Book Club: A Monster Calls, Online Discussion

a monster calls

Welcome to the comments and discussion of the Young Adult Cancer Book Club!  We are reading A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness, after an idea inspired by Siobhan Dowd.  Catch up on pages 1-22, pages 23-43, pages 44-65pages 66-85, pages 86-107, pages 108-126, pages 127-141, pages 142-158, pages 159-172, pages 173-196, and pages 197-206.

We’ve finished this book!  That means that it’s time for our online book club discussion!  Join us for an hour-long, online video chat discussion of A Monster Calls on March 5th, 5:30-6:30 pm PT / 7:30-8:30 pm CT / 8:30-9:30 pm ET!  RSVP below!

Book Club: A Monster Calls, pages 197-206

old tree

Welcome to the comments and discussion of the Young Adult Cancer Book Club!  We are reading A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness, after an idea inspired by Siobhan Dowd.  Catch up on pages 1-22, pages 23-43, pages 44-65pages 66-85, pages 86-107, pages 108-126, pages 127-141, pages 142-158, pages 159-172, and pages 173-196.

Let’s get started!

Commentary by Yolanda:

“Something In Common”

This chapter opens up with Connor having faced his nightmare, although he didn’t want to. His grandmother is frantically looking for him because his mother is nearing the end. She finds him asleep under the Yew tree and asks him where he has been. They hurriedly rush back to the hospital to ensure they don’t miss her last moments. While they drive Connor apologies to his grandmother and again he hears from an adult that “it doesn’t matter” hinting that there are more pressing things in life right now.

They share a tender moment before they reach the hospital, his grandmother points out, and they both agree, that they aren’t a natural fit for one another. But what they do have in common is his mum. She is what they have in common, seeing as she was the most important person to either of them.

“The Truth”

Connor and his grandmother burst into his mother’s hospital room, hoping that she is still hanging on. The nurse informs them that they made it in time, also pointing out that Connor was finally found. His grandmother sits beside the bed and holds his mum’s hand and informs her that both she and Connor were there. His mum then reaches out her other hand for him to hold and Connor dialogues with the Monster as to what to do?

The monster is with Connor, as he is afraid, telling him to tell truth. He takes note of the time on the wall, waiting for the infamous 12:07 he is used to. The Monster tells Connor that he is to tell the truth, he will be able to face whatever comes his way and he took his mother’s hand. It was then that Conner recognized that this was his nightmare, but simpler and just as hard. It was in this moment that he realized that was the reason that the monster came walking, to help him get through what he already knew was going to take place with his mum.

Connor finally speaks the truth to his mum telling her that he didn’t want her to go, she responds that she knows this. All the while the Monster is holding Connor up and helping him to stand in this moment. Connor repeats that he doesn’t want her to go and leans down to tightly hold her until… He knew that she would slip from him soon, but he could let her go knowing he spoke his truth.

 

Join in next Monday for the final step of the book club!

Thanks for joining us for pages 197-206 (“Something In Common” and “The Truth”) of  A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness!  Join in next Monday for the final step of the book club!

We will talk about a few chapters each Monday until the book is done.  If Monday happens to be a holiday, then the post will publish on Tuesday.  Once we finish the book, we’ll use one more Monday to talk about general feelings from the book and anything else you’d like to discuss.  We’ll also have a video chat book club discussion at the end!  Join in, in the comments every week!  Also, there will probably be spoilers so read along with us!

Excited about the young adult cancer book club?  Have any suggestions for future reads?  Let us know!

Book Club: A Monster Calls, pages 173-196

cliff

Welcome to the comments and discussion of the Young Adult Cancer Book Club!  We are reading A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness, after an idea inspired by Siobhan Dowd.  Catch up on pages 1-22, pages 23-43, pages 44-65pages 66-85, pages 86-107, pages 108-126, pages 127-141, pages 142-158, and pages 159-172.

Let’s get started!

Commentary by Miranda:

“The Fourth Tale”

This chapter finally reveals Conor’s tale; his nightmare that he keeps having. There has been a lot of vagueness and hints as to what it might be about in the previous chapters. We know that it was a powerful nightmare about Conor physically losing his grip and subsequently losing something, or someone, that he loves.

In this nightmare, Conor feels trapped and unable to protect his mother who happens to be sitting on a cliff edge. His body is heavy and he can’t move the way that he wants to. He doesn’t have the strength that he needs to save his mother from the monster that is waiting below and just out of sight.

