Patrick Ness is the award-winning and bestselling author of A Monster Calls, More Than This, The Rest of Us Just Live Here and Release as well as the legendary Chaos Walking trilogy. The first book in his middle grade series, Chronicles of a Lizard Nobody, was shortlisted for the Nero Awards. John Green has described him as "an insanely beautiful writer". He has won every major prize in children's fiction, including the Carnegie Medal for Writing twice. He has written the screenplay for the film of A Monster Calls and the BBC Dr Who spin-off, Class. He lives in London.
The story, narrated sparkily and saltily by its hero Todd, unpeels
Prentisstown's dark secrets like the layers of a very rotten onion.
Ness, an acclaimed author of adult fiction as well, moves things
along at a breakneck pace, and Todd's world is filled with
memorable characters, foul villains.
*Financial Times*
An impossibly good novel. It is at once endearing yet
unsentimental; compassionate yet damning; exhaustingly exhilarating
and yet tempered by a staid and considered emotivity. Written in
the first-person present tense in an unapologetically impudent
manner, this novel captures exceptionally the brash bravado and the
underlying insecurities that actively teem inside the minds and
explode in the actions of boys on their path to manhood.
*www.inthenews.co.uk*
THERE HAVE BEEN SEVERAL excellent debuts in recent months and
perhaps the most impressive is Patrick Ness's The Knife of Never
Letting Go. It's the story of Todd, the last boy in a community of
men. In Prentisstown, the Noise virus has left men with the ability
to hear each other's thoughts, those of animals too. The idea may
send shivers up the spine, but how different is it to the constant
intrusion of e-mails, texts, advertisements and CCTV we already
suffer? When Todd finds a lone girl in the marshes he realises they
have to escape, which isn't easy when your hunters can hear your
every thought. Written in Todd's characteristic vernacular and
brimming over with ideas about adolescence, faith and free will,
this is intelligent, immersive storytelling.
*The Scotsman*
A book like no other. It's one of the most gripping, fantastical
reads around.
*Sunday Express*
Darkly imagined and brilliantly created, the painful dystopian
setting of a world full of noise in which all thoughts can be heard
as if spoken is the background to this tense coming of age
story.
*The Guardian*
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