Nuortenkirja, jossa teinipoika heräilee öisin painajaisiin ja joutuu käymään läpi omaa suhdettaan äitinsä syöpähoitoihin. Eikä elämä muutenkaan ole helppoa, kun isä on muuttanut toiseen maahan, mummo on sietämätön ja koulussakin hakataan. Aika väkevä ja silottelematon, eli tykkäsin.
I've had a different Patrick Ness book, More Than This, on my Goodreads To Be Read list for ages, but recently spotted A Monster Calls as part of an Audible two-for-one offer so ended up buying it first. A relatively short audio book at just under four hours, I listened to it in two chunks whilst walking around Mojacar in Spain. Had I known what an amazing listen it was going to be, I think I would have arranged to complete the whole tale in a single walk! I understand that the printed version has some excellent illustrations which are obviously not included in the audio, but, for me, Jason Isaacs' superb narration more than compensated. His voice and style are perfect.
Patrick Ness has an uncannily accurate understanding of the guilt and anguish of slow bereavement. His story is told through …
One of my Top Ten Books of 2015
I've had a different Patrick Ness book, More Than This, on my Goodreads To Be Read list for ages, but recently spotted A Monster Calls as part of an Audible two-for-one offer so ended up buying it first. A relatively short audio book at just under four hours, I listened to it in two chunks whilst walking around Mojacar in Spain. Had I known what an amazing listen it was going to be, I think I would have arranged to complete the whole tale in a single walk! I understand that the printed version has some excellent illustrations which are obviously not included in the audio, but, for me, Jason Isaacs' superb narration more than compensated. His voice and style are perfect.
Patrick Ness has an uncannily accurate understanding of the guilt and anguish of slow bereavement. His story is told through the eyes of a teenage boy yet Conor's emotions are universal and not restricted to someone of his age. I found myself identifying with his anger and dread despite having been more than twenty years older when going through a similar experience. Although intended for a younger audience, I think A Monster Calls would be a powerful listen for most adults as well. Conor's grandmother's tight-lipped reactions as she copes with both her grandson and her daughter are heartrending.
The portrayal of the tree is fantastic in all senses of the word and I loved the device of the four stories, both their non-traditional fairytale quality and Conor's contemporary retorts to them. Stories Are Important! I was surprised by how much I was affected by this story. It was a struggle to keep my tears at bay during the final chapters and I have been thinking back over it in the days since finishing. I now have a clearer view of my own experience and, thanks to that fourth story, an appreciation that it's not just me who has felt that way.
A Monster Calls is a brilliant audio book and I believe any others I listen to in 2015 will be have to be incredible to match its intensity.
This book made me cry a cry I haven’t had in a long time. But not in a bad way, it helped me rethink about my own mothers death. I felt this book. Because it’s the same story I lived.
This book made me cry a cry I haven’t had in a long time. But not in a bad way, it helped me rethink about my own mothers death. I felt this book. Because it’s the same story I lived.
I read this book on my nephew Cedric's recommendation. I can't think of another book - YA or otherwise - that's so open and honest about loss and grief. Read it. But have a hankie nearby. I am not kidding.
There are books that matter. You can love them, or you can hate them. You can despise every single emotion they make you feel. You can cry more and more with each page. It doesn't matter what your opinion of the book really is. It only matters that it tell you the truth, and that you hear it. This is a book like that. The kind you buy after reading, and send wary glances on your shelf for the next decade until life opens its pages to you once more. A book that matters, no matter how much you hate it.
I didn't expect to feel what I felt when I started this book. The emotions I had reading this were very real and I found myself relating to the story. I was digging up feelings from something that happened a decade ago and it felt like I was in Conor O'Malley's shoes, experiencing his anger and his struggles. I give this book five stars because even though it was simply written the nature of the book was anything but. Plus, any book that makes me feel the way I did deserves the stars.
This was a very quick and entertaining read. I regret that I had to split this book up over a few days because it would have been the perfect kind of book to read in an afternoon. I enjoyed the Chaos Walking series from Ness and this further showed his strength as an author.
Get the hankies ready because A Monster Calls is a powerfully emotional read. It intelligently deals with grief in a way that will appeal to adults and children alike and I would hope it has the power to help children in a similar situation to Conor. His mother is seriously ill, his father is absent, he feels unconnected to his grandmother and he's become distanced from his friends at school...so much he has become the target for bullies. Until one night at 12:07, a monster calls asking for the truth.
I think this book is a fitting tribute to Siobhan Dowd who sadly died of cancer, leaving behind the idea for A Monster Calls.
Lavishly illustrated by Jim Kay, his wonderful multi-media drawings were what made me buy this book. He demonstrates that illustrating children's books does not need to be twee or clichéd. I hope A Monster Calls is …
Get the hankies ready because A Monster Calls is a powerfully emotional read. It intelligently deals with grief in a way that will appeal to adults and children alike and I would hope it has the power to help children in a similar situation to Conor. His mother is seriously ill, his father is absent, he feels unconnected to his grandmother and he's become distanced from his friends at school...so much he has become the target for bullies. Until one night at 12:07, a monster calls asking for the truth.
I think this book is a fitting tribute to Siobhan Dowd who sadly died of cancer, leaving behind the idea for A Monster Calls.
Lavishly illustrated by Jim Kay, his wonderful multi-media drawings were what made me buy this book. He demonstrates that illustrating children's books does not need to be twee or clichéd. I hope A Monster Calls is used as an example in many illustration courses in future. I know a lot of bloggers have been reviewing an ebook version but the hardback, published by Walker in the UK, is a thing of beauty. It's something I will go back to again and again.