☆Jessie☆ (Ageless Pages Reviews)'s Reviews > Changeling
Changeling (Order of Darkness, #1)
by Philippa Gregory (Goodreads Author)
by Philippa Gregory (Goodreads Author)
☆Jessie☆ (Ageless Pages Reviews)'s review
bookshelves: historical-fiction, pre-review, arc, fantasy, hf-italy, 2012-reviews, 2012-reads, reviewed, utterly-underwhelming, what-is-this-nonsense, great-potential-awful-execution, bring-on-the-cliche-parade
Jul 15, 12
bookshelves: historical-fiction, pre-review, arc, fantasy, hf-italy, 2012-reviews, 2012-reads, reviewed, utterly-underwhelming, what-is-this-nonsense, great-potential-awful-execution, bring-on-the-cliche-parade
Read in June, 2012
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This is a mess. I've long since grown out of most of my misguided, uneducated affection for Philippa Gregory novels, but any lingering chances I will read her subsequent novels were firmly ended by this read. From beginning to end, this is a dull, vapid and uninvolving novel. Full of undeveloped, one-dimensional and just plain boring characters, with little to no plot to speak of, there's nothing to recommend about Changeling. It's a sloppy and anachronistic mess of a book, and one that doesn't leave much hope for the rest of this series. Simply and best put: Changeling is a disappointing mess, even for those who have grown inured to Gregory's ham-handed attempts to write historical fiction.
Changeling is supposedly the tale of two (very dry, very flat) protagonists, Luca Vero and his female counterpart of Isolde of Lucretili. It's hard to connect with these cardboard cutouts masquerading as characters, and even more difficult with their cliched background characters of Freize and Ishraq. I don't have anything to say about either protagonist; both Luca and Isolde failed to come to life as people, nor gave me cause to invest in their respective stories. There's no real "mystery" to anything that Luca investigates, nor is the "changeling" label ever fully explored by the author. It's mentioned maybe twice, and then... just dropped in favor of a ill-fated (and inauthentic) romantic plotline between two sets of characters.
With no plot to speak of and with the adventures the group encounters coming across as sporadic, unrelated vignettes, it's hard to get a clear picture of the world that Gregory is attempting to create here. Is the supernatural real? Where are my alchemists and death dancers I was promised? This is an "Order of Darkness" novel, the first in an expected series, but bare lip service is paid to the idea of an overarching theme or message. This is Gregory's weakest effort on many fronts, and it shows throughout the dialogue-heavy novel, and badly. Events and reveals, plot twists are all predictable - from the twist about Isolde's fortunes to the "mystery" of the stigmata and poisoned nuns - each new revelation failed to achieve the any impact author was going for.
Changeling is affected, obvious and anachronistic. This review is unexpectedly hard to write because I cared so little about anything that was going on, nor about the main characters. Gregory's earlier novels aren't "good" per se, but they at least managed to entertain the reader, instead of bore them to tears, as this one does. You would think a novel with a trail about possessed and poisoned nuns would be a little more riveting. You'd be so so wrong. Lacking any significant character development, with a staid and predictable plot, Gregory is better suited to staying in the genre she's come to dominate. Stick with her fluffy, bodice-heaving novels and stay far, far away from Changeling.
This is a mess. I've long since grown out of most of my misguided, uneducated affection for Philippa Gregory novels, but any lingering chances I will read her subsequent novels were firmly ended by this read. From beginning to end, this is a dull, vapid and uninvolving novel. Full of undeveloped, one-dimensional and just plain boring characters, with little to no plot to speak of, there's nothing to recommend about Changeling. It's a sloppy and anachronistic mess of a book, and one that doesn't leave much hope for the rest of this series. Simply and best put: Changeling is a disappointing mess, even for those who have grown inured to Gregory's ham-handed attempts to write historical fiction.
