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The Changeling Kindle Edition
NOW AN APPLE TV+ SERIES STARRING LAKEITH STANDFIELD
ONE OF TIME'S 100 BEST FANTASY BOOKS OF ALL TIME
Winner of an American Book Award, a Locus Award for Best Horror Novel, a British Fantasy Award for Best Horror Novel, a World Fantasy Award for Best Novel
Nominated for a Shirley Jackson Award, an International Dublin Literary Award and a Mythopeic Award for Literature
When Apollo Kagwa was just a child, his father disappeared, leaving him with recurring nightmares and a box labelled 'Improbabilia'. Now a successful book dealer, Kagwa has a family of his own after meeting and falling in love with Emma, a librarian. The two marry and have a baby: so far so happy-ever-after.
However, as the pair settle into their new lives as parents, exhaustion and anxiety start to take their toll. Emma's behaviour becomes increasingly erratic, until one day she commits an unthinkable act, setting Apollo on a wild and fantastical quest through a suddenly otherworldly New York, in search of a wife and child he no longer recognises.
An epic novel for our anxiety-ridden times, The Changeling is a tale of parenthood, love - in its most raw and brutal form - and, ultimately, humanity.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherCanongate Books
- Publication date5 July 2018
- File size6.6 MB
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Product description
Review
"One of the reasons to read Victor LaValle's novels is the simple sentence-by-sentence pleasure of them--they offer hundreds of baby dopamine hits, tiny baths for the prose snob's reward system. . . . LaValle's observations about race remain, as ever, both stinging and mordantly funny. . . . And his imagery is a source of immense satisfaction. . . . If monsters are your subject, writing like an angel helps."--Jennifer Senior, The New York Times
"[A] bewitching masterpiece. . . . Like a woke Brothers Grimm, his clever new spin on the ages-old changeling myth is a modern fairy tale for the Trump era, taking on fatherhood, parenting, marriage, immigration, race and terrifying loss. . . . LaValle impressively maintains his storytelling momentum throughout The Changeling. . . . He not only recaptures the need for fairy tales but makes his essential reading as well."--USA Today (four out of four stars)
"Victor LaValle's fabulist ode to fatherhood and fairy tales offers a new take on themes as old as time. . . . Throughout western mythology, white men with swords have been the heroes while the rest of us watch, oohing and aahing, from the sidelines. With his genre-bending novel, The Changeling, Victor LaValle updates the epic narrative for the twenty-first century."--O: The Oprah Magazine
"Fiercely defies categorization. Written as a self-proclaimed 'fairy tale' in a punchy, inviting style, Mr. LaValle's haunting tale weaves a mesmerizing web around fatherhood, racism, horrific anxieties and even To Kill a Mockingbird. And the backdrop for this rich phantasmagoria? The boroughs of New York."--Janet Maslin, The New York Times
"I was frequently startled by The Changeling's piercingly beautiful insights into parenthood, childhood, [and] adulthood. . . . By turns enchanting, infuriating, horrifying, and heartbreaking, The Changeling is never less than completely engaging. . . . It's a book that makes me want to seek people out to talk about it, to share together our own stories of reading it."--NPR
"Fans of the macabre can't miss the latest offering from prolific horror master Victor LaValle, which hurls us into the most harrowing abyss imaginable: parenthood. . . . Definitely scarier than anything you'll hear around the campfire."--Vulture
"This is a perfect summer horror read."--Houston Chronicle
"Like a good Coen brothers film, this genre-defying, achingly literate phantasmagoria of a novel will work every nook and cranny of the imagination, taking the reader to places we're either too afraid to visit or never knew existed."--Paul Beatty, author of The Sellout
"Absolutely compelling, completely thrilling, The Changeling overflows with menace, wonder, and beauty."--Kelly Link, author of Get in Trouble
From the Inside Flap
Thus begins Apollo's odyssey through a world he only thought he understood, to find a wife and child who are nothing like he'd imagined. His quest, which begins when he meets a mysterious stranger who claims to have information about Emma's whereabouts, takes him to a forgotten island, a graveyard full of secrets, a forest where immigrant legends still live, and finally back to a place he thought he had lost forever.
