Skip to main content

A MONSTER CALLS by Patrick Ness (inspired by an idea from Siobhan Dowd and illustrated by Jim Kay)


“Every time the monster moved, Conor could hear the creak of wood groaning and yawning in the monster’s huge body.”

In her review for the New York Times, Jessica Bruder refers to A Monster Calls as, “A story that lodges in your bones and stays there.” 

This, I believe, is an understatement. 

I am afraid my words, mere pixels on the screen, cannot begin to honor how truly special this book is.

From his words in the Author’s Note, Patrick Ness held me spellbound.  Siobhan Dowd had developed an idea for a book about a monster and a boy whose mom had cancer.  Breast cancer cut her life short and she was unable to finish her story.  Patrick Ness, when asked to craft something from the seed of a story Dowd left behind said, “…the thing about ideas is that they grow other ideas.”  And so, A Monster Calls was born out of Dowd’s seed and Ness’s nurturing.

I suppose a book with that kind of conception was bound to be incredible, but I am sure not even the editor who entrusted him to write it could have guessed just how perfect a story Patrick Ness was capable of crafting.

The only thing that stopped me from all-out sobbing through the last 50 pages of the book was that I couldn’t read through tear-blurred eyes, and I didn’t want to miss a single word.

That is not to say, though, that this is a sad book.  It is; sure it is.  It couldn’t be about a young boy whose mother has cancer without being sad, but it is so much more than that.  It is clever, wittily humorous, beautiful, thought-provoking, inspiring, hopeful, and honest. 

If I could gift every one of you with a book, I would choose this one.  It is a reminder of what it means to be human.  It is a reminder of the power of story.  And it is truly a celebration of all that ink on a page, both in images and text can be. 

Comments

  1. It is truly beautiful, but also so hopeful that someone can finally work out the challenges of the monsters. So much conversation could happen with this book. I wish someone could hold a book group with it. Thanks, Christy.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you Christy for reviewing this. It is on my list and has now moved to the top!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wow, that is a powerful review! Thanks for sharing.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I've heard wonderful things about this book. Glad to hear you liked it.

    ReplyDelete
  5. What a great idea. The impact you had on the students while you had them has extended into their later grades. That's quite a testimonial to how good teachers are remembered long after the students leave. I had a 5th grade teacher who later moved to 7th grade and I got her again. She was tough as nails but we all loved her---called her Old Ironsides. She introduced me to Johnny Tremain and I still remember it 55 years later as if it were yesterday.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Gifting this book - your review has. I think I am going to have to read this, but in the sunshine months. Your review is encouraging and wonderful.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Wow - what a remarkable genesis for this book... and a powerful review. Thanks. thanks as well for being part of the 2012 Comment Challenge!
    Keep on commenting,
    Lee

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

ONE FOR THE MURPHYS by Lynda Mullaly Hunt

copyright date: May 2012 primarily marketed for: intermediate readers (5 th grade and up) I sort of expected One for the Murphys by Lynda Mullaly Hunt to be one of those overly sappy books with unrealistic, sickeningly sweet characters.  However, although the storyline might make it sound sappy, the characters are realistic and dynamic.  After a traumatic incident that lands both she and her mother in the hospital, Carley Connors is taken away and placed in foster care with the Murphy family.  The only life Carley has known is one of put-downs, food scraps, and shopping for clothes in Salvation Army drop boxes.  Until she meets the Murphys.  The Murphys are too good to be true: Julia, the mom, happily makes home-cooked meals for her three boys and firefighting, sports-loving husband.  In fact, Julia isn’t even rattled by Carley’s rough around the edges attitude.  At first, Carley despises the Murphys and the way they make he...

ALL THESE THINGS I’VE DONE by Gabrielle Zevin

copyright date: September 2011 primarily marketed for: young adults (8 th grade and up) I wish I would’ve known this was the beginning of a series before I started this book.   Then again, I might never have picked it up if I thought I might be committing to multiple books… At any rate, this is not a story I will be sad to return to this fall when the sequel is released.   Anya’s story takes place in New York City, in the future.   Around the time you will be old enough to be grandparents. This is a sort of post-apocalyptic, dystopian kind of book in a mild way.   Basically, the United States has self-destructed, and yet life seems to go surprisingly similar to the way we live nowadays.   Except that water and paper are costly and hard to come by.   Chocolate is prohibited.   Caffeine is an illegal drug.   Which is all to say that the setting alone is intriguing. Add to that setting, the fact that Anya is the oldest daughter of the ...

THE BIG CRUNCH by Pete Hautman

copyright date: January 2011 primarily marketed for: young adult (8 th grade and up) The Big Crunch by Pete Hautman is a book of rare quality.   It is one of the very elite books that could give any John Green book a run for its money.   That is high praise.   This story of Wes and June opens, “The first time Wes saw June, he thought she was kind of funny-looking.”   Aren’t you charmed already?   The Big Crunch is a love story with universal appeal.   It is one of the few books I would call a romance for guys.   And he gets inside the head and heart of both Wes and June in equal doses.   Although I still sense that Wes is the protagonist here—it is more his story than it is June’s.   I am confident Hautman got Wes’s character right because he certainly wrote June accurately as a female teen in love.   I continuously found myself wondering how Pete Hautman could possibly know exactly what went on in my mind when I was her ag...