Tuesday, 27 September 2016

Monsters Of Men- fantastic finale to a triumphant trilogy

I kept putting off reading this, the last instalment of the Chaos Walking Trilogy by Patrick Ness, partly because I didn't want it to actually end, but mostly because I had experienced the first two parts in audio format and I'd now got the last book in print. I was worried that the characters wouldn't be as clearly defined in the print edition, and also that the main feature of the "noise" in people's heads would somehow not be as effective. I shouldn't have worried. From the very first sentence, I was back  in the thick of things on New World, where the controlling nutter that is Mayor Prentiss seems to be getting exactly what he wants ... ALL OUT WAR! The book picks up where the last one finished ... Todd is desperately trying to keep the Mayor under some semblance of control, and Viola is racing to intercept the army Mistress Coyle has gathered, but over the horizon comes a legion of the indigenous Spackle ... seemingly intent on ridding their home of the invading humans. Despite their best intentions, battle commences, and it is a brutal one. Finally, talks commence, and peace is on the cards .... but when 1017, the Spackle slave Todd released in the previous book seems bent on his singular revenge, mutual destruction is once again on the cards. Can Todd and Viola live long enough to restore peace and finally be with one another, or will Mayor Prentiss use his ever-increasing powers of control to destroy everything and everyone? And can humanity ever get to grips with being able to hear each others thought all the time? Monsters of Men keeps the pulse racing and the reader guessing until the very end. There are breath-taking sequences and the action is relentless. It's not often I'm so involved in a book that my heart almost breaks! Although shocking, exhilarating and full of foreboding about the immense stupidity of war, this is, at its core, a story of loyalty, love and hope in a world where those things are in short supply. I urge you to take the plunge and read the whole trilogy. My only criticism was going to be that there is no more ... but I have found out that there is a short story called Snowscape which, I believe, provides a well needed coda! Now, where can I get it from ...?

My STAR rating: FIVE (unsurprisingly!)

Length: 603 print pages.
Price I paid: 50p.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.

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