This captivating retelling of a classic fairy tale imaginatively explores parental obsession, spousal love, and the secrets that make strangers out of the people we love the most. It's a thrilling and emotionally devastating journey through the gruesome legacies that threaten to devour us and the homely, messy magic that saves us, if we're lucky.
From the Back Cover
Thus begins Apollo's odyssey through a world he only thought he understood, to find a wife and child who are nothing like he'd imagined. His quest, which begins when he meets a mysterious stranger who claims to have information about Emma's whereabouts, takes him to a forgotten island, a graveyard full of secrets, a forest where immigrant legends still live, and finally back to a place he thought he had lost forever.
This captivating retelling of a classic fairy tale imaginatively explores parental obsession, spousal love, and the secrets that make strangers out of the people we love the most. It's a thrilling and emotionally devastating journey through the gruesome legacies that threaten to devour us and the homely, messy magic that saves us, if we're lucky.
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Lillian Kagwa emigrated from Uganda while Brian West arrived from the only slightly less foreign territory of Syracuse. This daughter of East Africa and son of upstate New York met at a cut-rate modeling agency on Northern Boulevard. Neither was a client.
The week of the garbage strike Lillian got hired as a secretary at the agency, greeting guests at the front desk. A pleasant sight for folks strolling sidewalks saddled with week-old waste. Brian, a parole officer, had been paying occasional visits to the agency’s founder, Pavel Aresenyev, one of his parolees, who’d spent four years in prison for fraud. Brian didn’t believe Pavel had gone legit. But that week Brian became focused less on Mr. Aresenyev and more on the new secretary who greeted him when he arrived. Meeting her felt like finding a rose growing in a landfill. Brian dropped by the modeling agency four times that week.
Despite his immediate attraction, Brian had a habit of mispronouncing Lillian Kagwa’s last name, and Lillian kept mistaking Brian for other white men. Hardly kismet. Still Brian West—short, stocky, and persistent—simply wouldn’t quit. And on the days when he didn’t show up, Lillian, to her own surprise, found she missed him.
Lillian Kagwa had come from Jinja, the second-largest city in Uganda, where she’d lived through the country’s emancipation from Britain and its eventual homegrown rule by Milton Obote. Obote used the army and his secret police, the General Service Unit, to rule the land. They spread wickedness wherever they went.
In 1967 Lillian and three cousins were traveling to the capital, Kampala, when they were pulled over by three men claiming to be agents of the GSU. The four cousins sat quietly as the agents inspected their identification, then demanded the only male cousin—Arthur—come out and open the trunk. Arthur didn’t want to leave Lillian and his sisters and hesitated. In that moment, one agent leaned in and casually shot Arthur in the stomach.
Lillian and her cousins were temporarily deafened by the sound, blinded by the muzzle flash, but Lillian still sensed the agent who’d fired the gun pawing inside the car to pull out the keys. Lillian, at the wheel, shifted the car into drive and shot off before her senses had returned to her, weaving across the two-lane road like a drunk. The agents fired at the car but couldn’t pursue it; their own vehicle had run out of gas. They’d set up the checkpoint to steal a suitable vehicle and would have to wait for another.
Lillian reached Kampala in half an hour, speeding the whole way. Arthur died long before that. An incident like this hardly counted as newsworthy. Uganda, as a whole, was going buckwild, and Lillian Kagwa wanted out. One year later Lillian secured a visa to the United States.
In 1968 Lillian came to New York. She was twenty-five and knew no one, but because of Uganda’s British rule, she already spoke the king’s English, and this made her transition easier. One of the reason’s Mr. Aresenyev hired her at the modeling agency was because her command of English was so much better than his. She made the business sound serious, legitimate, though Brian West’s suspicions were right: the whole thing was a scam. Lillian didn’t know this when she accepted the work. All she knew was the job paid twice the state minimum wage, three bucks an hour. Back in Uganda, she hadn’t been able to find work of any kind, so she cherished the gig. And what was a garbage strike compared with state-sanctioned murder?
