However, the questions of right and wrong, good and evil, have never before been grayer as Harry makes life-altering decisions that will, no doubt, have lasting effects for the rest of the series. His morals have been unbelievably steadfast as he's done exactly what he knows to be right throughout the series. In Changes, however, he faces his greatest struggles yet. Harry's journey has always been a challenging one, not to mention a dark one. Any avid reader of the series knows that there are certain recurrences in each and every novel, and I, personally, was beginning to hang my head whenever I picked up the latest one and had to hear the description of Harry's apartment or car for the sixteenth time.īutcher seems to have admitted to his repetitive disposition and torn himself, as well as the reader, away from what they were comfortable with, giving the series the "changes" it truly needed. Changes is well titled in that Butcher presents the same world, characters, and how they interact with each other, but he takes the formula for his series and turns it upside down. Changes is an appropriate title for such a long standing series.īutcher's long-running wizard/noir stories come to an enthralling climax in this pivotal point in the all the character's lives.
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