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The Stolen Child [Hardcover]

Keith Donohue
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Jonathan Cape Ltd (4 May 2006)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0224076965
  • ISBN-13: 978-0224076968
  • Product Dimensions: 21.6 x 14 x 3.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 924,484 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Keith Donohue
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Product Description

Amazon.com

Early Buzz From Amazon.com Top Reviewers

We queried our top 100 reviewers as of April 6 from Amazon.com, and asked them to read The Stolen Child and share their thoughts. We've included these early reviews below in the order they were received. For the sake of space, we've only included a brief excerpt of each reviewer's response. Enjoy!

Harriet Klausner: "Keith Donohue writes a great novel that will have readers debating the impact of nurturing and naturing as both Henrys adapt and adjust, but never feel whole. This is a fantastic fantasy that readers will enjoy immensely."

W. Boudville: "An updated and realistic Peter Pan. Keith Donohue has produced an exquisite first novel. Exceedingly polished prose with a compelling and original twist on a classic theme".

John Kwok: "Inspired by the W. B. Yeats poem "The Stolen Child", Keith Donohue's novel of the same title is a fine addition to the fantasy literature genre, yet told with the ample realism one expects from great works of mainstream literature."

A. Joseph Haschka: "The Stolen Child is a fairy tale for adults that transcends standard fare. An ingeniously crafted tale about hobgoblins, is a coming of age story and one about identities both lost and found."

Robert Morris: "Donohue brilliantly explores all manner of themes, many of which are found in the most popular fairy tales and nursery rhymes (e.g. fear of separation from one’s family, especially from parents). "

Donald Mitchell: "What would it like to be adopted and have your head full of fantasies? It might feel very much like this story. However, I think a story about an adopted child without the parallel changeling world would have been more interesting. Perhaps I lack a sense of romance and sympathy for the strivings of the dispossessed. If so, the fault is mine, not that of the story."

Joanna Daneman: "I found the writing stunningly simple and gripping. Within minutes, I was completely drawn into this book. I am a very finicky fiction reader, and I was delighted by Donohue's incredibly ability to make sensory experiences real, to make conversations flow naturally and logically--yet leading to surprise after surprise."

Charles Ashbacher: "The book moves back and forth between the two Henry's, how the substitute Henry handles his assimilation into human society and how the original adapts to the society that kidnapped him. It is an interesting story, as both "boys" have different perspectives on the life of a "growing" boy."

Lawyeraau: "This haunting and beautifully written debut novel had me compulsively turning its pages. I simply could not put it down! The author has created a fantasy world that exists on the cusp of the consciousness of humans. It is a world that is the stuff of fairy tales, only the author has turned it into one that is fitting for adults."

Gail Cooke: "It has been called magical, beguiling, remarkable, and vividly imagined. The Stolen Child is all of that, and much more. Keith Donohue's debut novel is an intriguing mix of imagination and reality, a story that reminds us of the joys of being human and the transcendency of love."

Grady Harp: "Longing to belong is but one of the essential facts of life that author Keith Donohoe weaves into his debut novel, The Stolen Child, a stunning work of fiction that brings alive an ages old myth involving faeries, hobgoblins, changelings and magical transformations to confront contemporary readers with food for thought about being careful of what you wish for!"

Lee Carlson: "The story is as much a celebration of memory as it is in belaboring its mysteries. Every character acts in concert to remind the reader of the subtlety of memory along with its power."

Daniel Jolley: "Keith Donohue has brought forth a magical debut novel full of insights into childhood and adulthood and the seemingly endless longing that largely defines both. He conjures a world of ancient legend and places it on the outskirts of modern civilization, thereby casting an insightful eye upon both."

Aisling Foster, The Times

"Curious"

Scotland on Sunday

"A welcome addition to the field of contemporary fantasy…sparklingly quirky... Overall it is a gently redemptive parable about becoming oneself."

Joanna Daneman, Top Reviewer at Amazon.com

I found the writing stunningly simple and gripping. Within minutes, I was completely drawn into this book

Gail Cooke, Top Reviewer at Amazon.com

It has been called magical, beguiling, remarkable, and vividly imagined. The Stolen Child is all of that, and much more

Lee Carlson, Top Reviewer at Amazon.com

Every character acts in concert to remind the reader of the subtlety of memory along with its power

Synopsis

The Stolen Child is the story of Henry Day, a seven-year-old kidnapped by a strange group living in the dark forest near his home. No ordinary kidnappers, they are the fairy changelings - ageless beings whose secret community is threatened by encroaching modern life. They give Henry a new name, Aniday, and the gift of agelessness - now and forever, he will be seven years old. In keeping with folk tradition, the group has left another child in Henry's place. This changeling boy, who has morphed himself into Henry's duplicate, must adjust to a completely new way of life and hide his true identity from the Day family. But he can't hide his extraordinary talent for the piano (a skill the real Henry never displayed), and his near-perfect performances prompt his father to suspect that the son he has raised is an imposter. As he grows older the new Henry Day becomes haunted by vague but persistent memories of life in another time and place, of a German piano teacher and his prodigy. Both Henry and Aniday search obsessively for who they were before they changed places in the world. Narrated in the alternating voices of Henry Day and his double, "The Stolen Child" is a classic tale of the search for identity and leaving childhood. With just the right mix of fantasy and realism, Keith Donohue creates a literary fable of remarkable depth and strange delights. The result is a bedtime story for adults, which will appeal to readers charmed and captivated by such recent bestsellers as "The Time Traveler's Wife" and "Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell" and by the classics by Tolkien and J.M. Barrie.

