The Knife of Never Letting Go (Chaos Walking #1)

 
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7 reviews with 5 stars
9 reviews
 
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Overall rating
 
4.7
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4.8(9)
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4.8(6)
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4.3(6)
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Upon Finishing, I am Emotionally Spent
Overall rating
 
4.7
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
4.0
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N/A
This book frustrated me, but not necessarily in a bad way. It’s definitely a page-turner and has a really unique premise and great plot. I find Todd not exactly likable, but there’s no debating that he is a very well-written character. The writing in this book is a little hard to get into, since it’s written in Todd’s voice, who is fairly illiterate, meaning that certain words are misspelled and wording is sometimes strange, but it’s well-done. After the first thirty or forty pages, the writing stopped annoying me and I was able to focus on the story.

In some ways, this book reminds me of Unwind in that Ness is not afraid to take on big topics like war, innocence, and the loss thereof. Even though on the surface this book is action and adventure-packed, at its core are some pretty big questions about morality. This is not really a book for the faint of heart(except I normally am), at times it’s rather gory, at least by my standards.

The main issue I had with this book is the lack of information. For awhile, both Todd and the reader don’t know why it’s so important for him to run away from Prentisstown, and this reason is used to build suspense. That’s fine, for awhile. But by the time we actually got to the big reveal, I wasn’t full of suspense anymore, I was truly annoyed. I just found the information was withheld a little too long, and the book would have had just as much of an impact if that information had been revealed earlier.

My other more minor complaint is more of a personal one. This book ends on a cliffhanger, but by the time I got to the end I was so emotionally exhausted from reading this book and slightly impatient with the pacing of information that I really don’t feel like reading through the rest of the trilogy, despite the fact that I really do believe this is a great book. As much as I want to know what happens, I don’t want to go on another journey with Todd again just to find out what happens in this world.

Final Impression: This is no doubt a really well-done book, but I also found it incredibly frustrating at times. I want to find out what happens next, but I don’t care quite enough to run out and buy the rest of the trilogy right away. 4/5 stars.
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Amazing post-apocalyptic fiction
Overall rating
 
4.7
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
4.0
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N/A
It took me a while to warm up to this book—about 100 pages or so. That’s rather a long time, though since the book itself was nearly 500 pages, it wasn’t too bad. But once things started happening (the first 100 pages cover a 6-hour period or so), then it was practically impossible to put this book down.

The travels of Todd, Viola and the talking dog Manchee were wholly engrossing. This book is very much an escapist read, I think. It’s the kind of book you read when you don’t want to think about everything else. In spite of its length, The Knife of Never Letting Go is full of action and new experiences, and I definitely don’t think it ever dragged.

Aside from its rough start, my big complaint was how Todd would fight a bad guy, leave him for dead, and then that same bad guy would pop up again in about 20 pages. It happened over and over and over and over again. Somewhat annoying, to be honest. (Note after the fact: this is Patrick Ness’s weakness throughout the series—nobody who died stayed dead.)
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This book is totally amazing!
Overall rating
 
5.0
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
5.0
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N/A
Can you imagine if you lived in a place where animals could talk, and you could hear what everyone was thinking, ALL THE TIME?!

Well, for Todd Hewitt, this is a reality. Todd lives in Prentisstown, has a dog called Manchee, and has never seen a female. There are none in Prentisstown. Todd is very excited about becoming a man (on the New World, when you turn thirteen, after thirteen cycles of thirteen months, you become a man). But as his birthday approaches, Todd discovers that his whole life was constructed around a lie, and the history of Prentisstown goes deeper and darker than anyone would expect.

One day, Todd hears a hole in the Noise. A little later, he meets Viola, the first (but not the last) female he has ever met and... she has no 'noise'.

This book never gets boring, and this book is written so well, it seems almost as if you were there, experiencing everything they experience. You get to know these two main characters so well.

This book is very sad, but I love it so much! I was hooked from the very first sentence! I love how there is Todd narrating the story, it gives you a much better view of what is really going on.


The way the book is written is very fun (even though it is a sad story) and if your one of those people who can't stand spelling mistakes, I advise you to brace yourself! This book has a lot of spelling mistakes but that just makes it even better.

