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Book Reviews of The Changed Man

The Changed Man
The Changed Man
Author: Orson Scott Card
ISBN-13: 9780812533651
ISBN-10: 0812533658
Publication Date: 4/15/1992
Pages: 256
Rating:
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
 18

3.3 stars, based on 18 ratings
Publisher: Tom Doherty Assoc Llc
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

althea avatar reviewed The Changed Man on + 774 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
I'd read about half of the stories in this collection of eleven before, in different books. This collection is on the theme of Card's more horror-oriented stories.
In his introduction, he talks about the delineations between dread, terror, and horror, and goes on rather sententiously about how horror is just about the blood and gore and nastiness, and how HIS (superior) stories are all about the "dread."
Then, the first story in the collection ("Eumenides in the Fourth Floor Lavatory") features an inhuman monster baby with suckers that create running sores, slime, blood, pus, said "baby" being hacked apart with a knife, shoved down a toilet, etc... In other words, as much gore and goo as in any story I've ever come across....
So... HMMM.
Of course, the story isn't all about the gross-out factor, it's about guilt and nasty people getting the punishment that coming to them, even when other people forgive them their sins. But you know what? Very little horror isn't actually "about" something, if one actually reads it.
Anyway, Card is a good writer, and many of these stories are very good. However, some do get annoyingly moralizing, especially "Closing the Timelid," which, as Card himself states in his Afterword, is "a homily against hedonism." As a pro-hedonist, obviously, I disagree!
jasoncavallaro avatar reviewed The Changed Man on + 92 more book reviews
I've read many of Card's novels, but if all of his short stories are of the same quality as THE CHANGED MAN, then his stories may actually be better than his novels.

Not one weak story in here, but "Fat Farm" was my favorite
taosing avatar reviewed The Changed Man on + 76 more book reviews
I don't really read short story collections anymore, even someone whose work I love as much as Orson Scott Card's. But, I figure a lot of folks do. So. Here it is!