Mrs Frisby and the Rats of NIMH

Mrs Frisby and the Rats of NIMH (Rats of NIMH #1)

4.09 of 5 stars 4.09  ·  rating details  ·  77,944 ratings  ·  1,555 reviews

Mrs. Frisby, a widowed mouse with four small children, must move her family to their summer quarters immediately, or face almost certain death. But her youngest son, Timothy, lies ill with pneumonia and must not be moved. Fortunately, she encounters the rats of NIMH, an extraordinary breed of highly intelligent creatures, who come up with a brilliant solution to her dilem...more

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Osho
BEFORE:
The serendipitous and simultaneous purchase of Rat Girl: A Memoir and Rat Island: Predators in Paradise and the World's Greatest Wildlife Rescue at the National Discount Rituals to Mark the Death of Borders was neither unremarked (by others) nor uncelebrated (alas, by me alone). I realized that I had other rat books at home, enough for a thematic rat shelf. Zinsser's Rats, Lice, and History: Being a Study in Biography, Which, After Twelve Preliminary Chapters Indispensable for the Prepara...more
Kirsten
This was one of my all-time favorite books when I was a kid; I must've read it eight times. So I was pleased to find that it holds up well, and I still found it very entertaining (although it seemed a shorter). I did notice some things that I don't think really registered when I was younger. For one, I was thinking as I read that Mrs. Frisby is a pretty unusual character for a children's book. She's an adult, which is not common to children's novels; usually the protagonist is the same age or a...more
Kate
WARNING!!! CONTAINS SPOILERS:

1. Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH mostly takes its place in Mr.Fitzgibbon farm. Mrs. Frisby who is a widow has 4 children. One day, one of her brightest kid Timothy becomes sick. The plowing was soon starting, but Timothy couldn't move out of his bed. Even after eating the medicine Mr. Ages gave, Timothy had a big chance that pneumonia will recur. That is when Mrs. Frisby started to find ways they could move without getting Timothy sick again. She went to her neigh...more
Jessica
This book captivated me from start to finish when I read it - for the first time - as an adult. It's such a beautiful story of courage and morality and heroism. It's hard to imagine anyone not being moved by "The Rats of Nimh" and its characters are well-developed and not easily forgotten. I thought about this book for days afterward, and I was sad when it ended.

There are really two stories going on at once; O'Brien cleverly brings the two together slowly by revealing their connection detail by...more
Ty
A lot like Watership Down but slightly less important and infinitely easier to finish. It's probably been ten years since the last time I read this which is weird to think about. If you live in Springfield, I'm starting a book club and this is the first book we're reading; come to the downtown library tomorrow evening if you wanna be in it. You don't have to have a copy or have started reading it yet.
Efe Sahinol
Dear Ms. Dansky,
this book is about a mouse called Mrs. Frisby and her four baby children. They have to move to their summer quarters but one of the babies gets sick and must not be moved. Now they have to face death and struggle to find food.
Kim
My son read this for third grade and loved it, so now he's hooked on the series and making me read it. What a great mouse/rat adventure!
El Templo de las Mil Puertas
"La señora Frisby y sus hijos son una familia de ratones que pasa el invierno en su casa subterránea en una granja. Cada año, cuando se acerca el calor, vuelven al campo antes de que el granjero empiece a arar el campo. Por desgracia, su hijo Timothy ha caído enfermo, y este año el calor ha empezado antes que de costumbre. La señora Frisby deberá encontrar el modo de evitar que el arado triture su casa antes de que Tim esté en condiciones de viajar, pero para ello necesitará la ayuda de las rata...more
Angie Taylor
I read this with my son for his reading/writing class. It was really fun to be taken back to memories of when I first heard this story. I'm not sure I read it when I was young or if I just watched the movie, which is vastly different from the book. There is no magical necklace that helps Mrs. Frisby save her house. I have heard of movie makers changing the story of a book a little for the screen, but the book is so different from the movie, I was confused. As always, the book is better.

As for wh...more
Matt
Great Book. It is both wonderful and unexpected. I remember seeing the movie as a child, the book follows much the same plot, but is so much better for so many reasons.

It is the story of a young mouse family. The mother has been widowed, and her young son is sick. She knows that "moving day" is approaching because they've been living in a cinder block in the farmers field all winter so they could find easy food left over from harvest. But spring is coming, and she knows the farmer will plow righ...more
Gale
“Courage of Maternal Love/Honor among Thieves”

This story has long been one of my favorites and deserves to be ranked
a modern classic. O’Brien introduces many serious issues into his
fascinating and charming tale about a mother field mouse who desperately negotiates and performs heroic acts to save her family. When Farmer Fitzgibbon prepares to plough his field, it proves an annual Day of Judgment for all the little creatures living therein. Mrs. Frisby’s determination to save her invalid son’s l...more
Corinne
Mrs. Frisby is a widowed field mouse and she's got a problem. She has a very ill child that must stay in bed but if she doesn't get her family to a safer place, their home with all of them in it will be destroyed. With the help of a few interesting characters, she finally gets in contact with the one group of animals that might be able to help: the rats that live under the rose bush.

