A Monster Calls
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What is the monster in A Monster Calls?
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Joe
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Jan 11, 2018 07:13PM

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perhaps the author wasn't clear about the monster, so we could each imagine something different for our selves.


I read it thinking the monster was real, and as the book progresses, I now think that Connor loses all the things that make him 'human' and coming closer to the 'wild', he and the monster come closer together.
In passages where Connor lets out his anger, becoming raging and primeval (Wild) he and the monster become one. In these moment Connor becomes part of the 'wild'.
The monster is a separate entity though, it's definitely real, and embodies all of 'the wild', the concept and the actual wild.
It can tell Connor stories that he's obviously never hear before, so it can't be some hallucination.

I read it thinking the monster was real, and as the book progresses, I now think that Connor loses all ..."
In my opinion it had nothing to do with the "wild." I think it's a possibility that Connor's subconscious created a villain for him to fight, since there was none, but realized that what he needed more was a companion. So in the end he was a little bit of both. And Patrick Ness's decision to have them watch "King Kong," probably influenced him. In a way, The Monster was like a mirror, reflecting his emotions without the filter that he put on for everyday life. Also, did anyone notice the similarities between the Monster and Grandma?


As to the physical physical havoc and destruction wrought, I see that as having been perpetrated by Conor while he was dreaming and sleepwalking (or should it be "sleep-bashing"?).

Well, that was easy. Thank you, Google!
https://treesforlife.org.uk/forest/my...
To me, I think that the monster was a figment of Conor's depression and grief, or perhaps of his imagination. It says in the book that yew trees are a sign of healing, but given the fact that Conor physically destroys Harry, and also physically destroys his grandmother's house, perhaps the monster is a kind of coping mechanism.
I don't know, I read books of higher levels.
I don't know, I read books of higher levels.
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