Friday 16 December 2016

Two New (Patrick) Ness Monsters.


I have just read Patrick Ness’s novel ‘A Monster Calls’ - in one sitting.  This novel  is based on an original story left unfinished by Siobhan Down,  the prize winning ‘Young Adult’ author who tragically died before she could write it herself.      Patrick Ness was invited to do so and his  book has won five major prizes and been highly praised by, among many others,  Malorie Blackman, Phillip Pullman, Frank Cottrell Boyce and Mary Hoffman.  

It has now been filmed and is now on release.   Directed by J. A. Bayone it has Liam Neeson, Sigourney Weaver,  Felicity Jones and Lewis MacDougal in the cast.   It is the story of young Connor and the Yew Tree Monster that comes to help him (drag him!)  into facing the two most terrifying things in his life. 

‘A Monster Calls’  is a so-called  ‘Young Adult’ novel, but this is only a convenient genre description that does not limit it’s power or depth.   It tackles some of the most important  subjects in life and does so with honesty, great compassion and acute psychological awareness.  

This is hardly surprising from the author who gave us the profound and original  Chaos Walking’ trilogy (including the title Monsters of Men),  winner of the Guardian Children’s Fiction prize,  the Costa Children’s Book Award and the Carnegie medal.     I will however go to see the film of ‘A Monster Calls’ with my heart in my throat,  as I now know that it will remind me and anyone who has been through  – or been close to someone who has been through – the heart-rending phase of grief that must,  it seems,  come before true heart-mending.   

I see that  the film of Ness’s  Chaos  Walking is now in pre-production and due for release in 2018.     Robert Zemeckis had been slated to direct it, but that role has now fallen to Doug Liman, (2 Bourne movies, Edge of Reason aka Live Die Repeat and Mr & Mrs Smith) with the script adapted by Charlie Kaufman (Eternal Kingdom of the Spotless Mind, Being John Malkovitch, Adaptation and Anomalisa) so plenty of talent there!   Plus Tom Holland and Daisy Ridley cast in  the main roles.    You may have seen Tom Holland in ‘The Impossible’ or as Thomas Cromwell’s son Gregory in the BBC’s magnificent  Wolf Hall.   Daisy Ridley was of course Ley in Star Wars: The Force Awakens.    


I have been looking forward to this film being made for a few years now , and hope it will at last come to completion.    I don’t know if I will be another trilogy – it certainly deserves to be.  Patrick Ness is willing and able to tackle very difficult subjects in ways that never condescend or simplify and yet are completely accessible to readers across the YA and adult range.      I do not yet know how good these new films will be – though I have high hopes – but I strongly recommend his books.   I will also look out for  Siobhan Down’s four books.   I am sure that the books we read in our teens can shape our lives so I love to see books that are full of challenge, compassion and wisdom.    Ursula Le Guin and Charles Dickens did it for me 50 years ago  and they have worthy successors.