The Knife of Never Letting Go is the first in the trilogy of Chaos Walking.

SO, EVERYONE OUT THERE, GO AND READ THIS BOOK! IT IS AMAZING!!!!
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Todd Hewitt
Overall rating
 
5.0
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
5.0
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N/A
What if there was a world where you could hear what everyone was thinking, even the animals. This is where Todd Hewitt lives with his dog Manchee. However, things don't go well for Todd as he reaches his birthday and he learns that his community is not what it seems. On the run from this secret he meets Viola, the only female he has ever met, and stranger still, someone who has no 'noise'. Their epic journey is never boring, and you fall in love with these two characters along the way.
Good Points
I loved the writing voice as it was Todd himself narrating the whole story. There is a lot of humor in the way the book is written even though it is a dark tail story. It's very sad.
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Dystopic Fiction at its Finest
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5.0
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5.0
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N/A
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Reader reviewed by Misty

I am a big fan of dystopic fiction, and The Knife of Never Letting Go
is one of the most compelling pieces of dystopia I have read in awhile.



Todd Hewitt is the last boy in Prentisstown. His birthday is
coming, when he will take his place among the men of his community: a
community of only men, where each can hear the others thoughts. The
inhabitants of Prentisstown -- man and beast alike -- are afflicted
with Noise: a continual stream of thoughts and images from every male
creature. There is no stopping or shielding Noise, it is just a way of
life. But when Todd stumbles upon a hole in the Noise, things begin to
change in Todd's life and he finds himself on the run from all of the
people he's ever known, and discovering along the way that all he's
known to be true may not be.



I loved Todd's voice. It did take some getting used to; and not just Todd's voice but the steady stream of all
voices, down to Todd's dog, Manchee, or the crocodiles that want to eat
him. But once the transition into Noise has been made, all of the
voices become very compelling and interesting. Ness manages to make
them distinct, which is no easy feat. He also keeps the sense of
urgency going through the story without ever making the reader think
"Oh, enough already!", or without giving away too much information too
soon, so that the revelations along the way are spoiled. The action
remains taut and teh narrative quick-paced and interesting.



The Knife of Never Letting Go is the first in a trilogy, Chaos
Walking, and Ness couldn't have made that more clear. First, there is
no way that the conflicts of the story could have been resolved in one
book; second, the ending is so abrupt that it would leave most readers extremely
irritated if it was not to be continued. The ending still may irritate
some, but it certainly makes you want to read the next in the series,
The Ask and the Answer...

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Knife of Never Letting Go is AMAZING!
Overall rating
 
5.0
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
N/A
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N/A
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Reader reviewed by danielle

Book Title: The Knife of Never Letting Go

Author: Patrick Ness

Pages: 496

Summery (from PatrickNess.com):


Todd Hewitt is the last boy in Prentisstown.

But Prentisstown isn't like other towns. Everyone can hear everyone else's thoughts in a constant, overwhelming, never-ending Noise. There is no privacy. There are no secrets.

Or are there?

Just one month away from the birthday that will make him a man, Todd unexpectedly stumbles upon a spot of complete silence.

Which is impossible.

Prentisstown has been lying to him.

And now he's going to have to run...


Can words express how much I loved The Knife of Never Letting Go? Probably not. But I'll do my best.

This book starts off with, single handedly, the best first sentence in the history of literature:


The first thing you find out when yer dog learns to talk is that dogs don't got nothing much to say. About Anything.


And so begins The Knife of Never Letting Go.

Todd lives in a world of Noise.

Constant, unfiltered, timeless Noise that wafts through his small community just as the sound of traffic does in ours. Every thought, every feeling, every tick of an emotion is broadcast for the entire world to hear--at least, as far as Todd is concerned. He's been told that Prentisstown is the only civilization in a world of nothing, desolate and empty for his entire life. Mr. Ness describes the Noise perfectly:


"The Noise is a man unfiltered, and without a filter, a man is just chaos walking"


It's not hard to believe that the entire book is just Todd's Noise. Words are misspelled, do to his lack of education. Single sentences run on for paragraphs, words are cut off before they can even be processed, every thought Todd has is completely raw. While this could have easily been a gimick, Patrick Ness pulls it off with surprising grace and fluency. Easy to understand, easy to relate to, The Knife of Never Letting Go is coming-of-age tale set in a world where coming of age is deadly, and manhood is strictly defined. It's a place where you both wish you were and thank every God you can think of your not.

