Recently I read A Monster Calls written by Patrick Ness from an idea by the late Siobhan Dowd which publishes in the U.K. later this week and in the U.S. in September. And now, with the announcement of Bin Laden's death following so closely on the anniversary of Hitler's, I've been doing some thinking about monsters.
One of the many extraordinary aspects of Ness's work is the way he presents the nuances of good and evil and complicates the very notion of monster. In his earlier Chaos Walking series the monsters were absolutist and terrorist humans involved with the colonization of a planet, each one convinced that the dreadful things that they did were done for righteous reasons. In A Monster Calls (the first chapter can be read here) the landscape is not literally as vast as a planet; instead it is the smaller world of a boy in emotional anguish. Yet even in this very intimate environment the monsters are just as complex and almost equally unfathomable.
As I consider the understandable responses to the deaths of real life monsters like Bin Laden and Hitler, Ness reinforces for me just how complicated good and evil really are. And also, that the end of a bad person doesn't mean the end of bad things, sadly.
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