Reviews

Changeling by Christopher Kubasik

kynan's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

TL;DR: Anti-bigotry lecture wrapped up in an intellectual infodump-esque introduction to the Shadowrun universe.

TL: Peter Clarris is the fifteen-year-old son to a well-off, if somewhat sociopathic and potentially nihilistic, professor of medicine. The year is 2039, the place is Chicago and the Night of Rage is just about to happen. The book opens with Peter coming to consciousness and discovering that he's undergone a somewhat surprising "goblinization", or, as this book puts it, "ingetisization". There's a lot of pseudo-medical jargon in Changeling. Well, I think that it's pseudo-medical. The deal is that Peter and his father are both very, very clever people and Peter was well on his way to following in his father's biological-medical footsteps when he was flipped into a troll. The book's conceit is to hold onto that thread and really try to tell the story of why things happened the way they did. So, "ingetisization" (I guess from the Latin ingens) is the process by which homo sapiens sapiens ("pure" humans) transforms into homo sapiens ingentis (trolls). We also learn the terms homo sapiens pumillonis (dwarves) and homo sapiens nobilis (elves) (the precursor metahumans in the Shadowrun world - with examples of both being born to human-parents as part of the Unexplained Genetic Expression starting in 2011) as well as homo sapiens robustus (orcs) and homo sapiens ingentis (trolls), of which the latter two only started appearing in 2021 when 10% of the human population suddenly "goblinized". Peter's goblinization-case, in 2039, is quite odd, and isn't explained.

The entire book is basically couched around Peter's desire to "cure" himself of his trollishness and it involves several detours into plausible (to me, but I'm no geneticist

manwithanagenda's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

It is books like this one, which I read so long ago, that leads to problems to my policy of reviewing everything I decide to swap. This book was one of easily over a hundred books that I kept from a huge lot of books in dozens of boxes of science fiction and fantasy novels that I got for almost nothing in high school.

I remember thinking the book was pretty good, but something of a let-down after the first trilogy in the Shadowrun series. This one is stand-alone (rereading the last few chapters it doesn't seem to scream sequel), and dealing more with the feelings of a kid who became a pariah after becoming a troll.
More...