The agency, Glamour Time, was run out of a windowless second-floor office near Queensboro Plaza, remote from any hub of high fashion but centrally located for soaking the aspiring models of working-class Queens. Potential clients could join the agency as long as they had headshots. Luckily, Mr. Aresenyev had a small studio right there at the agency and could snap the shots himself for a fee. For certain young women, he offered to take the shots after hours, just the two of them. The streets of New York were overrun with uncollected garbage, but Glamour Time carried its own stink. The only honest aspect of the business was the East African woman answering phones out front.
Mr. Aresenyev’s business might’ve run just fine for quite a while, soaking hopeful young women for years, except his damn parole officer had made the front office into his second home. How were you going to run a decent fraud when a cop was stopping by every other morning? Brian West was bad for business. And since he was smitten with Lillian that meant Lillian Kagwa was bad for business. So Mr. Aresenyev fired her. Not the smartest plan, but Mr. Aresenyev wasn’t bright. Now Brian pursued Pavel relentlessly, an Inspector Javert from Onondaga County. Charging for the headshots wasn’t illegal, but running a photo studio without a permit was enough to count as a violation of parole. Pavel Aresenyev went back to jail. Brian West got a commendation. Lillian Kagwa needed a new job.
She worked as an administrative secretary at a law firm in midtown Manhattan. The new job paid less. She moved into a smaller apartment. She cut off all communications with Brian. He’d cost her a good job, and the commute to midtown added a half hour of travel time each way, so no, she did not want to get dinner and a movie with Brian, thank you. Anyway, she was young, and it was New York City, where a lot more fun was to be had than back in Jinja. They met in 1968 but didn’t go on their first real date until eight years later.
Brian West gave Lillian room, backed off by a borough; he rented a place on Staten Island, but he couldn’t stop thinking of her. Why? What was it about Lillian? He couldn’t quite explain. It was as if she’d cast a spell.
Brian West had been the only child of two wildly unromantic drunks. At twelve Brian had a job selling candy at the Elmwood Theatre. He made the mistake of proudly displaying his earnings to his father, Frank. He expected a pat on the shoulder, words of congratulations; instead the boy endured a strong-arm robbery right in his own living room. His dad bought a case of Genesee beer with the money. Mom and Dad finished it before bedtime. A household like that will either break you or toughen you up. Maybe both. What was waiting on a woman to forgive you compared with having your father beat you up and steal your first paycheck?
Late in 1976 it finally happened. Brian West and Lillian Kagwa went on a date. They’d both been twenty-five when they first met during the week of the garbage strike, but now they were thirty-three. Lillian had met a lot of men during those intervening years, and Brian benefited from the comparison. He worked hard, didn’t drink, saved his money, and paid his debts. Funny how much she valued such qualities now. The only hiccup came at dinner, when Brian talked about how much he wanted children, the chance to be a husband and a father. As soon as he’d seen her at Glamour Time he’d sensed she would be a wonderful mother. When he finished talking she reminded him, gently, that this was their first date. Maybe they could wait to make wedding plans until after the movie at least? To Brian’s credit, he didn’t act wounded or angry—he laughed. He didn’t know it, but it was at this moment that Lillian truly fell for him.
He took her to see Rocky. It wouldn’t have been Lillian’s choice, but halfway through the movie, she started to enjoy herself. She even saw herself on the screen. A fierce dreamer. That’s what this movie was about. And wasn’t that her? She liked to think so. Maybe that was why Brian brought her to see this picture. To show her something about himself that he could never put into words. He’d told her the story of being robbed by his father, and she’d told him about Arthur getting gutshot in the car, and now here they both were in a darkened Times Square theater. Together. A pair of survivors. It seemed so unlikely—all the life that had led them here—as improbable as myth. In the dark she held his hand. Though they wouldn’t have sex for another three hours, it would be accurate to say their first child—their only child—was conceived right then. A thought, an idea, a shared dream; parenthood is a story two people start telling together.