From the Publisher

Inspired by the poem by W.B. Yeats about the common folk legend of the fairy changelings, this beguiling and truly original tale moves from contemporary America to nineteenth-century Germany and deep into humankind’s most basic fantasies and fears.

About the Author

Keith Donohue:

Keith Donohue is Director of Communications for the National Historical Publications and Records Commission at the National Archives, and previously worked at the National Endowment for the Arts. He lives in Maryland, near Washington, DC. This is his first novel.

Aisling Foster, The Times

"Curious"

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful
By Daniel Jolley HALL OF FAME TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Keith Donohue has brought forth a magical debut novel full of insights into childhood and adulthood and the seemingly endless longing that largely defines both. He conjures a world of ancient legend and places it on the outskirts of modern civilization, thereby casting an insightful eye upon both. Like many a story related to childish subjects, there is a complexity here of subtle strength and great depth that speaks to some of the most poignant thoughts and emotions of man. The Stolen Child is a truly enchanting tale that delves into man's eternal questions about the meaning and purpose of life even as it paints the pictures of two extraordinary lives linked together by a common identity.

The Stolen Child tells the story of Henry Day - both the boy who was born Henry Day and the changeling who assumed Henry Day's identity at the age of seven. The changelings, of course, are creatures out of centuries-old legend, said to steal children and leave defective changeling impostors in their place. The changelings in this novel are not the ugly little monsters who brought terror into the minds of our distant ancestors, however. They are essentially ageless children, each of them waiting patiently yet interminably for their turn to sneak back into the upper world of humans in place of some other stolen youngster. Young Henry Day finds himself stolen, baptized in the river into an entirely new life, and welcomed into a group of eleven changelings. He learns their ways as his previous memories quickly begin to fade - but his new life as Aniday is far from idyllic. His rare encounters with humans disturb him, keeping awake a spark within him of the family he left behind and a deep yearning to return. Unlike his new friends, he longs for paper and pencil, feeling the need to write down what he still remembers and to chronicle the story of his new life as the years come and go.

Having finally fulfilled his decades-old dream to return to human life, the new Henry Day faces his own obstacles. Having taken the exact features of the stolen child, he gives Henry's parents no reason to question that he is their son - not at first, anyway. There are noticeable differences, however - his new passion and natural skill at music being the most obvious. He has to remember to grow (and to do so in all the right places). And there is always an underlying sense of guilt in the back of his mind, one which is further complicated in time by his growing memories of his own stolen childhood in 19th century Germany.

Both Henry and Aniday seek a deeper meaning to their uncommon lives: Henry through his music and Aniday through the preservation of his memories in writing. Neither finds fulfillment or peace on his own, for they are two souls tied together in ways neither can truly fathom. Neither can begin to understand who he really is without coming to terms with who he used to be. Fate decrees that their worlds intersect on several occasions, as each one's search for his own identity seems to lead him closer and closer to the other. There are tragedies and triumphs along the way, and I must say I found the tragedies surprisingly powerful and emotional. You read this novel with your heart as much as your mind.

Donohue truly immerses you in the very different yet parallel worlds of Henry and Aniday, and you can't help but feel a close affinity to them both, particularly the latter. You might think the constant switching of viewpoint and narration between the two protagonists would prove clumsy or disorienting, but this is not the case at all. Indeed, the narrative of one constantly reinforces the other, especially when you get two divergent viewpoints of the same event. Keith Donohue may be a new name on the literary scene, but he's a master storyteller and a true maestro of the written word. Much like the fabled music of the wee folks, his writing mesmerizes and transports you to a completely magical realm that feels somehow strangely familiar, and you emerge from the final page as a changeling of sorts yourself, forever altered on a deeply personal level by this too-brief encounter with the Henry Day who was and the Henry Day who is.
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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful
By Joseph Haschka HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
THE STOLEN CHILD, an ingeniously crafted tale about hobgoblins, is a coming of age story and one about identities both lost and found. This beguiling yet tragic novel is placed in the recent past when, at least in the "sophisticated" and technology driven West, the faery myths have lost their hold on the popular consciousness and the creatures have thus become, to our loss, an endangered species joining griffins, mermaids, gorgons, centaurs, and unicorns.

