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Tobias has gotten used to his new life. He's a red-tailed hawk with the mind of a kid. It was difficult when he first became trapped in his morph, but he's started to come to terms with things. After all, how many kids actually get the chance to fly?But now Tobias is about to make a very difficult choice: a choice that the other Animorphs know nothing about. And it could mean the difference between living the rest of his life as a being human. K.A. APPLEGATE is the author of the bestselling show more Animorphs series, as well as the Remnants and Everworld series, Home of the Brave, and the Roscoe Riley Rules series. She lives in Tiburon, California. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
Spring 2020 (Animorph's Read 2020 March/April);
Tobias, Tobias, Tobias. I have so many feelings about you.
I'm glad we got to deal more with the Ellimnist because it's about time these books branched out and it makes sense that it's happening more and more. Time. Space. Other realm creatures, who are putting their fingers into the pot, while claiming they can't put their fingers in the pot (who, yeah, I totally have big, fully formed opinions about, too).
But Tobias can morph, again, weeeeeee.
Which means he gets to show up to Rachel's award ceremony, where she's getting an award for being on the five smartest people in the group, and that whole happening got me into a tizzy during my live read/necessary post-commentary with the show more Animorphs 2020 group, because I have a lot of feelings about how Rachel fills four different female trope slots at once, that are almost never put together, and yet does it without even seeming perfect or less a kiss than everyone else around her. show less
Tobias, Tobias, Tobias. I have so many feelings about you.
I'm glad we got to deal more with the Ellimnist because it's about time these books branched out and it makes sense that it's happening more and more. Time. Space. Other realm creatures, who are putting their fingers into the pot, while claiming they can't put their fingers in the pot (who, yeah, I totally have big, fully formed opinions about, too).
But Tobias can morph, again, weeeeeee.
Which means he gets to show up to Rachel's award ceremony, where she's getting an award for being on the five smartest people in the group, and that whole happening got me into a tizzy during my live read/necessary post-commentary with the show more Animorphs 2020 group, because I have a lot of feelings about how Rachel fills four different female trope slots at once, that are almost never put together, and yet does it without even seeming perfect or less a kiss than everyone else around her. show less
The Change is from Toby's point of view- he has adapted well to living as a hawk, but sometimes still really misses being human. Starts to experience some strange moments of being in one place, then suddenly another, or having visions.... Turns out one of the omniscient Ellimist is messing with Toby. I had forgotten about those godlike beings, and I find them rather annoying- how conveniently they can alter the storyline..... Toby finds the involvement extremely annoying, too- until a hint of a promise is dangled in front of him- that he might be able to regain his human form. So he takes the Ellimist's offer. Oh, and during all this inner turmoil, the kids are racing around the forest trying desperately to avoid the enemy- who have show more deployed all their forces to tracking down two escaped aliens- called Hork-Bajirs, who look vicious and deadly but in reality were a peaceful species until the Yeerks overtook them. So the kids learn quite a bit about the Hork-Bajir- including that they're not so smart- and you think they're all going to die at enemy hands but they pull an escape off last-minute- very cleverly this time, I thought. Their plan actually worked. And they are using their morphing skills more ingeniously, as well. Mostly they draw on their already-existing arsenal of animal forms, but Tobias re-acquires the ability to morph, and he turns himself into a raccoon in order to avoid being eaten by that same raccoon. And Rachel voluntarily morphs an alien in order to throw off the enemy. That was interesting. Of course, quite maddeningly but I am sure great for future plotlines, the promise Toby thought he'd gotten from the Ellimist isn't exactly what he thought it was. . . and yet that final scene, the last sentence of the book, is very moving. While I usually wish for more detail, sometimes the understatement is great in these books.
more at the Dogear Diary show less
more at the Dogear Diary show less
I missed the Animorphs series when it first came out. I was aware of it, but I was just starting high school, so I had more reading than I could manage as it was, and the Animorphs skewed slightly younger anyway. This was my first encounter with the stories, and I enjoyed it well enough.
