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The Stolen Child

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
When Henry Day is seven years old, he is kidnapped by ageless beings called changelings, who leave another child in Henry's place, a boy who will be his duplicate. Haunted by memories, both boys are driven to search for the keys to whom they once were before they switched places.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Here is a book that adults can use to escape the day-to-day and be enveloped by a well-told tale. Mixing fantasy and reality, the story tells of changelings, creatures who inhabit the woods, who kidnap a human boy and replace him with one of their own. The readers, Andy Paris and Jeff Woodman (no pun, I presume), alternate throughout and create two worlds that are at times separate and at times interconnected. We never know whose voice is performing at any particular time, but they both do a fine job with pacing and diction. Their accents seem forced, though it is difficult to say for sure. After all, what does a changeling sound like? R.I.G. (c) AudioFile 2006, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from August 7, 2006
      In interlocking chapters of scintillating prose, Donohue tells the tale of Henry Day and the two people he becomes after being snatched at age seven by changelings. One of them takes his human life, convincing almost everyone that he is the real Henry; meanwhile, the boy becomes one of the changelings, dubbed Aniday and initiated into their magical twilight world. Paris's and Woodman's impressive readings make Donohue's beguiling tale even more vivid: Paris uses a remarkable range of accents and pitches for changelings of various European backgrounds, as well as giving us the smart, soulful Aniday, who can't quite accept his new life. Meanwhile, Woodman illustrates the changing sound of American conversation from the '50s to the '70s, and his nuanced tones make one sympathize intensely with the second Henry Day, who is ever fearful of discovery and unable to relax into his own new life. Both readers manage to sound like a full cast without any sound effects, brilliantly illuminating the fantastic, detailed world Donohue has created so that the story will linger in listeners' minds for a long time afterward. Simultaneous release with the Nan Talese hardcover (Reviews, Jan. 23).

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 23, 2006
      Folk legends of the changeling serve as a touchstone for Donohue's haunting debut, set vaguely in the American northeast, about the maturation of a young man troubled by questions of identity. At age seven, Henry Day is kidnapped by hobgoblins and replaced by a look-alike impostor. In alternating chapters, each Henry relates the tale of how he adjusts to his new situation. Human Henry learns to run with his hobgoblin pack, who never age but rarely seem more fey than a gang of runaway teens. Hobgoblin Henry develops his uncanny talent for mimicry into a music career and settles into an otherwise unremarkable human life. Neither Henry feels entirely comfortable with his existence, and the pathos of their losses influences all of their relationships and experiences. Inevitably, their struggles to retrieve their increasingly forgotten pasts put them on paths that intersect decades later. Donohue keeps the fantasy as understated as the emotions of his characters, while they work through their respective growing pains. The result is an impressive novel of outsiders whose feelings of alienation are more natural than supernatural.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from October 1, 2006
      In this adult fairy tale, we take a trip to the other side of the hollow treea glimpse into the fey life of hobgoblins. Seven-year-old Henry Day is hiding in the woods near his home when he is snatched by hobgoblinsthey have been scheming to replace Henry with a lookalike goblin, or changeling, for some time. Andy Paris and Jeff Woodman narrate the lives of the changeling Henry and the snatched Henry, who becomes Aniday. Both remember their past lives as they try to fit into their new worlds. Changeling Henry becomes an accomplished pianista talent for music the real Henry had never shown. Aniday finds life among the changelings anything but magical, for in the modern world there is little space left for enchanted forests. This book is a delightful trip through the looking glass into the world of fairies, a rather darker world fraught with its own problems. Highly recommended for all libraries." Theresa Connors, Arkansas Tech Univ., Russellville"

      Copyright 2006 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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