The violence of the nightmare shows that Conor feels that he is responsible for protecting and saving his mother. It is safe to assume that the swirling dark monster that Conor encounters in this nightmare each time is the cancer that his mother has been fighting for so long. This nightmare suffocates him and hangs over his head. He feels terrible guilt in that he can’t hold on to her hands as she is torn from the cliff’s edge by the monster of Conor’s nightmare.

“The Rest of the Fourth Tale”

Here, Conor’s nightmare continues. This is the first time that he has continued in the dream since the point his mother falls off the cliff. Normally he wakes in a terror at this point. However, he is still in the nightmare along with the monster. The monster is not satisfied with what Conor thought was his tale. However, the tale is just beginning. Conor must speak his truth. The monster tells him if that he cannot do this then he will die.

Knowing that he must continue his tale and speak his truth wraps Conor in dread, anxiety, and fear. The terror he feels begins as a flame inside him and soon he is spewing fire in an attempt to avoid speaking his truth. Screaming aloud with pain and grief, Conor finally admits the fourth tale. “I can’t stand it anymore!” Conor says. The truth that has been eating Connor alive has been that he just wants this waiting to be over. Knowing that she will be gone and waiting is more than he can continue to bear. The suffering is too much and he feels such guilt that he just wants it all to be over with.

“Life After Death”

Conor awakes on the grassy hill outside of his house after the nightmare ends. He has not died by fire like he thought he did in the dream. He is surprised because he thought his tale would deserve punishment. He thought his thoughts made him a terrible person and that he deserved “the worst”.

Conor admits to the monster that he believes that it is his fault that his mother is dying. He tells the monster that he has been feeling like this for a long time. That he has just wished that it would all be over, even if that meant losing his mother. Connor feels terrible guilt for simply wishing for the end of pain. The monster tells him that this is such a human wish and that everyone, everywhere wishes this exact same thing. He tells Conor that he must speak the truth. It won’t be easy, as Conor has learned since he was almost willing to die rather than speak it.

Conor grow suddenly very tired and the tree creates a nest for him to sleep in. He reassures Conor that he can sleep and be able to see his mother soon. The chapter closes with an unanswered question for the monster from Conor as he doses off: Why do you always come at 12:07?

Join in next Monday for comments and discussion on the next 20 pages of the book!

Thanks for joining us for pages 173-196 (“The Fourth Tale,” “The Rest of the Fourth Tale,” and “Life After Death”) of  A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness!  Join in next Monday for the final chapters of the book!

We will talk about a few chapters each Monday until the book is done.  If Monday happens to be a holiday, then the post will publish on Tuesday.  Once we finish the book, we’ll use one more Monday to talk about general feelings from the book and anything else you’d like to discuss.  We’ll also have a video chat book club discussion at the end!  Join in, in the comments every week!  Also, there will probably be spoilers so read along with us!

Excited about the young adult cancer book club?  Have any suggestions for future reads?  Let us know!

Book Club: A Monster Calls, pages 159-172

hospital room

Welcome to the comments and discussion of the Young Adult Cancer Book Club!  We are reading A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness, after an idea inspired by Siobhan Dowd.  Catch up on pages 1-22, pages 23-43, pages 44-65pages 66-85, pages 86-107, pages 108-126, pages 127-141, and pages 142-158.

Let’s get started!

Commentary by Clarissa:

“A Note”

Conor is stuck in a waiting purgatory, seemingly isolated and unseen. “…Time kept moving forward for the rest of the world. The rest of the world that wasn’t waiting.” The words are subtle, but the meaning is strong. The audacity this world has to keep moving forward and to not wait with Conor! Then Lily offers a beautiful gesture in a note when she apologizes and says, “I see you.” It feels like a gift that Conor needs in this moment.

“100 Years”

Now Conor’s sense of knowing is growing stronger and less avoidable. He’s pulled out of school to see his mom and that alone means it is serious. Conor and his mom finally have “the talk” and he becomes angry. She grants his anger permission now and forever in the future. She wishes she had a hundred years to give him. He is determined more than ever to speak to the Monster.

“What’s the Use of You”

The Monster owes an explanation now, as Conor channels his anger into a full-on attack. He’s let Conor down by not healing his mother. “I did not come to heal her. I came to heal you,” the Monster explained. Conor grapples with this explanation, finally accepting that he does in fact require the monster’s help. It’s time for the fourth tale.