As for the characters, they are very well defined. Even Manchee, Todd's talking dog, seems be a character all his own, Todd's loyal companion throughout the book, putting his little dog life on the line a handful of times in order to protect him (the ever important "awwww" factor). At first, Todd makes it very clear that he does not want, and never asked for, Manchee (he wanted a knife, as it was), which he explains quite thoroughly:


Bens sent me to pick him some swamp apples and hes made me take Manchee with me, even tho we all know Cillian only bought him to stay on Mayor Prentiss good side and so suddenly heres this brand-new dog as a present for my birthday last year when I never said I wanted any dog, that what I said I wanted was for Cillian to finally fix the fissionbike so I wouldnt have to walk every forsaken place in this stupid town, but oh, no, happy birthday, Todd, heres a brand new puppy, Todd, and even tho you dont want him, even tho you never asked for him, guess who has to feed him and train him and wash him and take him for walks and listen to him jabber now hes got old enough for the talking germ to set his mouth moving? Guess who?


But, as you turn the pages and get deeper into Todd's chaotic thought process, you realize he does hold a certain affection for his dog, gradually turning into love as they spend their lonely days together running from God-knows-what, which I think is one of the more poigent parts of the book.

I especially love how they keep Todd and Viola's--the girl he meets as he runs from Prentisstown--unromantic. Call me a cynic, but it's highly unlikely that everytime a guy meets a girl, they fall in love. Especially while on the run from an army. I think that it's a curse that befalls far too much young adult literature these days--no matter how desperate the situation, no matter how CHAOTIC the circumstances, SOMEONE ALWAYS FALLS IN LOVE. I'm always a sucker for romance, but sometimes, it's just like, "I already read this. Three hundred times." If The Knife of Never Letting Go teaches us one thing, it's that a boy and a girl can meet and *gasp* just be friends.

Keep in mind, dear readers, that just because it's in the YA section, does not mean it's for the faint of heart: The Knife of Never Letting go is a horrific, all-to-realistic tale of what could happen to our--and other's--world if we're not careful. Though the year is unspecified, the place (and planet) left oddly in the dark, it's in a way that just makes it all the more eery and surreal.

There's no way of describing The Knife of Never Letting Go without spoiling it, but I will say this; anyone, young or old, should pick it up. Immediately. Go, you fools. Your missing out. There are precious hours being wasted. GO!
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Surprisingly Stunning
Overall rating
 
5.0
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
N/A
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N/A
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N/A
Reader reviewed by Allison Fraclose

Todd Hewitt lives in a town where no thought is secret, and even animals have the ability to speak. A byproduct of the war with the Spackle, the resident beings of this planet when the colonists touched down years ago, the constant presence of noise has driven most of the men crazy. Other aftereffects of the war, such as the annihilation of every other colony outside of Prentisstown and the death of every woman on the planet, has already put a strain on the minds of these men. Todd eagerly awaits his birthdayonly one month awaywhen he will officially become a man&and something much more important than the last boy in Prentisstown.




While out picking swamp apples for one of his two guardians, Todd and his dog, Manchee, come across a strange, rare thinga spot of silence in the constant noise. When he returns home to tell his caretakers about his discovery, they tell him he must leave town, immediately. Even odder is that they already have a bag packed for him, and will give Todd no explanation while they buy him time to run.




Todd and Manchee suddenly find themselves racing through the countryside with an army in pursuit. Every man in Prentisstown now seems to be after him, and Todd still does not know why. His only clue is a battered book that he cannot read, and the knowledge that everything he has ever known about his life in Prentisstown has been a lie. Finding aid in the most unexpected of places, Todd must now survive the wrath of an unforgiving world in order to find out the truth.




Now, Im not the type to cry as I read the sad parts in books, or watch the sad parts in movies, but I have to admit that I actually shed a few tears over this story, since Id grown so invested in these characters and their trials. With sneakily brilliant writing, this book will be one knife in your chest that will keep you anxious for the sequel.

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