The Stolen Child: A Novel

The Stolen Child: A Novel
by Keith Donohue

The Stolen Child: A Novel
List Price: $23.95
Our Price: $4.49
You Save: $19.46 (81%)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Buy Used: from $0.01 (click here)
Category: Book
See more book details and other editions


(Click here)
Buy this book at online book store in your country
Canada | UK | Germany | France

Book Summary Information

Author: Keith Donohue
Edition: Hardcover
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2006-05-09
ISBN: 0385516169
Number of pages: 336
Publisher: Nan A. Talese

Book Reviews of The Stolen Child: A Novel

Book Review: A celebration of memory
Summary: 5 Stars

Is it easier to pretend to be something you are not when that is your intent, rather than for example being something that someone else wants you to be? When making pretenses, is it easier to forget what you really were, or is that easier when you are put into an environment that demands you act in a certain way? Are memories more pliable, more easily erased, when we wish them to be? Is personal identity easier to maintain if it is undergoing pressure to modify it, as compared with the situation where this modification is done willingly? Are memories essential to personal identity, or can we deal with experiences on-the-fly, learning each challenge anew? When memories elapse, does the brain fill them in, in order to maintain historical continuity? Does living depend on instincts rather than rote memorization? Are memories both a consolation and a burden?

These questions run in the background in this etude to the media temporal lobe. In it a "changeling" becomes a human child, and the human child becomes a changeling. The changelings must monitor the child before the change is made in order to gain information on their idiosyncrasies and behavioral patterns. And of course, the switch must occur before the child has a 'developed sense of self.' Of course, errors in replication occur. It is not a high fidelity transformation. These errors are noticed, interestingly, by untrained observers: Mary and Elizabeth, the younger twin sisters of Henry Day. The unbiased mind can typically spot a fake. The younger the mind the more alert it is to making proper identification.

Aniday is the child kidnapped by the changelings; Henry Day is the changeling who takes his place among the humans. Each has interesting stories to tell, and each is preoccupied with the past. Each indulges in a large degree of self-monitoring, but enjoy life to a certain extent. They form emotional attachments, despite their intense introspection. They tell their stories alternately in each chapter, lest the reader be misled (or duped?) into imputing any mutual entanglement between them.

Henry Day learns well the ways of the humans, and as long as he stays within the confines of the house and school, things become routine for him. Life according to strict patterns is easy. Life requiring creativity is more difficult. Aniday adjusts by learning "true obedience and deference" and his curiosity was controlled. Living life according to orders is easy. Life requiring creativity is more difficult.

Henry Day learns he has a penchant for piano, and its tones trigger "powerful synapses." But his talent he imputes to some other causes, some other life perhaps. Genius to him, and his new "father", seems alien, having its source not within him but somewhere else. He cannot accept his talent as being his alone. Neither can his father, who has "no vision" and "no passion for life", and is the resident cynic of the story. And his talent in piano was inversely proportional to his magical ability that he had as a changeling. His adeptness in the creation of musical notes therefore was not to be thought of as magic. Music rather was mathematical, and reflected patterns in everyday life. But Henry forgot to make his penis grow along with his body. Such a memory loss cannot be forgiven, especially when it is his first time. Henry's self esteem was at stake here. Size matters. That must always be remembered.

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. Luchog is right when he says that the mind will often create its own world in order to help pass the time. And Chavisory is right when he says that imagination will recreate what the memory loses. But the brain is in general reliable. It can be depended upon for fairly long stretches of time. In addition, it can be supplemented by the diary, by the journal, as Aniday teaches us so well. Journals he says are written proof of existence. And the brain can help us find clues to give the past more meaning. And as Smaolach said with eloquence, one can rely on the mind, a "stoirin", the complicated machine inside the skull.

Summary of The Stolen Child: A Novel

Inspired by the W.B. Yeats poem that tempts a child from home to the waters and the wild, The Stolen Child is a modern fairy tale narrated by the child Henry Day and his double.

On a summer night, Henry Day runs away from home and hides in a hollow tree. There he is taken by the changelings?an unaging tribe of wild children who live in darkness and in secret. They spirit him away, name him Aniday, and make him one of their own. Stuck forever as a child, Aniday grows in spirit, struggling to remember the life and family he left behind. He also seeks to understand and fit in this shadow land, as modern life encroaches upon both myth and nature.

In his place, the changelings leave a double, a boy who steals Henry?s life in the world. This new Henry Day must adjust to a modern culture while hiding his true identity from the Day family. But he can?t hide his extraordinary talent for the piano (a skill the true Henry never displayed), and his dazzling performances prompt his father to suspect that the son he has raised is an imposter. As he ages 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. Of a time when he, too, had been a stolen child. Both Henry and Aniday obsessively search for who they once were before they changed places in the world.

The Stolen Child is a classic tale of leaving childhood and the search for identity. With just the right mix of fantasy and realism, Keith Donohue has created a bedtime story for adults and a literary fable of remarkable depth and strange delights.