Join in next Monday for comments and discussion on the next 20 pages of the book!

Thanks for joining us for pages 159-172 (“A Note,” “100 Years,” and “What’s the Use of You”) of  A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness!  Join in next Monday for the next chapters of the book!

We will talk about a few chapters each Monday until the book is done.  If Monday happens to be a holiday, then the post will publish on Tuesday.  Once we finish the book, we’ll use one more Monday to talk about general feelings from the book and anything else you’d like to discuss.  We’ll also have a video chat book club discussion at the end!  Join in, in the comments every week!  Also, there will probably be spoilers so read along with us!

Excited about the young adult cancer book club?  Have any suggestions for future reads?  Let us know!

Book Club: A Monster Calls, pages 142-158

storm clouds

Welcome to the comments and discussion of the Young Adult Cancer Book Club!  We are reading A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness, after an idea inspired by Siobhan Dowd.  Catch up on pages 1-22, pages 23-43, pages 44-65pages 66-85, pages 86-107, pages 108-126, and pages 127-141.

Let’s get started!

“I No Longer See You”

Commentary by Marie:

The conflict between Harry and Conor comes to a head in this chapter. Conor is filled with desperation and pain as he focuses on this new treatment for his mum from the yew tree, when Harry and his sidekicks arrive to taunt and bully him once again. Conor is no longer afraid and possibly even welcomes the interruption but then Harry surprises him by saying he’s figured Harry out and then he offers his hand to shake. Then he utters the devastating words “I no longer see you” before walking away as if Conor is invisible. The monster appears as the lunch hall clocks reads 12:07; it is time for the third tale.

Commentary by Natalie:

This chapter starts with the grandma silently indicating that the new treatment is not working. Then things with Harry come to a head when he finally realizes what he can do to punish Connor more than beating him which is to completely ignore him.

“The Third Tale”

Commentary by Marie:

This is a short tale about a man who was effectively, though not actually, invisible, who one day becomes tired of being unseen. The yew monster asks “And if no one sees you, are you really there at all?” which must echo how Conor is feeling and may explain his first moment of violence, destroying his grandmother’s sitting room earlier, and his ongoing ambivalence about class work, as he feels invisible and struggles to give voice to his fears and emotions. Conor asks the monster how the man in this third tale made people see him and the reply is “he called for a monster” as Harry is shoved across the dining hall by the monster. Suddenly the whole school is watching, though no one will make eye contact as if they are embarrassed. Harry taunts Conor, actually mentioning his mum, and says Conor wants to be punished for some terrible secret. It seems Harry does understand Conor, but not enough to see the beating coming.

Commentary by Natalie:

The Third Tale was the most difficult for me to read because you can see that Connor is hurting but doesn’t know where to take out his aggression. In this tale the monster is talking to Connor as he is physically manifesting the tale by attacking Harry while the whole school watches.

“Punishment”

Commentary by Marie:

We are told that Conor beat Harry so badly that he ended up in the hospital. Yet, Miss Kwan and the headmistress are reluctant to hold Conor accountable. Miss Kwan mentions Conor’s “special circumstances” (but doesn’t come right out and say Conor’s mum is ill which makes Conor wince). Now we understand that Conor’s perception is that the monster beat Harry though Conor could nonetheless feel the blows as if he had given them and through the haze he could see the other schoolchildren looking on in shock and terror. Conor attempts to tell the headmistress that it wasn’t him that did it and the headmistress doesn’t seem to have a response to that, though Miss Kwan notes that the entire lunch hall saw Conor giving the beating.

These chapters where Conor becomes violent reminded me of another book I read recently of a child who had horrible tantrums – it’s described from the point of view of the child and he felt there was a monster inside him that sometimes would get so big and uncontrollable and then would completely consume him during his fits. It almost seems that the yew monster’s story world that Conor gets transported to is a little like something that consumes Conor so he doesn’t fully see and feel his destructive actions. This, in a way, gives Conor permission to express his rage and helplessness.

The conclusion of this incident is both unexpected and yet conceivable. The headmistress tells Conor that normally this behaviour would be punished with immediate expulsion, which causes Conor relief because everything would make sense again. But then the headmistress lets him go with only the vague threat that someday they will talk about this incident, but not today. Conor has to go back to class as if everything is normal; Conor is no longer invisible but he feels more isolated than ever.

