Patrick Ness is rapidly becoming one of my favourite authors. I read A Monster Calls, about a year ago and loved it. And so when I spied the first two books in his Chaos Walking series in a Buy One, Get One Free offer on audible, I could not resist. In The Knife of Never Letting Go, we meet Todd Hewitt, the only boy left in Prentiss Town, a small settlement on New World - a planet sparsely populated by humans who settled there a few years ago. Todd will, according to the rules of Prentiss Town, become a man in one months' time, at the grand old age of 13. However, Prentiss Town is an ugly, unhappy place, only populated by men. When his mother died while he was tiny, Todd was been raised by Ben. Todd has always been led to believe that she, and all the other women and girls on New World, died as a result of catching the Noise Germ. This Germ, which affects the entire population, renders everyone's private thoughts, public - whether you are man or animal. It is a constant cacophony of sound that could drive anyone mad ... but it also killed every woman and girl in Prentiss Town, leaving the men to fend for themselves. When Todd is out one day and comes across something that has "no noise" he is confused. Unfortunately, he cannot keep his confusion to himself and so begins his extraordinary journey from a boy to a man. You'd think in a place where you can hear other people's thoughts, there would be no secrets, but you couldn't be more wrong. As Todd is sent away by his guardian, in order to protect him from what reaching manhood means in Prentiss Town, he is unsure where to go and what to do. Armed with a knife, a book his mother had written and the spectacularly brilliant character of his dog, Manchee, he heads off and finds that the source of the "being" with no noise is ... a girl! But both Todd and the girl are being stalked ... for no one is allowed to leave Prentiss Town. This is a fast-paced, touching, violent and yet humorous book. It does everything you want - transports you to a different time and place, challenges your perceptions and your moral values and keeps you on the edge of your seat, and also has some heart breaking scenes too. I read the audio edition, narrated by Humphrey Bower, who is totally fabulous and really brings the different characters to life. There are also some nifty sound shifts to help the listener identify what images and words are "noise" and what are verbal. Okay, so it may be a book aimed at the Young Adult market, but it is a superb novel on every level. I cannot praise this book highly enough and I will be diving into the next one very soon.
My STAR rating: FIVE.
Length: 512 print pages.
Price I paid: £2.92.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio book; ebook.
It's year SIXTEEN of my reading challenge blog, and this year I'm continuing to focus on reading those books that people have gifted to me that have been saved "for a rainy day" ... well, the rainy days are here! No longer will they languish in the gathering dust, but instead, they'll be given the priority they deserve! Oh, and I'm really, REALLY going to try and read more in general after a few years of struggling to muster up more than 5-10 minutes at the end of a day. Wish me luck!
Friday, 29 May 2015
Saturday, 23 May 2015
The Black Jackals - the chaos of Normandy 1940
The Black Jackals, by Iain Gale is a novel of war. It is not pretty. It shows all the things I imagine war to be - violent, dirty, exhausting, exhilarating, ugly, heroic and most of all, chaotic. Set during the retreat of the British army in France during the summer of 1940, the action opens with Lieutenant Peter Lamb leading his Black Jackals as they try to delay the advance of German tanks overs a bridge by blowing it up ... but this throws up his first dilemma, as the bridge is teeming with refugees. We see him struggle to balance honour, duty and his own moral core with the tasks he is ordered to do. In the face of overwhelming odds, unreliable information and orders which either don't make sense or contradict each other, he tries to get as many of his men through a series of short, but dangerous sorties in the hope that eventually, they will get to the coast and be picked up and taken back to dear old Blighty. Along the way there are acts of true heroism, cynicism, cruelty and madness. This is a gripping story, that feels very real - it is woven around events from history and the author has created characters that are totally believable. Not always a comfortable read (no book about any war should be a comfortable read), it is well worth the effort and I was not disappointed, even learning something new ... this is NOT about Dunkirk, but a much lesser known evacuation that took place a little later down the coast. I can heartily recommend this title to anyone who is likes to be transported to another time and place, but who doesn't mind getting their hands dirty in the process. I am happy to report that this is not the only outing for the character of Peter Lamb, and I will definitely be seeking him out again.