Changeling is supposedly the tale of two (very dry, very flat) protagonists, Luca Vero and his female counterpart of Isolde of Lucretili. It's hard to connect with these cardboard cutouts masquerading as characters, and even more difficult with their cliched background characters of Freize and Ishraq. I don't have anything to say about either protagonist; both Luca and Isolde failed to come to life as people, nor gave me cause to invest in their respective stories. There's no real "mystery" to anything that Luca investigates, nor is the "changeling" label ever fully explored by the author. It's mentioned maybe twice, and then... just dropped in favor of a ill-fated (and inauthentic) romantic plotline between two sets of characters.
With no plot to speak of and with the adventures the group encounters coming across as sporadic, unrelated vignettes, it's hard to get a clear picture of the world that Gregory is attempting to create here. Is the supernatural real? Where are my alchemists and death dancers I was promised? This is an "Order of Darkness" novel, the first in an expected series, but bare lip service is paid to the idea of an overarching theme or message. This is Gregory's weakest effort on many fronts, and it shows throughout the dialogue-heavy novel, and badly. Events and reveals, plot twists are all predictable - from the twist about Isolde's fortunes to the "mystery" of the stigmata and poisoned nuns - each new revelation failed to achieve the any impact author was going for.
Changeling is affected, obvious and anachronistic. This review is unexpectedly hard to write because I cared so little about anything that was going on, nor about the main characters. Gregory's earlier novels aren't "good" per se, but they at least managed to entertain the reader, instead of bore them to tears, as this one does. You would think a novel with a trail about possessed and poisoned nuns would be a little more riveting. You'd be so so wrong. Lacking any significant character development, with a staid and predictable plot, Gregory is better suited to staying in the genre she's come to dominate. Stick with her fluffy, bodice-heaving novels and stay far, far away from Changeling.
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Reading Progress
| 06/24/2012 | page 29 |
|
11.0% | "Yeah, this... this is not going to be good." |
| 06/24/2012 | page 138 |
|
52.0% | "Yeeaahhh... I'm not invested in this at all. One would think a novel with possessed and poisoned nuns would be a leetle more involving." |
| 06/27/2012 | page 156 |
|
59.0% | "Nuns yelling "kill them"? Uh...okay then." |
| 06/27/2012 | page 178 |
|
67.0% |
"This makes zero sense. If Luca/Freize already figured out who was behind the nunnery deaths, the poisonings, and the false stigmata, why are Isolde and Ishraq still considered witches? This is such a mess." |
| 06/27/2012 | page 231 |
|
87.0% |
"There's still no overarching plot for this book. It's just a series of unsatisfying vignettes as the group travels along... Only 30 pages to go.." |
| 06/27/2012 | page 259 |
|
97.0% | "Everything about this has been so obvious and affected. Worst Philippa Gregory novel yet -- and that's saying something." |
Comments (showing 1-11 of 11) (11 new)
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message 1:
by
Audra (Unabridged Chick)
(new)
Feb 17, 2012 07:30am
Oooh. I'm tempted...
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message 2:
by
☆Jessie☆ (Ageless Pages Reviews)
(last edited Jun 24, 2012 10:57am)
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rated it 1 star
Aww, thanks very much Ebony! It was a frustrating book and I want to steer as many people as possible away from it. :D
I couldn't agree more with this review. What a terrible attempt at a novel. If this was a debut I doubt it would even have been published.
I very much agree, Sara Nia! It's just a big mess! PG continues to go down in my estimations with every new book she publishes.
I thought I was reading a book by a different writer...I understand it's her first young adult...but she didn't have to be so simplistic in her writing...it felt as though a young child had wrote it...
I agree completely, Jessica. It was very simple, almost totally dumbed-down. A waste of an interesting idea, I think.
Aww...I was about to pick this up because the idea sounds so awesome. Even the title and series name sounds cool. Books-that-could-have-been-better annoy me far more than books-that-are-complete-crap.
It is such a great concept squandered by Philippa Gregory's blunt and dry writing. It would've been great - with a different author. :-(


