Piper at the Gates of Dusk (New World, Book 1) by Patrick Ness
Book of the Week: 31 May 2026
Just as in the opening chapter of the first book in Patrick Ness’s Chaos Walking series, this book starts with an intriguing idea and the promise of excitement to come.
It is eighteen years since The Knife of Never Letting Go (Chaos Walking, Book 1) introduced us to the world of Todd Hewitt who is plagued, not only with the thoughts of his dog Manatee, but with those of every male in Prentisstown where he lives with Ben and Cillian who raised him following the death of his parents. The town is one of only a few human settlements on New World, where humans landed just twenty years before. The population is in decline because the native inhabitants of New World, who humans call ‘spackle’, released something called the ‘Noise’ germ that killed all human women, half the men and drove the remainder of the survivors mad. Now everyone experiences a constant onslaught of the thoughts of men and animals under the oppressive rule of Mayor Prentiss who uses violence to stay in power and book-burning to keep everyone ignorant.
One day, when Todd and Manatee are out walking, they discover an impossibility – a ‘hole’ in the Noise which marks the beginning of a breathless adventure.
Fast forward to Piper at the Gates of Dusk where, many years later, Todd is now the father of two boys, Max and Ben. Todd still experiences the Noise, but it is now his choice because he prefers it to the silence that has been created by a cure invented by the ‘spackle’ who prefer to be called by their own name: the ‘land’. The family: Todd, his wife Viola, along with Ben and Max, live out in the countryside where one day, when the boys are out walking, something extraordinary happens:
The god comes screaming through the trees, shoving them to each side like matchsticks, breaking and burning them as it thrashes its way out of the woods to come running, stumbling, screaming to the shore of the lake – Where me and Max have nowhere to run.
It looks like a giant, skinless man, just muscles on bones, a jawful of teeth, and wild, staring eyeballs with no lids. Maybe it’s screaming because of the skinlessness or maybe because flames cover nearly all of it, like it’s coated in fuel.
Despite the lack of Noise, young people are now being infected with troubling dreams and a strange object has been spotted in the skies hurtling towards New World. There is only an uneasy peace between humans and the original inhabitants of the planet and a small but powerful group of humans are intent on destroying even this state of affairs. Then, in echoes of the Robert Browning poem, The Pied Piper of Hamelin, young people begin to disappear and the family know they must take some action.
Patrick Ness has a talent not only for creating fascinating and inventive worlds, but for inhabiting them with a range of believable characters and moral choices that get us thinking. Add the frequent nail-biting action scenes and end-of-chapter cliff-hangers and it all adds up to an exciting and thought-provoking read.
This can be read as the first in the New World trilogy (no date yet for books 2 and 3), but for a richer experience read the Chaos Walking series first, starting with The Knife of Never Letting Go (2008), followed by The Ask and the Answer (2009) and finally, Monsters of Men (2010)