Editorial Reviews
Keith Donohue's sparkling debut novel was first presented by the publisher as a "bedtime story for adults." Intrigued by comparisons to Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell and The Confessions of Max Tivoli, we dipped into the book, only to find ourselves transported into a strange and wonderfully rich story--a perfect blend of literary fantasy and realism that kept us captivated until the very end. Find out what our top reviewers have to say about The Stolen Child, and hear from Keith Donohue about about the origins of the story below. --The Editors


Early Buzz From Amazon.com Top Reviewers

We queried our top 100 reviewers as of April 6, 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, but each review is available for reading in its entirety by clicking the "Read the review" link. 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." Read Harriet Klausner's review

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." Read W. Boudville's review

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." Read John Kwok's review

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." Read A. Joseph Haschka's review

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). " Read Robert Morris's review

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." Read Donald Mitchell's review

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." Read Joanna Daneman's review

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." Read Charles Ashbacher's review

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." Read Lawyeraau's review

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." Read Gail Cooke's review

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!" Read Grady Harp's review

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." Read Lee Carlson's review

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." Read Daniel Jolley's review


An Autobiographical Note from Keith Donohue

My dad used to call me, the middle child of seven, "the youngest of the oldest, and the oldest of the youngest." Being dead smack in the middle of a large Irish American family, it is no wonder that I have felt like a changeling myself now and again. We were just like the Kennedys, without the money or the power.

We lived in a cramped yellow house at the bottom of a steep hill in Pittsburgh. Climbing that street as a small child was like hiking up a mountain, but it instilled a sense of ambition and determination. In the mid-Sixties, we moved to Southern Maryland, to a town so small that there was but a single commercial crossroads with a High's Dairy Store across from Ben Franklin's Five and Dime Store. There were still enough woods and swampland available to allow for hours of exploration and getting lost nearly every day.

On a whim, I went back to Pittsburgh for college and began to write in earnest at Duquesne University, studying under the Pennsylvania state laureate poet Sam Hazo, and putting myself through school through two creative writing scholarships. My dream was to be a novelist, but there weren't any openings.

Upon graduation, and being unable to find a job in the city, I moved back to the Washington area to work for the National Endowment for the Arts, answering the mail for the chairman of the agency. Within four years, I was writing speeches for a new and different chairman, a job I held for the eight years that coincided with what some have called the culture wars. I wrote for the freedom of expression crowd.

Off hours, I went back to school, earned a doctorate in English literature, specializing in modern Irish literature. After stints working on federal child care policy and as a cultural policy analyst, I circled round again to that steep hill and wrote The Stolen Child, figuring that if I was to become that novelist, the time had come to stop dreaming and simply climb.

I'm married, have four children, and am back working at a small embattled agency that gives grants to archives across the country to preserve and publish the records of the American experience. In my spare time, I'm writing another novel about myths in America.


The Story Behind the Story

The very first image that came to me when I began The Stolen Child was of a young boy hiding in a hollow tree, face pressed against its wooden ribs, determined not to be found by anyone. His defiant wish to be alone struck me as a universal gesture--a striking out for independence that children make when frustrated by the confines of childhood. When the changelings come and get that boy, he becomes a victim of his own imagination. He is stolen away by his own worst nightmare.

As concerned as I was about the boy hiding in the tree, I also knew that I wanted to write about an adult struggling to remember the dreams of childhood. He had to be as trapped and frustrated by the strictures of his adulthood. And in order for any drama to exist, these two emotional states must clash.

That's why there are two narrators telling two intertwined stories--one adult trying to remember his "stolen" childhood and one child trapped in time at age seven. Since the conflict is primarily between the grown-up Henry Day and the child Aniday, the story needed some way to make both characters alive, have parallel and mirroring lives, joys and challenges, and allow them to confront one another. I needed some way to make the metaphorical be literal.

That's where the changeling folk myth came in. Changelings and faeries have been around for eons in virtually every culture. They are the mysterious beings flitting around the corner of the imagination, and in many places, faeries and changelings have the reputation of breaking into homes and replacing babies and young children with replicas. Or luring children away from their homes to come live in the wild and become part of their unaging magical tribe. The child is stolen by the faeries, and the faery changeling "becomes" the child.

In reality, the legend grew from real human predicaments dealing primarily with the inability of some parents to care for children with a failure to thrive. They explained away the unwanted children by claiming that they were not human at all, that the changelings had come and stolen their child and left one of their own in its place. Having a changeling rather than a real human made it much easier for parents to get rid of such a child.

Through our wild imaginations and fear of the dark and unknown, the changeling myth evolved into a spooky story. Careful, kid, or the changelings will come get you. Or, conversely, as an explanation for why you're so different from all the rest of the kids; you're actually a changeling.
"The Stolen Child" by William Butler Yeats, is one of the more well-known literary uses of folk legend to comment on the real world. Reading the poem, we get caught up in those wonderful images of "hidden faery vats" and the faeries "whispering to the slumbering trout," but then Yeats gives us, in the final stanza, an idea of the family life that the stolen child is leaving behind. But away he goes, "from a world more full of weeping than he can understand."

How perfect for a story about what it's like to be seven and to remember being seven.