It's the late 1940s in a rural setting outside Chicago. Seven year-old Henry Day, alone in the woods near his home, is abducted by a band of a dozen hobgoblins, which, in mythology, are faeries "gone bad". By the story's definition, each hobgoblin was once human before being kidnapped while still young and, by some subtle process, turned into a creature that never ages, even over hundreds of years. At some point, determined by seniority within the group, a hobgoblin, or "changeling", can return to the society of humans by co-opting the identity of a kidnapped child. Once returned to the "upper world", the hobgoblin takes up the aging process where he/she left off. In this case, Henry, now "Aniday", languishes in the purgatory of eternal childhood while his replacement matures to fully actualized adulthood as "Henry Day". Aniday's tragedy comprises an identity and life's potential lost, while Henry's is that his new identity vies with that of his previous human existence, began in 1851, which Day subliminally remembers and eventually obsesses over.

The novel's thirty-six chapters alternate between Aniday and Henry, each telling his first-person story as it extends over three decades, the history of each touching at points with the other until a final confrontation, such as it is.

This is Keith Donohue's first novel, and I'm awarding five stars for cleverness, though it does have problems which would compel me to award only four if coming from a more accomplished author. The story concludes in a way that was, for me, very unfulfilling; I thought it lacked closure for both characters. Also, the hobgoblins, who were all once human and can become so again anytime they chose, now live a wretched, unhygienic, near-starvation existence continually exposed to the elements and possible injury while subsisting only with the help of food, garb, and utensils scavenged or stolen from humans. (Indeed, the mischievous hobgoblin will steal one sock from a clothesline to create "the mystery of the missing sock from every washday".) That being the case, the author, while removing for the reader much of the magic, mystery and whimsicality of the faeries' existence, supplies no compelling imperative for them to remain the creatures they are. Indeed, they exist at all because human society once believed in their reality, and they now approach extinction because the twentieth century's technological enlightenment leaves them no room.

THE STOLEN CHILD is a fairy tale for adults that transcends standard fare.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
By Lawyeraau HALL OF FAME TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
This haunting and beautifully written debut novel had me compulsively turning its pages. I simply could not put it down! The author has created a fantasy world that exists on the cusp of the consciousness of humans. It is a world that is the stuff of fairy tales, only the author has turned it into one that is fitting for adults. Lyrical in its telling, the author spins a story about a world that exists side by side with the one that we inhabit everyday. It is a world of the changelings. These are creatures that exist only to burrow into our lives by usurping the place of a human child. How they do it, why they do it, and the ramifications of their actions are at the crux of this fascinating and wonderful, poignantly told story.
It is a story that is charged with great emotional impact, as it conveys the desire that each one of us has to fit into the social fabric that is woven around every one of us from that day that we are born.
This is simply one of the best books that I have read this year. Bravo!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
How to be a favourite auntie
I bought this book for my 15 year old niece who is an avid reader and had mentioned the forthcoming film.She was absolutely made up with it and could not put the book down.
Published on 14 Feb 2010 by Grace Jones
Interesting idea that falls short
The synopsis: faeries steal a young boy and make him one of them while replacing him with a changeling in the real world. I was intrigued enough to give it a read. Read more
Published on 22 Aug 2008 by Aesop
Great Contemporary Fantasy on Searching for One's Identity
Inspired by the W. B. Yeats poem "The Stolen Child", Keith Donohue's novel of the same title is a fine addition to the fantasy literature genre, yet told with the ample realism one... Read more
Published on 17 Aug 2008 by John Kwok
Good in parts.
This novel is good in parts, but there are also many bits that are uncaptivating and a little boring... Read more
Published on 3 Feb 2008 by FAMOUS NAME
Good in parts.
This novel is good in parts, but there are also many bits that are uncaptivating and a little boring... Read more
Published on 27 Jan 2008 by FAMOUS NAME
A book that will steal your time and reward you with wonder
This wonderful book was recommended to me by a friend. It is magical. A book about identity and love and growing up and being, a book that lives on n the mind outside the pages... Read more
Published on 13 Nov 2007 by J. morris
Arrested Lives
Stories about magic open our minds to new wonders that we wouldn't otherwise consider. On wings of imagination, our pleasure soars when the resonance is deep with something within... Read more
Published on 18 Oct 2007 by Donald Mitchell
Arrested Lives
Stories about magic open our minds to new wonders that we wouldn't otherwise consider. On wings of imagination, our pleasure soars when the resonance is deep with something within... Read more
Published on 18 Oct 2007 by Donald Mitchell
Faery tale not for children
A terrifying changeling tale set in the woods of New England where a small pack of hobgoblins lived. Ageless and heartless, their purpose was to kidnap a vulnerable human child. Read more
Published on 6 Sep 2007 by kehs
An fairy story that has bite!
A haunting read that kept me riveted from the first page until the last. This is a book about Changeling's and how they live on the fringes of society, ethereal ageless children... Read more
Published on 19 July 2007 by Kali
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