Changeling by Matt Wesolowski

Changeling (Six Stories, #3)

by Matt Wesolowski

Elusive online journalist Scott King investigates another cold case – the disappearance of a seven-year-old boy from his father’s car on Christmas Eve – in an intensely dark, deeply chilling and searingly thought-provoking thriller, in another episode of Six Stories.

***LONGLISTED for the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year***

***SHORTLISTED for Best Thriller at the Amazon Publishing Readers’ Awards 2019***

***SHORTLISTED for Best Independent Voice at the Amazon Publishing Readers’ Awards 2019***

‘Insidiously terrifying, with possibly the creepiest woods since The Blair Witch Project … a genuine chiller with a whammy of an ending’ C J Tudor

‘Frighteningly wonderful … one of the best books I’ve read in years’ Khurrum Rahman

’A creepy, chilling read that is ridiculously difficult to put down’ Luca Veste

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A missing child
A family in denial
Six witnesses
Six stories
Which one is true?

On Christmas Eve in 1988, seven-year-old Alfie Marsden vanished in the dark Wentshire Forest Pass, when his father, Sorrel, stopped the car to investigate a mysterious knocking sound. No trace of the child, nor his remains, have ever been found. Alfie Marsden was declared officially dead in 1995.

Elusive online journalist, Scott King, whose ‘Six Stories’ podcasts have become an internet sensation, investigates the disappearance, interviewing six witnesses, including Sorrel and his ex-partner, to try to find out what really happened that fateful night. Journeying through the trees of the Wentshire Forest – a place synonymous with strange sightings, and tales of hidden folk who dwell there, he talks to a company that tried and failed to build a development in the forest, and a psychic who claims to know what happened to the little boy…

Intensely dark, deeply chilling and searingly thought provoking, Changeling is an up-to-the-minute, startling thriller, taking you to places you will never, ever forget

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Praise for the Six Stories series

‘Matt Wesolowski brilliantly depicts a desperate and disturbed corner of north-east England in which paranoia reigns and goodness is thwarted … an exceptional storyteller' Andrew Michael Hurley

‘Beautifully written, smart, compassionate – and scary as hell. Matt Wesolowski is one of the most exciting and original voices in crime fiction’ Alex North

‘Endlessly inventive and with literary thrills a-plenty, Matt Wesolowski is boldly carving his own uniquely dark niche in fiction’ Benjamin Myers

‘Disturbing, compelling and atmospheric, it will terrify and enthral you in equal measure’ M W Craven

’First-class plotting’ S Magazine

‘A dazzling fictional mystery’ Foreword Reviews

‘Readers of Kathleen Barber’s Are You Sleeping and fans of Ruth Ware will enjoy this slim but compelling novel’ Booklist

‘Bold, clever and genuinely chilling’Deidre O’Brien, Sunday Mirror

‘A genuine genre-bending debut’ Carla McKay, Daily Mail

'Impeccably crafted and gripping from start to finish’ Doug Johnstone, The Big Issue

‘The very epitome of a must-read’ Heat

‘Wonderfully horrifying … the suspense crackles’ James Oswald

‘Original, inventive and dazzlingly clever’ Fiona Cummins

‘Haunting, horrifying, and heartrending. Fans of Arthur Machen, whose unsettling tale The White People provides an epigraph, will want to check this one out’ Publishers Weekly

Reviewed by zooloo1983 on

5 of 5 stars

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Wow!!! Where do you begin with writing a review for a book like this! I will never EVER have the words for it. But OH MY GOD OH MY GOD and OH MY GOD, even they do not cover it! I still need to write my review for Six Stories and finish Hydra but to date, this book was the most epic.

It is all the buzzwords you can think of amazeballs, fantastic, epic, twisty, spooky, creepy and did I say AMAZING!!!

With the disappearing of little Alfie Marsden occurring in 1988, no one knows what happened that day, until someone contacts Scott King with some new information to look into the mystery for his podcast. But who is this unknown person? Can they be trusted? He then sets out to try and solve this mystery which is not like him, where normally he lets the story be told. So what makes this case so different?

The research in this book to do the Changeling, fairies, haunted woods was fantastic. But also, more importantly, the domestic abuse and the controlling nature of someone all have been researched in so much detail. This story was a heartbreaking one with the disappearance of Alfie. but Changeling focuses more on the people surrounding the mysterious circumstance and the folklore of the woods.

I read this in two sittings, I started this in the evening, on my own in the dark, as you do and read the chapter about the workman and site at Wentshire Forest, my god did it freak me out!! With all the tapping and evil laughing, I could picture being there. It doesn’t help that I live right by some woods, the weather when reading was windy! And there was a lot of rain, so much that when it stopped there was a tapping sound! So when the workers were experiencing the tap-tap-tap outside the window of the Portakabin, I felt like hiding under the duvet as I had the same tap-tap-Tap sound!! Any chapter which was about the woods for some reason just reminded me of the Blair Witch project, hearing sounds and seeing things but not quite sure who or what was out there.

Although as I said the story is about Alfie, it is not only about him. This forest is the crux of the book, it enables the readers to get lost in the supernatural, the folklore and the Changeling, enabling you to use that as an excuse to what happens in six stories. It is also used to reiterate the control that it has on people, and it mirrors the behaviour and controlling issues of one of the characters. It amplifies it. It is the unsaid thing in both scenarios that say so much more than what is said. A look or an innocent hand-holding means more than outright abuse. The fear of what is going to happen, same with the woods, the unknown of where the sounds are coming from and what will happen next!

The idea of a podcast to tell the stories is absolutely epic! When I listened to Six Stories (review to follow), I didn’t know what to expect so when you listening you didn’t feel like it was a book, make believe I thought and felt that these were real podcasts. I had to google it to check, Mr Wesolowski’s writing does this to you. His storytelling, done via the podcasts, make you feel like you are working with Scott King trying to work out the clues and try and get closure one each case. It grips you like nothing I have ever known. It is so clever in how it feeds you the information, letting you become devoured by the words before spitting you out and saying goodbye! You are left in a puddle of mess trying to work out what you just read. Are there forces in play here?

Changeling is written so matter of factly that you do forget it is only a story. The forest isn’t really haunted…is it? And when the final episode hits, when you here the final words from Scott, as you wait in anticipation. Mr Wesolowski completely sucker punches you. The air leaves your lungs so quickly you wonder what the hell happened. Was this the plan all along?

This is written so deliciously well, it captivated your mind. It takes over you, it consumes you as you are embroiled in the case. It does not let go of you until you begin to experience (in your imagination of course) the tap-tap-tap…wait what’s that noise…I’m sure it was laughter…….I hope it was the wind….

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 27 January, 2019: Finished reading
  • 27 January, 2019: Reviewed