By April 1977 Lillian was showing. Brian found them a two-bedroom apartment in Jackson Heights. Their son came in September. Brian thought it would be weird to name a half-black kid Rocky, so instead they named him Apollo. Brian liked to carry the newborn in the crook of one arm, cooing to him, “You are the god, Apollo. Good night, my little sun.” And they lived happily ever after. At least for a few years.
By Apollo’s fourth birthday Brian West was gone.
Brian hadn’t run off with another woman or skipped town to move back to Syracuse. The man might as well have been erased from existence. He couldn’t be found because he’d left no trail, neither breadcrumbs nor credit card receipts. Gone. Disappeared. Vanished.
When Apollo was born, Brian and Lillian thought they’d reached the end of the story, but they’d been wrong. The wildness had only begun.
Product details
- ASIN : B0792DFRYD
- Publisher : Canongate Books
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : 5 July 2018
- Edition : Main
- Language : English
- File size : 6.6 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 427 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-1786893833
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: 158,157 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- 1,175 in Contemporary Fantasy Fiction
- 10,348 in Contemporary Fiction (Books)
- 65,146 in Whispersync for Voice
- Customer reviews:
About the author

Victor LaValle is the author of a short-story collection, Slapboxing with Jesus, four novels, The Ecstatic, Big Machine, The Devil in Silver & The Changeling, and two novellas, Lucretia and the Kroons and The Ballad of Black Tom.
His most recent novel, THE CHANGELING, is an old school fairy tale. It's made to keep you up at night. It's meant to make you scared.
Customer reviews
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Customers find this book to be a brilliant dark tale with unexpected twists. The writing receives positive feedback for its deftness.
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Customers praise the book's dark tale, with one customer noting its fantastic twist on the modern fairy tale and another mentioning its tightly paced plot that kept them gripped.
"...The genre is best described as magical realism...." Read more
"I loved this book. The writing is exquisite and the story itself raises your hair. This is not schlock horror; this is literary horror at its best...." Read more
"...of a slog to get into but the effort paid off as the story took some very unexpected twists and turns towards the climax. Would I read it again?..." Read more
"...transmuting from one genre to another with each book part, always surprising, always keeping you guessing and that way truly living up to its name...." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing quality of the book, with one describing it as an easy read.
"...It is also beautifully written. Tradition and high tech mesh seamlessly in the story...." Read more
"I loved this book. The writing is exquisite and the story itself raises your hair. This is not schlock horror; this is literary horror at its best...." Read more
"Okay easy read. Bit silly, well written gavel esk story and what's not to like? Not much I'm my opinion" Read more
"...I was with him as soon as he was introduced. Beautiful, deft writing and a tightly paced plot had me gripped...." Read more
Top reviews from United Kingdom
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- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 8 August 2018Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseMy favourite read of this year so far. The genre is best described as magical realism. It’s set in New York and the central character is a young man with a Ghanaian mother and a white, ex-cop, father. He’s a book man and spends his time searching for rare books. On the day of his greatest find his wife attacks him and kills their son, or so it seems. But the book is far more complex than that. The title might give you some clues.
It’s about masculinity and the changing nature of fatherhood; it’s about motherhood, childbirth, love, paranoia, cyber-stalking, immigration, witches, wishes, revenge and trolls (both kinds). It is also beautifully written.
Tradition and high tech mesh seamlessly in the story. It takes mere steps to bridge the mundane and the magical. I’ve read one other writer who manages to do this with equal elegance – Haruki Murakami.
