Showing posts with label Patrick Ness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patrick Ness. Show all posts

The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

There is a lot of love in the book blogging world for The Knife of Never Letting Go, book one of the Chaos Walking trilogy. I was excited to see it on sale several months ago for Kindle, and excited to have the impetus to read it for the FYA book club. The book was very interesting, and packed with a lot of emotion and adventure, but it might not have been the right time for me to read it. However, I am planning on continuing with the series.

Todd lives in New World, and his community has been infected by the Noise -- a germ spread by the hostile resident aliens that causes all the thoughts of men to be audible to others, and that causes women to die. Thus, Todd is the youngest member of a community with no women and no hope of advancement. Until one day, when he discovers a silent space in the Noise, and learns that the history he believed is in reality very different. Todd goes on a journey to escape the specters of his town and hopefully find a life of his own amid the chaos.

There are many, many good things to say about The Knife of Never Letting Go. It is action-packed. It reveals secrets just slowly enough to tantalize you, without making you absolutely bonkers-crazy with cliffhangers (although it definitely walks dangerously near the line). It has an intense and intriguing fantasy world. It has vivid characters (I love and adore Manchee (THE MOST), Ben, and Viola). And the writing, although occasionally distracting (it is written in Todd's perspective and therefore his dialect) is poignant and vibrant.

I think for me, I just wasn't in the mood for this kind of dark, plot-driven novel. I was definitely affected by the many powerful, emotional scenes. It was definitely an enjoyable book. I just didn't connect to it on a personal level. However, I do plan to continue with this series, and now that I am familiar with the tone of the book, will keep The Ask and the Answer in check for when I am in the mood for this kind of story.

3.5 stars

Warnings: Language with one f-bomb, violence with some gory images, references to sexuality (it is a world where men's thoughts are visible to everyone so you get some of that sort of thing)

YA Friday: A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness

Friday, November 04, 2011

Title: A Monster Calls
Author: Patrick Ness (inspired by an idea by Siobhan Dowd)
Illustrator: Jim Kay
Genre: YA, fantasy, scary book
Publisher: Walker and Company, 2011
Source: Library
Read for: Fun

Conor O'Malley has been having nightmares, in addition to the nightmare of his waking life -- his mom throwing up every day, unable to stay awake long enough to cook a meal, the kids bullying him at school, his mean, ungrandmotherly grandmother, his absent father. But when a monster shows up outside his window, it isn't the monster from the nightmare. This monster wants to tell Conor stories -- but he also wants Conor to tell him a story, one more terrifying than Conor wants to face.

Wow. This book. It is short, and the language is simple and concise -- I read it in just an hour or two. But between the lines of the simple story, it deals with some powerful themes, like justice, good and evil, and who is ever really right. It takes anger and crushing grief and looks at them head on. It examines the fact that adults really can't fix everything, and that in fact the way some of them handle situations for their children actually makes things much, much worse. In short, it isn't always an easy book to read, but it has an important message that I think could help many people, not only young teens dealing with grief.

The presentation of the story is stellar. I've never read anything else by Patrick Ness (although I hear that the Chaos Walking trilogy is a must-read) and I loved his simple, powerful language. I think the writing of the monster's dialogue is the strongest bit of the story. The monster speaks almost rhythmically, growling out wisdom in his menacing voice. The illustrations are also powerful -- the stark, blurry, black and white pictures complemented the story's atmosphere.

Conor just broke my heart, the way he tried to take care of everything for his mom, wiping the counters and making dinner, while his stress and sadness and anger were battling it out inside of him. When he first meets the monster and it asks him if he is afraid, Conor says, "Shout all you want. I've seen worse." It reminded me of the sweet kids I worked with this summer, the eight-year-old who was fiercely protective of her mother, the six-year-old who climbed on my back for a piggy-back ride and told me all about how she didn't want her dad to die and what surgeries he had undergone. They're not afraid of some loud, large being yelling in their window -- they know what else is out there. The way the monster allowed Conor to finally express his emotions was powerful. As we get to know Conor, we see that he is a controlled, even-tempered kid, so when he finally breaks loose it is frightening and heartbreaking. I felt his emotions as if they were my own.

I loved the symbol of the monster coming to heal Conor. We all have to deal with something at some point, whether it is illness, accident, rejection, or failure. The monster didn't represent the tough situations, however; he represented what it takes to pull through them. Allowing ourselves to survive when all we want to do is curl up in the fetal position can be the toughest part of an ordeal, a monster impossible to defeat. However, Conor didn't defeat the monster -- he walked with it until he understood how to leave it.

As I said before, this isn't an easy book to read -- it brought me to tears more than once. However, I think it is an important resource to deal with grief, whether or not the griever is in Conor's exact situation or is dealing with something slightly different. It is definitely something I will be carrying in my arsenal of non-medical tools as a nurse.

4.5 stars

Warnings: 1 or 2 little swears.
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