I know I would have enjoyed it more if I was younger, as the writing is clearly meant for a younger audience, specifically the dialogue, even in the adult aliens. The book is told from the perspective of one of the kids known as the Animorphs, who in a previous adventure became stuck in his animal form. We follow him in dealing with being a former human, how life has changed for him now that he is stuck living in the wild in his animal form, and how that show more helps or impedes him in helping his friends.
A fun one, that I hope someone finds in my Little Free Library and enjoys. I have another Animorphs book I grabbed from a library sale that I'll be reading some time soon. show less
I know I would have enjoyed it more if I was younger, as the writing is clearly meant for a younger audience, specifically the dialogue, even in the adult aliens. The book is told from the perspective of one of the kids known as the Animorphs, who in a previous adventure became stuck in his animal form. We follow him in dealing with being a former human, how life has changed for him now that he is stuck living in the wild in his animal form, and how that show more helps or impedes him in helping his friends.
A fun one, that I hope someone finds in my Little Free Library and enjoys. I have another Animorphs book I grabbed from a library sale that I'll be reading some time soon. show less
Fun fluff series that gets less and less fluff over time.
Animorphs was a good series that kept me reading. Enjoyed these as a kid.
A short comment for every book of the series until I get a chance to re-read them. All three of my sons and I loved this series and read every single book - I even bought every single book (most, but not all, used; some through school book sales). I'm excited to re-read them to see how the five main characters develop and to watch all the different transformations again.
The best books appeal to *readers* universally - not children versus adults. These may not be quite worthy of the adjective 'best' but they do have that crossover appeal.
The best books appeal to *readers* universally - not children versus adults. These may not be quite worthy of the adjective 'best' but they do have that crossover appeal.
Tobias is a red-tailed hawk with the mind of a kid, but he has to make a choice which means the difference between being a hawk and being human.
Series: Animorphs, Main series, 13
Animorphs
Lexile: 530 [view chart]
Series: Animorphs, Main series, 13
Animorphs
Lexile: 530 [view chart]
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1990s
309 works; 17 members
Books Read in 2019
4,052 works; 108 members
Childhood Favorites
427 works; 24 members
Author Information

352+ Works 90,234 Members
Katherine Applegate was born in Michigan on July 19, 1956. She writes science fiction, young adult romances, and pop-up books. She is the author of the Making Waves, Making Out, and Roscoe Riley Rules series. She writes the Animorphs, Everworld, and Remnants series under the pen name K. A. Applegate. She also writes under the pen names of C. show more Archer, Catherine Kendall and Elizabeth Benning. She has received numerous awards including a Golden Duck Award (Eleanor Cameron Award for Middle Grades) for The Message in 1997, the SCBWI 2008 Golden Kite Award for Best Fiction and the Bank Street 2008 Josette Frank Award for Home of the Brave, and the 2013 Newbery Medal and the Rebecca Caudill Young Readers' Book Award (Illinois) for The One and Only Ivan. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Work Relationships
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Change (Animorphs #13) (Animorphs #13)
- Original title
- The Change
- Original publication date
- 1997-12
- People/Characters
- Tobias [in Animorphs]; Jake [in Animorphs]; Cassie [in Animorphs]; Rachel [in Animorphs]; Marco [in Animorphs]; "Ax" Aximili-Esgarrouth-Isthill (show all 10); Jara Hamee; Ket Halpak; The Ellimist; Visser Three (Esplin 9466)
- Important places
- USA
- Dedication
- For Michael
- First words
- My name is Tobias. The other Animorphs can't tell you very much about themselves, but I can.
- Disambiguation notice
- La Mutation is the French title for The Change
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 1,015
- Popularity
- 25,628
- Reviews
- 8
- Rating
- (3.66)
- Languages
- 6 — Dutch, English, French, German, Norwegian (Bokmål), Swedish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 20
- ASINs
- 2























