Commentary by Natalie:

The headmistress has to decide how to punish Connor for beating Harry at school. Connor instantly feels relief that he will get in trouble which will provide a distraction from what is going on with his mother but quickly realizes that they are not going to punish him and he will continue to be the kid that everyone stares at in school.

Join in next Monday for comments and discussion on the next 20 pages of the book!

Thanks for joining us for pages 142-158 (“I No Longer See You,” “The Third Tale,” and “Punishment”) of  A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness!  Join in next Monday for the next chapters of the book!

We will talk about a few chapters each Monday until the book is done.  If Monday happens to be a holiday, then the post will publish on Tuesday.  Once we finish the book, we’ll use one more Monday to talk about general feelings from the book and anything else you’d like to discuss.  We’ll also have a video chat book club discussion at the end!  Join in, in the comments every week!  Also, there will probably be spoilers so read along with us!

Excited about the young adult cancer book club?  Have any suggestions for future reads?  Let us know!

Book Club: A Monster Calls, pages 86-107

grandfather clock

Welcome to the comments and discussion of the Young Adult Cancer Book Club!  We are reading A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness, after an idea inspired by Siobhan Dowd.  Catch up on pages 1-22, pages 23-43, pages 44-65, and pages 66-85.

Let’s get started!

Commentary by Vinesha:

Reading these three chapters, I see Conor coming more into his own. He seems to be finding his voice through the chaos swirling around him. In the first section, it was refreshing to see Conor being vulnerable and open with his dad — having those difficult conversations. These kinds of chats when trying to voice my deep, challenging thoughts are a struggle – and this was the case during my cancer journey too – and so I admire Conor for being able to share things on his mind, even amidst the difficult circumstances surrounding him. It’s unfortunate his dad didn’t fully understand and also made light of the implicit worries laced in Conor’s words when he was sharing his thoughts on the situation and the yew tree monster to his dad. I’m sure Christmas celebrations are the furthest thing from Conor’s mind, except that it was yet another uncertain day ahead that he wouldn’t know how his life would look.

Conor ends up alone at his grandma’s and we see fear, anger, and trying to hang onto control as he dismantles some of the clock. Seeing this taking place, the yew tree dream state takes over again as Conor is given support, handed control, and asked (given permission) to release his aggression, feelings, and anger. Conor was finally validated for the journey he was going through, which the yew tree has had time to intimately understand.

It will be interesting to see the aftermath of the household destruction in relationships with his family. I’m also taking note of how it will impact Conor to be given some grasp of control when his life is seemingly falling apart.

Commentary by Brittany:

“Champ”

In this chapter, Conor’s dad arrives. It’s a big moment since his dad lives in America with his new family. It seems like everyone knows what is going to happen but Conor. Conor is in denial. He knows something is up but he just doesn’t want to believe it.

Conor tells his dad about the yew tree to try and stop his dad from talking about the future. He just wants everything to be the same and not change.

“Americans Don’t Get Much Holiday”

Conor’s grandma is in the hospital to visit his mother and his dad is going back to America. Conor is upset to hear the news of his dad’s short visit. He must feel abandoned since his dad is leaving him. He has no one to run to. When he gets back to his grandma’s house and is all alone, Conor’s takes out some aggression on his grandmother’s clock.

At the end of the chapter, the monster arrives.

“The Second Tale”

The monster comes back to tell Conor the second story. I really love the second story. The story is about the Apothecary, the parsonage, and medicine. The Apothecary wants the yew tree so he could use it for medicine but the parson wouldn’t let him have access to it. The parson didn’t agree with the Apothecary’s ways. When the parson’s daughters grew sick with no cure in sight, he begged the Apothecary for help. The Apothecary remembered the past and declined. The daughters died that night.

 

Join in next Monday for comments and discussion on the next 20 pages of the book!

Thanks for joining us for pages 86-107 (“Champ,” “Americans Don’t Get Much Holiday,” and “The Second Talk”) of  A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness!  Join in next Monday for the next chapters of the book!

We will talk about a few chapters each Monday until the book is done.  If Monday happens to be a holiday, then the post will publish on Tuesday.  Once we finish the book, we’ll use one more Monday to talk about general feelings from the book and anything else you’d like to discuss.  We’ll also have a video chat book club discussion at the end!  Join in, in the comments every week!  Also, there will probably be spoilers so read along with us!