Of course, they aren't just ANY rats and a good part of this story is theirs, learning about how they came to be s...more
Keegan
Just read this book with my four-year-old son. It's hard to know what percentage he understood, but as long as he is still interested and asks me to read another chapter then I keep going and don't worry too much about comprehension since I figure it develops by reading and discussing. He was even more motivated to read it when we picked up the movie (The Secret of NIMH) from the library and I told him we could watch it after we finished reading the book.

I know I've read the book before, but I d...more
Gavin Yee
I wanted to read this book cuss a review i watched http://thatguywiththeglasses.com/vide...

said The Secret Of Nimh movie was pretty different from the book.. and ever since i took script writing class.. i have wondered how things were changed from book to movie... ( and good ones...)and yea... the book and movie are pretty different... and is interesting to see why they did change the stuff they did in the movie to make it more movie like...

Trying to think of the book on its own is a little har...more
John
I read this once as a child, but my primary memories involved the movie, which I had seen numerous times, and with which I have a strong attachment. Suffice it to say that while I continue to enjoy the movie as a piece of nostalgia from days gone by, I was pleasantly surprised by the book, which doesn't include the worst and most non-sensical parts of the movie (i.e. anything to do with magic or medallions). Instead, the book offers what to me reads like something of a parable, as one group of c...more
E.A.
I would like to say I actually read MRS. FRISBY AND THE RATS OF NIMH by Robert C. O’Brien when I was a child, but that isn’t true. I have heard about it for years, and I’ve seen the movie but it was until a couple of weeks ago that I read it. I loved it. It will be one that I read to my children. There is a very good reason why this story won a Newberry award. Though it is written for children between 8-12 it is suitable for all ages.

The movie THE SECRET OF NIMH does a fair representation of pa...more
Julie
Year: 1971
Reading Level: Intermediate
Genre: Sci-Fi/Fantasy

Plot Summary: It's early spring and for newly-widowed Mrs. Frisby and her small (mice) children, it means they have to move out of the farmer's garden before he plows it. Unfortunately her youngest son, Timothy, falls seriously ill and she cannot move him before the plowing. Mrs. Frisby finds help in unexpected places, but nowhere more unexpected than from a mysterious group of rats living under a rose bush. Where did the rats come from?...more
Jenna T 8 Reading
Apr 16, 2012 Jenna T 8 Reading added it  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: any one looking for a good read
Recommended to Jenna T 8 Reading by: Mrs. Olnes
Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH was a great book! Its about this mouse that has four children and one of them became ill with pneumonia. Moving day was comming and Timothy, the boy that became ill, was too weak to move. So Mrs. Frisby set out for her husband's friend Mr. Ages. Mr. Ages gave her three packets of medicine to help Timothy. On the way back, Mrs. Frisby saw farmer Fitzgibbon getting his tractor ready. She also met a crow that got caught in some string. She saved the crow that then t...more
Rosa
The ideas underpinning the story are thought-provoking, the heroine (and the fact that there's a heroine front and center who is all the more heroic for her maternal qualities) badass, the bare outlines of the plot are interesting - but the actual narrative and writing style are quite "deliberately paced". Four and Half flew the coop about 2 pages in, preferring instead to bash toys against the wall in the near vicinity. Seven and Half sat through the whole thing and seemed reasonably interested...more
Davis Dunavin
(spoilers)

Will I ever find a talking animal book to equal "Watership Down"? Doubtful. And that's okay.

But in my latest jaunts through the great kid lit of the 20th century, "Mrs. Frisby" is a standout. O'Brien sets up a talking-animal world with what seem at first some loose conventions, and while his young audience may not notice, the genre-savvy reader immediately notices something is up. Mrs. Frisby and her family can read? They can use medicine? Heck, they know what a postcard is? Then O'Bri...more
Casey Lindstrom
What a great novel! The story opens up to a mother mouse (Mrs. Frisby) and her four children. She is widow and lives out the outskirts of a farmer's garden. Her youngest son Timothy, falls sick which was not a surprise due to the fact that he has always been weak. Mrs. Frisby is now on a journey to find a way to help cure her son and move them safely before the farmer's plow comes and ruins them and their home. The adventure tells Mrs. Frisby a lot about her husband and her permissional strength...more
Jennifer W
One of my all-time favorite children's movies is "The Secret of NIMH," which was based on this book. I watched it repeatedly as a child, and can still enjoy it as an adult. I know as a kid I owned this book, but I don't recall reading it entirely. I did read this book as a college student for a Children's Lit class and enjoyed it. However, I had the same reaction to it then as I did rereading it now: this is so different from the movie. The basic plot is the same, sick mouse, Moving Day, super s...more
Paul Darcy
by Robert C. O’Brien, published in 1971.

