![]() ![]() ![]() Combined with wicked cover art, this book has the makings of a success. Debut novelist Yovanoff offers well-developed characters, a fascinating take on the Fairy Court, and an exciting story line. Eventually, the two teenagers join forces in an attempt to overturn the town's intolerable status quo. Mackie, however-sickened by iron, terrified that his neighbors will turn on him-has paid a terrible price, as has Tate Stewart, who is traumatized by the loss of her baby sister, the latest stolen child. She does an excellent job of creating and sustaining a mood of fear, hopelessness, and misery throughout the novel, something that is lightened only occasionally by Mackies dry humor and the easy charm of his friend Roswell. What, after all, is one baby taken every seven years, in exchange for continued economic prosperity? "Everyone else's unemployment skyrockets, and their tech plants go bankrupt and their dairy farms fail, but not ours," says Mackie's sister, Emma, one of the few who will acknowledge the town's secrets. Yovanoffs innovative plot draws on the changeling legends from Western European folklore. Everyone knows it, though no one will acknowledge it, for fear of upsetting a deal the town made long ago. Mackie is a changeling, a fairy child exchanged for a stolen human baby. ![]() Many high school students feel like outsiders, but in this dark fantasy Mackie Doyle has better reason than most to be alienated. ![]()
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