Excited about the young adult cancer book club?  Have any suggestions for future reads?  Let us know!

Book Club: A Monster Calls, pages 66-85

hospital waiting room

Welcome to the comments and discussion of the Young Adult Cancer Book Club!  We are reading A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness, after an idea inspired by Siobhan Dowd.  Catch up on pages 1-22, pages 23-43, and pages 44-65.

Let’s get started!

“Understanding”

Commentary by Megan:

Lily is trying to be a friend to Conor and is even willing to forgive Conor about getting her in trouble at school. He doesn’t accept her kindness, and it is obvious he doesn’t forgive her for telling friends at school about his mother’s illness which has led to him becoming isolated and “invisible.” The bullying continues as Conor is punched by Harry in the schoolyard. This time, Lily doesn’t intervene. Harry continues to be threatening to Conor but Miss Kwan interrupts. She continues to show kindness and perhaps pity to Conor; however, it appears that Conor doesn’t want kindness or pity. He wants everything to be normal and for people to treat him normal.

Commentary by Krystina:

This chapter focuses on a few situations where there is either a lack of or clear understanding from those involved.

The first situation surrounds Lily is trying to be understanding of Conor’s behavior from the day before at school, when he lied and allowed her to get into trouble. Lily makes mention of her mum saying people need to “make allowances” for Conor, because of what was going on with his mum. Conor blames Lily and her mum for the way he is being treated by everyone, because Lily and her mum were the ones who spread the news about his mum being sick. The next situation occurs at school and involves, Conor and the bullies; Harry, Anton, and Sully. After Conor is punched in the stomach by Harry, Sully tries to turn Conor around by his shoulder. Harry stops this and says, there is an understanding between himself and Conor, that Harry is the only to touch Conor. Conor replied by nodding and internally agreed that there, indeed, was an understanding between the two of them. The final situation includes Miss Kwan and Conor. Miss Kwan explains to Conor that she understands that though Harry may be charming, she knows he is still a bully. Miss Kwan, also wants Conor to know she understands the reason he may be keeping quiet, is due to his mum’s situation. She tells Conor if he needs anything, her door is always open, but though Conor can hear the “care”, he didn’t want to accept it because he didn’t feel deserving of it.

“Little Talk”

Commentary by Megan:

Conor’s grandmother tells him he will be staying with her at her house as his mom is in a lot of pain and going to be admitted to the hospital. She is in pain because the treatment isn’t working. He also finds out his father is coming to visit from America. He is going to leave his “new” family in America to come visit. Conor asks his grandmother why but doesn’t get an answer. He goes to see his mom, but she is resting in his bed instead of her own. She reassures Conor the doctors will make her pain better while she is in the hospital. She also tells him treatment is not working, but she is sure to provide reassurance that the doctors will just “adjust” her treatment again- just like last time. He tells her she can tell him if that’s not true, which may be a sign he is more open to the reality of the situation. This appears to be a first for him. She tries to comfort him by telling him to watch the yew tree for her while she is gone so it is there when she gets back. This is her way of showing she will come back home from the hospital, just like last time.

Commentary by Krystina:

Conor finds out his mum is going to the hospital because she’s still in pain. He learns that he will be staying with his grandmother for a few days, which he is not happy about, and that his father is coming to visit from America, which he is extremely confused by. Conor’s mum finally talks to him about her current condition. She mentions that the treatment isn’t working, but assures him that there are plenty of other things that the doctors will try, and that he is not to worry. Conor, not entirely convinced, responds by saying “if there’s more, you can tell me”. At which point, his mum does not reply but hugs him tight and then makes mention of the yew tree.

“Grandma’s House”

Commentary by Megan:

The monster hasn’t showed up for five days since being at grandmother’s house. His grandmother doesn’t even have a real yard- and no room for a yew tree. Conor finds himself alone in his grandmother’s house and waiting on his father to arrive. And maybe waiting on the monster to show up? Conor goes to the pristine sitting room and reads a book. No monster. Finally, his father arrives and Conor seems to have a genuine, wide smile for the first time in quite awhile.