My STAR rating: FIVE.
Length: 328 print pages.
Price I paid: £0.00, it was a gift.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook
My STAR rating: FIVE.
Length: 328 print pages.
Price I paid: £0.00, it was a gift.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook
Thursday, 14 May 2015
Thursdays in the Park - never too late for love!
Thursdays in the Park, by Hilary Boyd is a lightweight book that will not tax your brain cells too much. Jeanie is almost sixty and her life is plodding along in a comfy, but less than thrilling manner. The main highlight of her life is her granddaughter, Ellie, who she looks after on Thursday afternoons and always takes to the park. One day, she bumps into Ray, a man on grandfatherly duties - and their two grandchildren start to play very happily together and they get talking. This chance encounter shakes her up and brings her life into focus. She is in a stale marriage, her husband George is overbearing and non communicative - and left the marital bedroom 10 years ago without explanation. He wants her to give up her whole life - the shop she runs, the closeness of her daughter and granddaughter and retire to the country. She has kept saying no, but no one is listening. The charming Ray sets her heart a flutter and makes her feel like a teenager ... is this real or is she just reacting to the unhappiness in her life "before Ray"? It is nice to have an older woman as the central character of a book for a change, and more especially one who still has all her faculties and passions. There are also traumas and tension and soul searching a-plenty. I did find myself caring about Jeanie and wanting her to be happy, but at the same time, I wanted to shake her for her pliability and apparent "hey ho" attitude that had seemed to be her forte up to this point. However, I could have done with a bit more depth to all the supporting cast, some of whom felt a bit like caricatures to me. A book maybe for a holiday or with nothing better to do - great for the Kindle! One that will not be staying with me for very long I suspect ... but sometimes, that's what your brain needs!
My STAR rating: THREE.
Length: 352 print pages.
Price I paid: £0.20.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook.
My STAR rating: THREE.
Length: 352 print pages.
Price I paid: £0.20.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook.
Thursday, 7 May 2015
The Redbreast - gripping to the end
I have decided that it is just not safe to be around Harry Hole for any length of time. The Redbreast, by Jo Nesbo, is the third outing for the Norwegian detective, but the first one set in his own country. The action starts with Harry shooting someone who he believes is threatening the life of the visiting American President. When it turns out that they were part of the US security detail, rather than an assassin, Harry is quietly assigned to another department to keep him out of the way of the media! Here, he misses, Ellen, his partner, who has been helping him to get and keep off the alcohol which, in his dark moods, threaten to overtake his life completely. (If he wasn't such a good detective, he would be out of a job in 10 minutes!) He is now investigating the neo-Nazi movement, and whether the recent smuggling in of a rare rifle favoured by assassins, has something to do with them. When a former WWII Nazi sympathiser is found with his throat cut, Harry feels that there are links with a murder he and Ellen had previously started to investigate. However, right on the point of a breakthrough, Ellen is murdered, and Harry slips back down into his self-destructive pit of alcoholic despair, but not for long. He strives to find the key that will provide the link to all the events going on around him. And so begins a journey which started 50 years ago, and one which could leave a deadly legacy ... I have to say that I am starting to really like Harry Hole, despite his numerous faults. This book demands your attention from the first page and you really have to remain focused throughout. Don't get me wrong, it is a very enjoyable read, but there are many threads that you have to keep a hold of as the book progresses. The writing is sharp, the dialogue realistic and often witty and Harry is becoming a more rounded character, with a little hint of better times to come! Jo Nesbo has really got into his stride with this series and it will not be long before I am reaching for more. After all, there is a massive thread that has not been tied off as yet, and the reader is left dangling and wondering ... a great strategy for an author if they can pull it off!
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 626 print pages.
Price I paid: £0.50
Formats available: print; unabridged audio cassette; unabridged audio download; ebook.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 626 print pages.
Price I paid: £0.50
Formats available: print; unabridged audio cassette; unabridged audio download; ebook.
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