It is a deeply human tale about what can go wrong psychologically and emotionally when a couple has a baby. I cannot recommend enough that you get hold of this book now and consume it.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 5 March 2021Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseI loved this book. The writing is exquisite and the story itself raises your hair. This is not schlock horror; this is literary horror at its best. You have to pay attention, because the main character does not see what he should be seeing. That is a difficult thing to pull off, but Lavelle does it with style. Like Thomas Heuvelt's books, this one is not for the shallow reader, or the impatient one. I love that horror is getting past the easy-read stage and growing up and growing clever, and this book is a great example of that evolution. Also, it's nice to have black protagonists for no other reason than that they happen to be black. I read it and then went back and read it again to see what I'd missed the first time!
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 27 August 2023Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseIt’s hard to describe a book as bizarre as this one. I found it a bit of a slog to get into but the effort paid off as the story took some very unexpected twists and turns towards the climax. Would I read it again? No, but I don’t regret reading it either.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 July 2019Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseIf you love King and Gaiman, please do yourself a favour & without researching too much on this novel - plunge right in!
That way, like me - you’ll totally fall for the mirage exposition with its sense of faux safety & romance (yes, I cried twice), only to feel like somebody has pulled the rug from under your feet and stole the story from you - to take it into totally unexpected places, about one third in.
This is not a horror novel (although one particular chapter explodes totally unexpectedly - and therefore effectively - with unprecedented violence and dread so gripping it made me miss my train stop by 40 MINUTES!), not a feminist manifesto, an urban fairytale for grownups or an exploration of parenthood. It’s all of those things, transmuting from one genre to another with each book part, always surprising, always keeping you guessing and that way truly living up to its name. The Changeling.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 2 January 2021Format: Kindle EditionVerified PurchaseOkay easy read. Bit silly, well written gavel esk story and what's not to like? Not much I'm my opinion
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 27 January 2019Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseI loved the main character, Apollo, completely. I was with him as soon as he was introduced.
Beautiful, deft writing and a tightly paced plot had me gripped. I love some supernatural in a real setting and dark stories. It was completely believable which should have been hard to pull off near the end but LaValle managed it. I even tried to slow down my reading because I didn’t want it to end.
So excited to discover this writer, didn’t know anything about him before so I’m going to buy another of his books right now.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 October 2018Format: PaperbackApollo Kagwa is an antiquarian book dealer whose business, Improbabilia, is named for a box his long-absent father left for him. When his wife, Emma, begins acting strangely after the birth of their child, Brian, it appears she’s suffering from post-natal depression but it quickly becomes clear there’s something much more wrong going on. And when she commits a horrific act and vanishes, Apollo must find her in a world that’s suddenly not at all what he thought it was and where magic might just have a place.
I loved everything about this novel - the characters are spot-on and beautifully crafted, as is the description of New York (both now and back in the late 60s when the story begins). Told with a wonderfully measured pace, where LaValle is willing to explain the minutiae of people’s lives which actually enriches the story rather than slowing it down, this gives us all the information we could ever need until we feel like we know these characters, so that when the bad things happen - and they do - they hit like bolts. Weaving cleverly between mundane life and a magical existence, this slowly layers the plot without ever sacrificing believability and by the last third, the reader is racing through the pages, piecing things together as Apollo does and staring, in awe, at the world LaValle opens up for us. Beautifully crafted, filled with wonder on every page (along with a nice layer of grit), this is a superb novel and I highly recommend it.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 13 October 2023Format: Kindle EditionVerified PurchaseIs my fav sentence in the book! This story took me on a complete journey by far the best book I’ve read in some time! Was a long read but this was better than tv. Loved loved loved!
Top reviews from other countries
- Robert BermanReviewed in the United States on 30 August 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars "Bell, Book and Candle" all grown up.
What happens when a good writer explores the building blocks of a family; a man, his wife, and how a child is first conceived in mind and then by an act of intense physical intimacy is given form and substance in this tension building narrative. At the heart of the narrative, the reader begins to sense the introduction of a really evil magic.