Commentary by Krystina:

Conor notes that the “monster” has not visited him in five days, since being at his grandma’s house. His grandmother keeps referring to the room Conor is staying in, as “his” room. I think this is her way of trying to prepare Conor for what is to come. However, Conor hates this room more than anything else in her house. At this point, I feel Conor is still resisting accepting his mum’s current situation and the possible consequences that may result. As Conor waits for his father to arrive, he checks under his grandmother’s rug, for any signs in the floor of the “monster”. The doorbell rings and with much excitement, Conor opens the door. The chapter ends with Conor hearing his father say “Hey, Son” and Conor responding with a smile bigger than it had been in a year.

 

Join in next Monday for comments and discussion on the next 20 pages of the book!

Thanks for joining us for pages 66-85 (“Understanding,” “Little Talk,” and “Grandma’s House”) of  A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness!  Join in next Monday for the next chapters of the book!

We will talk about a few chapters each Monday until the book is done.  If Monday happens to be a holiday, then the post will publish on Tuesday.  Once we finish the book, we’ll use one more Monday to talk about general feelings from the book and anything else you’d like to discuss.  We’ll also have a video chat book club discussion at the end!  Join in, in the comments every week!  Also, there will probably be spoilers so read along with us!

Excited about the young adult cancer book club?  Have any suggestions for future reads?  Let us know!

Book Club: A Monster Calls, pages 44-65

village scene

Welcome to the comments and discussion of the Young Adult Cancer Book Club!  We are reading A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness, after an idea inspired by Siobhan Dowd.  Catch up on pages 1-22 and pages 23-43.

Let’s get started!

Commentary by Jessica:

“The Wildness of Stories”

In this chapter, Conor is dealing with the inconvenience of giving up his room to his grandma and is worried that his mom is not recovering from treatment as quickly as she used to. Conor’s annoyance and anger about his situation carry over to his encounter with the monster who has the nerve to show up 2 minutes late. The monster is amazed that Conor does not seem to be afraid of him and questions exactly what does scare him. Conor wonders if perhaps the monster was there to help Conor with the problems he’s having with his grandma. This leads to the monster’s first story.

“The First Tale” and “The Rest of the First Tale”

The monster’s first story is a fairy tale (though he swears it’s true) about a prince and his “evil” stepmother. The prince’s father dies when the prince is 17, one year before he can take the throne. In the meantime, his stepmother takes over the throne. The queen is suspected of being a witch who poisoned her husband. In order to continue her reign as queen, the stepmother decides that maybe the best course of action would be to marry the prince (yuck!). The prince, however, has fallen in love with a farmer’s daughter and has no desire to marry his own stepmother (again, yuck!), so he runs away with the farmer’s daughter with a plan to return on his 18th birthday to take his rightful place on the thrown. After a night under the yew tree (aka, the monster) the prince awakens to find his future bride stabbed to death. He runs to some local villagers for help and tells them the queen has killed his bride. This angers the villagers and they condemn the queen to death by burning at the stake. At the last minute, the monster rescues the queen and brings her to a seaside village so she can live the rest of her life in peace. Conor questions this decision, but the monster reveals that the prince had been deceptive and had actually killed his bride himself and blamed the queen because he believed that doing so would overthrow a great evil. It raises the question of whether or not the queen was truly evil and whether the prince did the right thing. Conor wonders if the monster is telling him this to convince him to be nicer to his grandma, but the monster laughs and says he’s not giving lessons in niceness. He’s really showing Conor that there is not always a good guy and a bad guy. People are usually somewhere in between. The encounter with the monster ends with the monster telling Conor that his grandma is not the one Conor needs to be saved from, which raises the question, who does the monster think Conor needs saving from?

 

Join in next Monday for comments and discussion on the next 20 pages of the book!

Thanks for joining us for pages 44-65 (“The Wildness of Stories,” “The First Tale,” and “The Rest of the First Tale”) of  A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness!  Join in next Monday for the next chapters of the book!

We will talk about a few chapters each Monday until the book is done.  If Monday happens to be a holiday, then the post will publish on Tuesday.  Once we finish the book, we’ll use one more Monday to talk about general feelings from the book and anything else you’d like to discuss.  We’ll also have a video chat book club discussion at the end!  Join in, in the comments every week!  Also, there will probably be spoilers so read along with us!

Excited about the young adult cancer book club?  Have any suggestions for future reads?  Let us know!