So I asked myself: What if we make the changelings real? What if we have the boy out in the woods with a band of faeries, the flip side of the real world? What if he is replaced by a changeling who can grow up and become the adult, who fools everyone into thinking that he is indeed the real Henry Day, when he knows all along that the authentic Henry is out there in the woods?

That's when the fun began. The two narrators' stories spiraling around and interlocking like a Celtic knot. The changeling who steals Henry Day's life gradually realizes that he, too, was a real human boy once upon a time. He, too, was a stolen child and must struggle to dredge up that childhood and deal with his dreams and his own weeping world. The real Henry Day--now known as Aniday among the faeries--faces what it means to be a part of a fading folk myth at the latter half of the 20th century, and the struggle that all children have coming to terms with their mortality, leaving family behind, and leaving childhood behind in order to find some speck of love, happiness, and the road ahead.


Book Subjects
Most talked about in Mythology Books
Dracula ImageDracula
by Bram Stoker
Dutton Adult; Published: 2009-09-24; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $2.99
Price in other shops: $24.95
A Darkness More Than Night ImageA Darkness More Than Night
by Michael Connelly
Little Brown and Company; Published: 2001-01; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $2.93
Price in other shops: $25.95
Folktales of India (Folktales of the World) ImageFolktales of India (Folktales of the World)
University Of Chicago Press; Published: 1999-04-15; Paperback; Book
Best price: $14.68
Price in other shops: $20.00
Folktales of India (Folktales of the World) ImageFolktales of India (Folktales of the World)
University Of Chicago Press; Published: 1987-04-15; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $58.45
Dictionary of Ancient Deities ImageDictionary of Ancient Deities
by Patricia Turner, the late Charles Russell Coulter
Oxford University Press, USA; Published: 2001-07-19; Paperback; Book
Best price: $78.17
Frankenstein (Oxford World's Classics) ImageFrankenstein (Oxford World's Classics)
by Mary Shelley
Oxford University Press, USA; Published: 2001-11-01; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $19.00
Helen of Troy ImageHelen of Troy
by Margaret George
Penguin (Non-Classics); Published: 2007-05-29; Paperback; Book
Best price: $6.17
Price in other shops: $17.00
The Iliad (Penguin Classics) ImageThe Iliad (Penguin Classics)
by Homer
Penguin Books; Published: 1991-07-01; Paperback; Book
Best price: $6.28
Price in other shops: $15.00
Le Morte d'Arthur: Volume 2 (Penguin Classics) ImageLe Morte d'Arthur: Volume 2 (Penguin Classics)
by Thomas Malory
Penguin Classics; Published: 1970-01-30; Paperback; Book
Best price: $8.52
Price in other shops: $16.00
Matchless: An Illumination of Hans Christian Andersen's Classic "The Little Match Girl" ImageMatchless: An Illumination of Hans Christian Andersen's Classic "The Little Match Girl"
by Gregory Maguire
William Morrow Paperbacks; Published: 2010-09-28; Paperback; Book
Best price: $1.00
Price in other shops: $12.99
Similar Books and other products
Trickster Makes This World: Mischief, Myth, and Art ImageTrickster Makes This World: Mischief, Myth, and Art
by Lewis Hyde
Farrar, Straus and Giroux; Published: 2010-08-17; Paperback; Book
Best price: $9.64
Price in other shops: $18.00
The King of Lies ImageThe King of Lies
by John Hart
Minotaur Books; Published: 2006-05-16; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $6.99
Price in other shops: $22.95
The Thirteenth Tale ImageThe Thirteenth Tale
by Diane Setterfield
Atria Books; Published: 2006-09-12; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $2.50
Price in other shops: $26.00
The Sandman Vol. 1: Preludes & Nocturnes (New Edition) ImageThe Sandman Vol. 1: Preludes & Nocturnes (New Edition)
by Neil Gaiman
DC Comics; Vertigo; Published: 2010-10-19; Paperback; Book
Best price: $11.76
Price in other shops: $19.99
Robopocalypse: A Novel ImageRobopocalypse: A Novel
by Daniel H. Wilson
Doubleday; Published: 2011-06-07; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $10.95
Price in other shops: $25.00
My Mother She Killed Me, My Father He Ate Me: Forty New Fairy Tales ImageMy Mother She Killed Me, My Father He Ate Me: Forty New Fairy Tales
Penguin (Non-Classics); Published: 2010-09-28; Paperback; Book
Best price: $9.65
Price in other shops: $17.00
The Yiddish Policemen's Union ImageThe Yiddish Policemen's Union
by Michael Chabon
Harper; Published: 2007-05-01; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $2.70
Price in other shops: $26.95
The Stolen Child ImageThe Stolen Child
by Keith Donohue
Anchor; Published: 2007-05-08; Paperback; Book
Best price: $8.02
Price in other shops: $15.95
Angels of Destruction: A Novel ImageAngels of Destruction: A Novel
by Keith Donohue
Broadway; Published: 2009-10-13; Paperback; Book
Best price: $2.00
Price in other shops: $15.00
The Road ImageThe Road
by Cormac McCarthy
Knopf; Published: 2006-09-26; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $12.55
Price in other shops: $24.95
Book store. Illustrated catalog of books on different categories