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The Demon's Lexicon
The Demon's Lexicon
The Demon's Lexicon
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The Demon's Lexicon

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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Sixteen-year-old Nick and his brother, Alan, are always ready to run. Their father is dead, and their mother is crazy—she screams if Nick gets near her. She’s no help in protecting any of them from the deadly magicians who use demons to work their magic. The magicians want a charm that Nick’s mother stole—and they want it badly enough to kill. Alan is Nick’s partner in demon slaying and the only person he trusts in the world. So things get very scary and very complicated when Nick begins to suspect that everything Alan has told him about their father, their mother, their past, and what they are doing is a complete lie. . . .
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 2, 2009
ISBN9781416994923
Author

Sarah Rees Brennan

Sarah Rees Brennan is the New York Times best-selling author of fantasy novels for teens including The Demon's Lexicon, a YALSA Top Ten Books for Young Adults, and The Bane Chronicles, co-authored with Cassandra Clare and Maureen Johnson. www.sarahreesbrennan.com

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Reviews for The Demon's Lexicon

Rating: 4.014925373134329 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    At first I didn't get where the story was going but that's where Sarah shines in her writing! The story of Nick and Alan is fascinating and by the time you get to the end of this first book you will be flabbergasted at where the story goes. I can't wait to start the next book which I have but will hold off on starting because once I start it I won't want to put it down.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Reason for Reading: The plot sounds fascinating and just like my type of book. Comments: I couldn't finish this book. I made it to page 94. I admit it's been a busy week for me but to struggle with one book and read only 95 pgs in a week, for me, is unreal. I really did give this the extra effort because I wanted to like it but it just never captured me. I couldn't get a hold on the plot. I couldn't connect with the characters. Finally, the parts about demons and magic that should have captured my imagination (I wanted it to!) just didn't. It has received very good reviews from others, though. It's average rating on Amazon is 4.5. I wish I was one of them but sadly this book and I just could not connect with one another.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It's possible I built this book up too much before I finally got the chance to read it. I've been following Sarah Rees Brennan's work for awhile; she's done some excellent fanfic, and her Livejournal is an enduring delight. She definitely knows how to write engagingly, but I'm used to her writing about likeable characters.This book is told entirely from the point of view of a very unlikeable character. He's sociopathic, misanthropic, misogynistic. It turns out that there are important reasons for this, but that doesn't make it any more fun to be inside his head.Having read the final chapter, I want to go back and read the book again. I suspect it'll be better the second time around. (Already, there are a couple of minor points that annoyed me the first time through that turn out to make more sense in hindsight...)The good news is that book two is supposed to be from a different character's point of view. Any of the three major choices would be an improvement, and it should be much more fun to see where they go from here.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is the first book in the Demon’s Lexicon trilogy. This was an okay YA paranormal/UF book. It's a fairly dark story, and while I didn't hate it, it was incredibly predictable. I kept hoping for something to happen that I didn't expect and it never did. I listened to this on audiobook and the narration was fine; I didn’t really love it or hate it. I would recommend listening to on audiobook if you enjoy audiobooks. The story is about a couple brothers that are fleeing a cult of evil mages that are after their insane mother. It’s pretty dark for a YA novel, but not awfully so. There is some action, mystery, and of course demonic elements. I did enjoy the creative take on demons and their interaction with humans and our world; this was a bit different than other YA demon themed urban fantasies I have read. I also liked that this wasn't really "romance" focused but was focused more on family, friendship, and what it means to be human. Overall an okay book, but I wasn't all that engaged in the story and found that whole thing to be too predictable. I don't plan on continuing with the series.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Really good. I liked the relationship between the brothers and the twist.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A great replacement for Harry Potter fans. There is lots of action and dark humor.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I was intrigued when someone recommended to me "The Demon's Lexicon". I'm a big fan of Rob Thurman's Leandros brothers series, and was curious to see how author Sarah Rees Brennan handled the brothers theme. And...I found her book hard to put down.In Brennan's world, magic and demons exist, unknown to us ordinary humans. Power-hungry Magicians, grouped in Magician Circles, use magic to summon demons into our world and "feed" humans to them (they help demons possess humans) in exchange for more power.Across England, 16 y/o Nick and his big brother Alan escape from the evil Magicians, while dragging their crazy mom, Olivia, along for the ride. Years ago, the Magicians managed to kill their father, and Alan was injured badly and was left with a permanent limp. It seems that the Magicians desperately want back a unique talisman that Olivia stole.Alan and Nick are different. While the sensitive-yet-tough Alan is thin, blue-eyed, with a pianist's hands, relying on his superb way with words, cunning and gun-marksmanship, Nick is big, dark and brooding, fighting silently with his swords and knives.One night, just when Alan and Nick intend to skip town again following another Magicians' attack, someone butts in:young Jamie and his sister Mae dare ask the brothers for help. Jamie has been mark by demons. If no one helps Jamie remove the marks, he'll die. Nick doesn't want to help; all he cares about is Alan.Alan, however, wants to try save Jamie. When, while trying to help Mae and Jamie, Alan gets marked by demons, too, Nick is furious-- he must find a way to remove the demon mark and save Alan. On top of it all, Nick starts to suspect that Alan, the only person he trusts, has been keeping secrets from him for years...The story is written in third-person, from Nick's point-of-view. Sentences are lean, simple, edgy, threaded with subtle, dark humor. The writing is superb, the surprises are many, and the ending is just perfect.I recommend this book wholeheartedly. Just don't expect another "Nightlife". Brennan's "The Demon's Lexicon" is different, in a wonderful way.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I thought I was easily predicting the plot of the book as I was reading along. It was still an interesting read and I was enjoying the characters. Then the author threw a curve ball I was not expecting out of nowhere. I was glued until the last page when that one hit me on the head. Not my typical genre, but I thoroughly enjoyed it from start to finish.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I waited for this book to come out for at least a year, and when I finally got it (tonight!) I started reading it and didn't stop until it was done. It is insanely enthralling.

