Rat kings appear in novels such as
The Standard by
Alexander Lernet-Holenia,
It by
Stephen King,
Accordion Crimes by
Annie Proulx,
The Tale of One Bad Rat by
Bryan Talbot,
Ratking by
Michael Dibdin,
Rotters by
Daniel Kraus,
Peeps by
Scott Westerfeld,
The Haunting of Alaizabel Cray by
Chris Wooding,
Rats and Gargoyles by
Mary Gentle,
Luther: The Calling by
Neil Cross,
The War for the Lot by
Sterling E. Lanier,
Cold Storage by
David Koepp, where it plays a prominent role, and
The Rats by
James Herbert. The
Lorrie Moore short story
Wings features a couple who discover a rat king in their attic. In
Alan Moore and
Ian Gibson's comic book series
The Ballad of Halo Jones, the Rat King was a weapon of war, a super-intelligent collective able to coordinate attacks by regular rats on a global scale, decimating an entire planet. In
The Amazing Maurice and his Educated Rodents by
Terry Pratchett, Keith skeptically notes that the filth associated with supposedly tying the rats together at a young age is not found in a rat's nest. It is eventually revealed that members of the Ratcatchers' Guild create rat kings as a
masterpiece to demonstrate their skill in handling live rats. The main antagonist of the novel, a rat king called Spider due to having eight component rats, is motivated by his grudge against humanity for his traumatic creation. In an author's note at the end of the novel, Pratchett ventures the theory that "down the ages, some cruel and inventive people have had altogether too much time on their hands". Natural History Museum was found in 2005.
E. T. A. Hoffmann's
The Nutcracker and the Mouse King features a character called the Mouse King (), with seven heads. The character is sometimes depicted as multi-headed in productions of the
Tchaikovsky ballet
The Nutcracker, based on the novella. The film
The Nutcracker and the Four Realms, based on the short story, similarly features a "Mouse King", a rat-king like creature formed from a teeming mass of small mice. The phenomenon's name appeared as the title of a
Boston Manor song released in 2020. When asked about it, vocalist Henry Cox explained that he used the rat king as a metaphor for contemporary political and social events. A creature known as the Rat King is featured in the 2020 action-adventure video game
The Last of Us Part II. It is a conjoinment of multiple fungus-infected humans, which protagonist
Abby encounters in the underground levels of a hospital. Three actors were tied together to perform
motion capture for the creature. Co-director Kurt Margenau described the idea behind the Rat King as the team's take on "what happens to them [the infected] when they sit around for a really long time." A rat king appears in
Hoard by
Luna Carmoon. A mass of rats is found among hoarded ephemera in Maria's mother's home. A rat king appears in the TV show
Adventure Time in the episode "Little Brother", and in
The Amazing World of Gumball in the episode "The Gripes". A rat king appears in and is a main theme of
Ego Death by
Jazz Emu, where the protagonist creates a human/rat persona based on their obsession with the Rat King phenomena. A rat king prominently features in the film
Together. == See also ==