Rascal presents a version of the classic coming-of-age story, as 11-year-old Sterling comes to terms with the harsh realities of life. His boyhood is the paradisiacal ideal of small-town America, a rollicking time filled with carefree adventures in the great outdoors. Yet years before the memoir begins, Sterling has already suffered the life-changing loss of his mother. Not having a female presence around the house gives him further license to indulge in boyhood shenanigans, but the loss also seems to make him responsible and emotionally sensitive beyond his years. In that sense, an important chunk of Sterling’s coming of age is already in place, and his year raising Rascal simply helps him solidify and understand this process.
At seven years old, Sterling was too young to really make sense of his mother’s death, which seemed like an inexplicable cruelty. With Rascal, Sterling finds himself in the parental role, rearing him from a little cub into a full-grown animal. He repeatedly wishes their time together could last forever, but in the end, he’s forced to acknowledge both societal strictures and Rascal’s own biological needs: he simply can’t keep a wild animal as a pet. In ultimately bidding a painful and permanent farewell to Rascal, he makes a concession both to nature’s inevitabilities (connecting back to his mother’s death) and human societal demands. In this way, the novel suggests that while carefree joys are a key part of learning about the world and growing up, coming of age involves letting go of those same joys and accepting life’s painful, inexplicable realities.
Coming of Age ThemeTracker
Coming of Age Quotes in Rascal
1. May Quotes
I hated to think about that terrible war which had been killing and wounding millions of men ever since the year my mother died. Here we were, safe and remote from the war, and worrying about such small and unimportant things as whether Oscar would get a whipping when he got home, and how to feed and raise a little raccoon.
2. June Quotes
Perhaps a psychologist might say that I had substituted pets for a family. I had a human family, of course—interesting, well-educated, and affectionate. But Mother was dead, my father often away on business trips, my brother Herschel fighting in France, and my sisters Theo and Jessica now living their adult lives.
We were probably as happy as anyone can be in our world.
3. July Quotes
I always enjoyed these farm excursions, particularly the opportunity to watch colts and calves high-tailing through the pastures. The young of almost every species, it seemed, were glad to be alive, Rascal included.
4. August Quotes
I was suddenly completely happy, in love with the loony world and with my father and Rascal. I didn’t care where I slept, or how many times I tipped out of my hammock.
5. September Quotes
Then I had a sad but happy thought. If Ursa Major, the Great Bear, was my constellation, Ursa Minor, the Little Bear, was by natural right Rascal’s constellation. Long years after we were both gone, there we still would be, swimming across the midnight sky together.
After a while I couldn’t stand it any longer and I went out and opened the wire door. He clung to me and cried and talked about it, asking that unanswerable question.
So I took him to bed with me and we both fell into a fitful sleep, touching each other again and again throughout the night for reassurance.
6. October Quotes
Now the trunk had been cut for rifle stocks, as had so many walnut trees that season. I found a red “writing stone” in the creek and in big, angry letters printed on the stump: DAMN THE MAN WHO CUT THIS TREE.
7. November Quotes
I looked up at my father hoping he would say something adequate, but he didn’t. So I tried to be gracious.
“Oh, Sterling, what a charming little animal.” She put an arm around me as we watched, and I suddenly had an overwhelming desire to tell her how much she meant to me.
I think she knew without words, because when I looked up she was not laughing, only smiling tenderly.
I burned my fur catalogues in the furnace and hung my traps in the loft of the barn, never to use them again. Men had stopped killing other men in France that day; and on that day I signed a permanent peace treaty with the animals and the birds. It is perhaps the only peace treaty that was ever kept.
8. December, January, February Quotes
It is good to remember that I was given those swift and shining skates early enough in my life so that I could use them for three happy winters. By the fourth winter I was in a wheel chair. And even when I learned to walk, I was never able to skate again.
9. March and April Quotes
I left the pecans on a stump near the waterline, hoping Rascal would find them. And I paddled swiftly and desperately away from the place where we had parted.