I really liked “Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH”, but found that it had one irritating sort of flaw. There is a back story about half way through the book which lasts around sixty pages. It’s too much. But don’t let that deter you, this really is a must-read-to-your-child book.

Well written and full of adventure, we follow Mrs. Frisby a mouse, as she does what needs to be done to save her son Timothy who is sick and can’t make the journey to the summer hom...more
sondheim
I read this book when I was about six years old, having plucked it off the shelf at the school library because it had a mouse on the cover, and because I had wanted to challenge myself to read a really thick book (200-odd pages of course being like a fantasy epic to a six-year-old). I loved it even though it was a bit sad, and I was so proud of myself for having finished it that I boasted about it to everyone. I learned all sorts of new words, like "pneumonia", which I was only informed halfway...more
Rainbowgirl
J'ai revu le dessin animé (Brisby et le secret de Nimh) il y a quelques jours. Les légères incohérences du scénario ainsi que les allusions trop superficielles à l'univers des rats m'ont donné envie de lire le bouquin pour voir de quoi il retournait. Et j'ai eu exactement ce que je voulais : tout s'explique ! Tout ce qui ne colle pas dans le film, c'est quelque chose qui était différent dans le livre ou mieux expliqué.
Pour autant, le livre n'est pas fondamentalement meilleur. Il est prenant, ori...more
Sara Hannon
1. Fantasy

2. Mrs. Frisby, a widowed mouse with four children, works to keep her youngest son safe when he is too sick to move before the plow comes through and destroys their winter home. On her journey to accomplish this, she discovers a great deal about her late husband and some very special rats that live nearby.

3. I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I loved the emphasis on courage and intelligence overcoming size and strength, which for children can be a really great lesson to learn. On a side...more
Ashton Livsey
Genre: Science Fiction
Summary: This story tells of Mrs. Frisby’s dilemma that comes when her son falls sick and can’t be moved for moving day. To solve the problem she has to ask help from the wise owl, Mr. Ages and the rats. Along the way she learns of her husband’s past, death and connection with the rats of NIHM.
Critique: a) This book really comes together with the focus of the setting.
The author uses descriptive words to talk about the home of Mrs. Frisby, the farmer’s house, the farmer’s y...more
Melissa
Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH
By: Robert C. O'Brien
Illustrated by: Zena Bernstein

Genre: Fantasy

Mrs. Frisby, a recently widowed mom of 4 mice, would love nothing more than to keep her son, who has recently come down with pneumonia, warm and safe but Moving Day is soon arriving. She employs the help of many unusual animals around the Fitzgibbon's farm: a crow, an owl, a family of unusually smart rats, and other mice. The story is completely fantasy-based with some realistic problems. The determi...more
Zakiah Hines
Aug 30, 2011 Zakiah Hines rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: classmates
Recommended to Zakiah by: my aunt
The book Mrs.Frisby and the Rats of Nimh is about a mouse named Mrs. Frisby whose husband died and left her with four small children to take care of. One day one of her children became sick with pneumonia and could not get out of bed. This was a big problem because moving day was coming. So, Mrs.Frisby goes on these wild and dangerous journeys to save her son.I think the point the writer was trying to get across to the reader is that Mrs.Frisby is the kind of mother that would do anything for he...more
Dominic
There is something so magical about a really good children's book. And lately I've been thinking I should write one of these myself (I have some good ideas), and not a YA novel like I once thought. Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH is exactly that kind of really good children's book. It is full of wonder and suspense that appeals to both children and adults; it opens an adult world even so slightly, filling the young reader with awe. Plus, it is well-written, which I find lacking in a lot of YA f...more
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Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH (Paperback/Newbery )
Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH (Paperback)
The Secret of NIMH (Paperback)
Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH (Paperback)
Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH (Mass Market Paperback)

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Robert Leslie Conly (better known by his pen name, Robert C. O'Brien) was an American author and journalist for National Geographic Magazine.

For more information, please see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_C...
More about Robert C. O'Brien...
Z for Zachariah The Silver Crown A Report from Group 17 The Secret Of Nimh Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH: L-I-T Guide

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