A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness
“But how do you fight all the different stuff inside? By speaking the truth.” Being a teenager is hard enough, but if you are also being bullied, ignored and waiting for death to strike when the bell tolls (at seven minutes past midnight it seems), you are in serious need of help; any help, no matter the shape. This is a book you want to finish and also never to end; a book that has the honour of having won both the Carnegie and the Kate Greenaway medals; a book waiting for you to cry your heart out; a book made of tales weaving themselves in search of the truth which, in the end, is all that matters. LRB Critical perspective: A Monster Calls takes Dowd's preliminary idea, and draws out of that bud a tale that has nothing of the hybrid about it. Received wisdom dictates that books published for children need endings that are, if not exactly happy, then at least hopeful. A happy ending would have been a betrayal of the kind of bracingly honest book this is, but hope can be hard t