Lavalle is not a johnny-come-lately writer. He has written quite a few good books and has a large following. What drew me into the sphere of Lavalle’s writing was the incredible disparity among the reviews of the average reader on Amazon.com. Amazon’s readership was almost equally divided between “Excellent” and “Horrid.” The style of writing does not change. The writing is lyrical almost beautiful in scope. You care about the main character, about his love of books, the love he has for his wife his child. It is compelling, honest, and forces the reader to confront feelings, emotions, and perceptions that cannot be real. Is there a good witch? Is there a bad witch? Is a modern midwife a nurse or Satan’s protégé? If your wife and child are burned to ashes in a fire started by your wife, can you bring them both back from hell, and what must you give to do it? How do you love the woman who has killed everything you love including herself, especially herself? In many respects, this would have been better treated like Dorothy in Oz so the reader could feel the distinct click that tells you we now suspend reality because the Munchkins are dancing around us, but we will soon return to Kansas and everything will be wonderful.
Lavalle gives you none of that. His style, his love of the beauty of words never changes nor is the horror blatant. It is simply there, in your face, and as you read your own perceptions begin to change. You become immersed in a quest not only to restore your child but to destroy the one who has taken him from you. For Lavalle, the great equalizer, what gives a person the ability to breathe life into a cursed child, to capture a life that once was, is love. There is no complexity. Some readers will call it God, but God is too complex for this. This is human, real human love between father and child. The sex of the child is trivial, it is father attached to a child; totally unidirectional and absolute.
Lavalle’s style of writing is unusually straightforward, direct, and in your face. He writes with the rapier thrust and parry style of Hemingway, but there are certain paragraphs in the book that have the lilting melodies of Thomas Wolfe describing a banquet; so poignant they almost bring you to tears. Lavalle is a connoisseur of words and books. His main character is a book dealer who searches estate sales and back alley old and dying shops for that rare ever elusive volume that will bring him both wealth and recognition. He has a minor success and sells his valuable book, to whom, if not the devil, is certainly an emissary and so begins a really frightening journey for both him and the reader. The reader can only feel a sense of the disquiet, he cannot truly grasp the gaping, maw of hell, particularly as it is so cleverly disguised.
Some reviewers have equated the writings of Lavalle with the poetry of Edgar Allan Poe, to whit, “The Raven”, but Poe is absolutely not subtle. The raven would happily sit on your shoulder and pick out your eye. Lavalle is more like Arthur Rimbaud. In short, you think you smell a rose, but it is the euphoria of black tar opium.
It is almost as if Lavale has decided to rewrite Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “Rappaccini’s Daughter” in the twenty-first century. The story of such a genuinely poisonous woman has never been better written than this.
Reading The Changeling is an experience to be savored as an exploration of avenues within your soul you know exist, but they are to be approached with a sense of trepidation and wonderment. It is a fairy tale not for children.
- Felicity BanksReviewed in Australia on 22 April 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Eerie power in realism
Format: Kindle EditionVerified PurchaseThe realism of this fantastic tale gives it a horrifying power. For the first third of the novel, the book exists perfectly in the real world, in exquisite realism. Then things change, and they'll never be the same again.
- ABReviewed in Belgium on 16 November 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Truly Amazing Book
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseVery well written, very rarely enjoy fiction novels, but I'm addicted to Victor LaVelle's work now.
- Ronald C McKenzieReviewed in Canada on 22 August 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars LaValle’s best yet - highly recommended
LaValle creates a modern-day fairy tale that blends folklore and contemporary horror in perfect balance. HIs finest and most ambitious work yet, so it’s an easy recommendation.
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Hel'Reviewed in France on 3 August 2018
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellente découverte !
Une variation moderne sur d'anciens motifs de contes de fées, plantée dans le beau terreau multiracial de New York et dans l'Amérique terrible de Trump, pour explorer les merveilles et terreurs, les erreurs et déterminations de cœurs de parents. Si les monstres et l'horreur sont bien présents, c'est par l'humanité que Lavalle vous arrache les tripes, et vous attache au récit jusqu'à la dernière page.
A lire, pour ceux qui sont prêts à perdre le sommeil pour un "fairy tale"...