Summary:
Grade 9 Up—Todd Hewitt lives in a world in which all
women are dead, and the thoughts of men and animals are
constantly audible as Noise. Graphically represented by a set
of scratchy fonts and sentence fragments that run into and over
each other, Noise is an oppressive chaos of words, images, and
sounds that makes human company exhausting and no thought truly
private. The history of these peculiar circumstances unfolds
over the course of the novel, but Ness's basic world-building
is so immediately successful that readers, too, will be shocked
when Todd and his dog, Manchee, first notice a silence in the
Noise. Realizing that he must keep the silence secret from the
town leaders, he runs away, and his terrified flight with an
army in pursuit makes up the backbone of the plot. The
emotional, physical, and intellectual drama is well crafted and
relentless. Todd, who narrates in a vulnerable and stylized
voice, is a sympathetic character who nevertheless makes a few
wrenching mistakes. Manchee and Aaron, a zealot preacher,
function both as characters and as symbols. Tension, suspense,
and the regular bombardment of Noise are palpable throughout,
mitigated by occasional moments of welcome humor. The
cliff-hanger ending is unexpected and unsatisfying, but the
book is still a pleasure for sophisticated readers comfortable
with the length and the bleak, literary tone.—_Megan
Honig, New York Public Library_
Starred Review Chased by a madman preacher and
possibly the rest of his townsfolk as well, young Todd Hewitt
flees his settlement on a planet where war with the natives has
killed all the women and infected the men with a germ that
broadcasts their thoughts aloud for all to hear. This
cacophanous thought-cloud is known as Noise and is rendered
with startling effectiveness on the page. The first of many
secrets is revealed when Todd discovers an unsettling hole in
the Noise, and quickly realizes that he lives in a much
different world than the one he thought he did. Some of the
central conceits of the drama can be hard to swallow, but the
pure inventiveness and excitement of the telling more than make
up for it. Narrated in a sort of pidgin English with crack
dramatic and comic timing by Todd and featuring one of the
finest talking-dog characters anywhere, this troubling,
unforgettable opener to the Chaos Walking trilogy is a
penetrating look at the ways in which we reveal ourselves to
one another, and what it takes to be a man in a society gone
horribly wrong. The cliffhanger ending is as effective as a
shot to the gut. Grades 8-12. --Ian Chipman
From School Library Journal
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