A human boy and a goblin changeling are raised as brothers.
Thirteen years ago, a goblin out of the Wild Wood brought a doppelgänger to exchange for a human infant—then had to dash away to escape detection, leaving both infant and changeling behind. Though everyone knows one of the babies must be a changeling, their mother insisted on raising Tinn and Cole as twins. Now, years later, they’re inseparable, and both drive their mother to distraction, playing in the quarry and swapping the salt for the sugar. But one day the boys receive a mysterious letter explaining that if the changeling child doesn’t join the goblin horde, all the magical creatures will die. Neither boy knows who the real changeling actually is, and though they’re mischievous and irreverent, they each want what’s best for one another. Thus begins Tinn and Cole’s quest through the Wild Wood, past the Oddmire, and beyond the Deep Dark. They’ll encounter not just goblins, but also a hinkypunk (a grieving will-o’-the-wisp with a candle in his beard), the Witch of the Wood, and a feral little shape-shifting girl their own age. Apparently set in the same fantastic, alternative bygone America as Ritter’s Jacoby series for teens, this middle-grade adventure starts slow but ramps up into a tale of maternal and brotherly love that’s never mawkishly sentimental.
A delightful series opener
. (Fantasy. 9-12)