Book Club: A Monster Calls, pages 23-43

window

Welcome to the comments and discussion of the Young Adult Cancer Book Club!  We are reading A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness, after an idea inspired by Siobhan Dowd.  Catch up on pages 1-22.

Let’s get started!

“Life Writing”

In this chapter, we meet the monster again.  And in plain daylight, looking back at Conor from the yew tree.  We also learn of how his friend Lily “changed the whole world in a single day.”  You have to feel for Conor…his mom is sick, his childhood friend finds out, and then the whole school knew about it.  It must have forced Conor to need to face his Mom’s illness in every face, every glance, every moment.

“Three Stories”

We meet the monster in closer proximity in this chapter.  He is big and tall and powerful to young Conor.  To him, the monster’s arms were “so wide they seemed big enough to encompass the world.”  We also learn why the monster has come.  He will tell Conor three stories because “stories are the wildest things of all…stories chase and bite and hunt.”  Oh my goodness, I love the writing in this book.  It is beautiful and poetic and carries such meaning in so few words.  The monster tells Conor that he will be the one telling the monter the last story and if he does not, the monter will “eat him alive.”  What an apt metaphor for holding secrets and shame inside of us, refusing to allow another in.

“Grandma”

Conor’s grandma seems to be, from Conor’s description, much like her house.  “…filled with expensive old things you could never touch.”  She doesn’t seem to be able to relate to Conor as he needs and she represents a brand new life, where Conor and his mom are no longer in charge of their little life together.

 

Join in next Monday for comments and discussion on the next 20 pages of the book!

Thanks for joining us for pages 23-43 (“Life Writing,” “Three Stories,” and “Grandma”) of  A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness!  Join in next Monday for the next chapters of the book!

We will talk about a few chapters each Monday until the book is done.  If Monday happens to be a holiday, then the post will publish on Tuesday.  Once we finish the book, we’ll use one more Monday to talk about general feelings from the book and anything else you’d like to discuss.  We’ll also have a video chat book club discussion at the end!  Join in, in the comments every week!  Also, there will probably be spoilers so read along with us!

Excited about the young adult cancer book club?  Have any suggestions for future reads?  Let us know!

Book Club: A Monster Calls, pages 1-22

tree at night

Welcome to the comments and discussion of the Young Adult Cancer Book Club!  We are reading A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness, after an idea inspired by Siobhan Dowd.

Let’s get started!

“A Monster Calls”

Wow!  What an opening!  You can really see the surroundings as described in the first several pages.  You can feel the air rushing around Conor as the monster lifts him up in the air outside his bedroom window.  The descriptions are beautiful and the images in the book add so much to its magical quality.  I’ve read this book before but you have to stand in wonder at a little boy who stands in the grips of a monster and is not afraid.  It forces the reader to ask themselves, then what is he afraid of?!

“Breakfast”

This small chapter gives us a glimpse into what Conor may be frightened of.  We meet Conor in the daytime, as an independent child needing to help take care of himself while he mother deals with an illness.  Though not directly stated, based on her bald head and the mention of treatments, one can imagine that she is going through chemotherapy treatments after a cancer diagnosis.  Conor’s mom tells him that Grandma is coming to visit to help out.  Conor seems to prefer life in their house with just him and his mom to this new arrangement.

What a brave duo they have become.  Conor’s mom, living as a single mom while facing cancer and Conor, a young boy holding it all together.

“School”

Being a kid is hard.  Being a kid with a sick mother, while having some sort of yet to be define recurring nightmare, is even harder.  In this chapter we see bullies and a friend, both of whom are perceived as enemy forces by our main character, Conor.  Whatever he is battling inside, he seems to want to battle it alone.  Perhaps hoping it will then just go away.

 

Join in next Monday for comments and discussion on the next 20 pages of the book!

Thanks for joining us for pages 1-22 (“A Monster Calls,” “Breakfast,” and “School”) of  A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness!  Join in next Monday for the next chapters of the book!

We will talk about a few chapters each Monday until the book is done.  If Monday happens to be a holiday, then the post will publish on Tuesday.  Once we finish the book, we’ll use one more Monday to talk about general feelings from the book and anything else you’d like to discuss.  We’ll also have a video chat book club discussion at the end!  Join in, in the comments every week!  Also, there will probably be spoilers so read along with us!

Excited about the young adult cancer book club?  Have any suggestions for future reads?  Let us know!