calling a student a name, and shoving him in the hallway. Civilians were expected to act with responsibility, so Bo’s low temper was definitely perceived as an incorrect behavior. Bo was indeed not treated equally due to both his low temper and his troublesome nature. If it weren’t for this preposterous society, Bo may have avoided a lot of troubles and would have never been sent to prison.
Recommendations: Teenagers would enjoy reading Rash the best. This is due to the viewpoints and concepts about our generation looked upon with Hautams novel. Also, both genders would enjoy reading this book. Even though the book’s main characters are all male, the book’s concepts are universal.
The novel, "RASH", By Pete Hautman is based on a fictional world in the future with safety being the top priority in society. Laws and restrictions get out of hand and are taken way too far. It gets to the point where you get thrown in jail just for being overweight. The main character, Bo, is on Levor, which is a pill that gives him extra time to react to a dangerous situation. For example, one of these situations would be verbally assaulting another human. Bo calls Kahlos, the popular jerk of the school, "a dog's anus." This lands him in the principal’s office where he is warned to not commit another minor act against the law. He eventually does it again and gets sent to a prison camp that makes pizzas in a factory called 3-8-7 McDonald's. Being new, he was considered a paperback until they found out that he could run like no other. Football at this time was illegal and the factories boss has a special team of gold shirts that have better hours and food than most of the workers there. The paperbacks are always stuck eating pizza and drinking Pepsi. Bo's artificial intelligence bot, named Bork, helps black mail the factories boss to release Bo. Fortunately for Bo, he is a good runner. The boss is known for being a ruthless guy. The town of safety is near, but Polar Bears stand between safety and death. Bo eventually earns a diploma and takes his running skills and goes to South America where he can play football where it is still legal.
Bo, the main Character of the book, is the main focus point. Everything that happens in the book has a relation back to Bo, like his feelings for Maddy; his crush, Karhlos; his rival, and his family. Bo's family has always been sort of the bad boy’s family, so everyone expects it from him. Bo sometimes blames his actions on his bloodline inheritance. Hammer, the boss of factory 3-8-7, is a much built big man that used to play professional football until it became illegal. He has a harsh personality and doesn't care much for the well being of any of the people at the factory because all of them are replaceable in his mind. Bork is Bo's cyber intelligence bot that grows smarter and can talk more like a human the more Bo trains him. Eventually, Bork gets an opportunity to blackmail Hammer and gets Bo out of the factory. Bork turns into a rogue which is illegal and is eventually terminated by the Security&Safety Department.
This novel is based on a fictional world that takes place in 2074, in the future and is now called USSA, which stands for United States Safer of America. Every unsafe action is criminalized and Bo breaks it one too many times. He is then sent to the rough frigid Canadian Tundra, where he will serve his time in prison doing work for a Big Business Corporation Such As McDonalds. When he escapes the hard work he end up in a hospital from a bear crushing him as someone shot it just before he got mauled by it. Races and competitions between Karhlos and Bo were all done at the school where Karhlos faked getting a rash and blamed it on Bo. This is the start of his criminal acts that forces him to be sent away. Another major area of the story is in South America where he now plays football.
The main theme that I got from the book was safety; this book demonstrates acts of extraordinary and unusual precautions to daily life. It takes being safe to a whole new level of intensity that is completely unnecessary. Bo tests the system because of how corrupt and unjust it is and just can't accommodate the extreme rules and regulations.
I would strongly recommend this book to a person that is willing to stick with the book and not give up half way, because the beginning half is boring and just overall frustrating to read about how poorly he is treated. The story doesn't get interesting 'til he gets sent away and starts to become more skilled with football and other common things that are illegal in the book.
Bo was just a kid whose father and brother had anger problems. He went to school and was a great track athlete. He liked to work on his AI (artificial intelligence) whose name is Bork. He had a few anger problems but was living a decent life with his mother and his grandfather. One day when he was at track, he got in an argument with his worst enemy, Karlos. In the future, slinging around a few hurtful words is a felony. Bo had to go to court, but the judge was easy on him and gave him a warning. The next time he saw Karlos he swung at him. This was the moment that Bo’s life changed. Bo got sentenced to two years to the Mcdonald's prison camp in Canada. He had to make pizza with a bunch of other prisoners. His roommate was a kid nicknamed rhino. He was nicknamed rhino because he was over 350lbs. They had a rough start, but they became friends over the course of their prison time. They were doing good with making and eating pizza every day. Then one day the leader of the prison, Hammer, was holding tryouts. When it was Bo's turn to run the football, he scored a touchdown on the people he was against. He made the team, but his catching ability was almost none. They had a lot of practices and were slowly getting better as a team. one day Hammer told them that they had a game to play against the Coke plant. The game did not go well for either team. They both had several injuries and the game was called off about half way through. They were going to get time to heal so they can play again in two weeks. When they got back to their camp, Bo’s AI had contacted him. He was acting like a lawyer. He contacted Hammer and asked for Bo’s release. When Hammer heard that he threw Bo out into the wilderness to run twenty six miles to the next town. He was in sight of the town when a polar bear started to chase him. There was a tour of polar bears going on so they tranquilized it, but the body still landed on Bo. He woke up in the hospital. He was eventually able to fly back to his house. Bork was also able to free his father. When he met his father, he didn't know how to feel. His dad was a hot head around the house and eventually signed away to go back to the prison camp. Bo was told that he needed to leave the country from Bork, so he was going to go to south america and run for a living. Bo was changed a lot over the course of the book. He went from being a hot head and snapping every now and again, to someone who was thinking about what they wanted to do with their life. Prison was probably the best thing that happened to him. It made him see what he actually wants to do with his life. He may have gotten hurt along the way, but it made him mature enough to make important life choices. This book is probably more for the teenage audience. Kids of any gender older than 12 would probably like this book. It shows how someone's decision making rapidly matures over the course of a prison sentence. Teens would be able to relate to what Bo was going through. I think that the book was ok. The futuristic aspect of the book was not really interesting. The inventions that they had are some that we could probably have within the next ten years. It was nothing to crazy that made you think about what could happen. That was the only real downfall of the book. The action in the book was not extreme, but still enough to want to make you keep reading.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Rash is an amazing book that takes a look at the possible future of the United States and all the weird laws and procedures that people will enact for their own safety. In the year 2070, the United Safer States of America now relies on its massive penal system for the bulk of its work force, public service and and even big corporations are paying the government to use inmates as factory workers. The book follows Bo Marsten and his family that have a large history of violent tendency. With extreme laws set in place, Bo's father was sent to jail for road rage and Bo's brother was put away for picking a fight. After Bo lets his anger get the best of him while fighting over a girl with another school mate, he too is locked away in jail. While he is put away, Bo learns that the jails around the USSA play sports such as football that were made illegal over 30 years ago. Without his consent or wanting, Bo is forced to play football for his jail's team where he ends up loving the sport and the violence. I would definitely recommend this book to anybody that likes a short but engaging read that will keep you reading no matter where you want to stop.