    This is the first paragraph: "The pipe under the sink was leaking again. It wouldn't have been so bad, except that Nick kept his favorite sword under the sink." This is our introduction to Nick Ryves, a sixteen year old who has been on the run from magicians his entire life. He and his older brother Alan (with a crippled leg and a habit of caring about pitiful cases) have only themselves to depend on--their mother is mad, and their father was killed years ago. Desperate to free his family and his friends from demons and magicians both, Alan comes up with plan that could kill them all as easily as save them.

    Nick has a fascinating POV, and the relationships between characters are believable and drawn with a deft touch. Brennan has a great ear for dialog, and uses humor to great affect. Every character has motivations, moralities, pasts and personalities--the depth therein never overwhelms the action, but makes it feel real, instead. The action scenes feel frantic and alive, and the twists and turns near the end...damn. Worth reading the entire book just for the showdown.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This was amazing. I couldn't say if I loved Nick, but I was attached to him from page one. The deeper I got into his mind, the more involved I became, until it was hard to put it down. It's amazing how deep she was able to go with him- especially as most writers rely on their talent to make readers feel what the character is feeling, and Nick's main is murderous rage. Not exactly something you want to impose on your readers. Yet... I loved it. The simple way he viewed the world, with a few basic truths and nothing else mattering, everything. It was amazing, and I have no idea how she did it. I'm going to be waiting for more from this author. With talent like this... it would be worth the wait.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    It starts very slowly, but does speed up so it is worth sticking with it. Likewise at times the plot seems very transparent, and again it will surprise you. I'm interested to see where the rest of the trilogy leads.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I had very high expectations for this book, founded almost entirely on Sarah Rees Brennan's bewitching livejournal posts. I am happy to say that THE DEMON'S LEXICON delivered on every level. I adored the snappy, witty banter and the excitement of the twisty plot. About halfway through I started suspecting a particular plot point and then I HAD TO KNOW if I was right and whooshed through the rest of it to the end. But my absolute favorite aspect of the book are the characters of Nick and Alan. This book may be told from the point-of-view of an apparent sociopath, but it has one of the deepest hearts of any book I've read lately. In fact, I found it more affecting emotionally than most of the romances I've read!

    I will certainly be looking for the sequel!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I'd read this book several years ago and liked it--but not enough to buy the sequels. This time around, I picked up the entire trilogy from the library. It's darker than I remember, and the protagonist/viewpoint character Nick was still an unpleasant narrator. However, knowing what I did about the twist ending, his unpleasantness made a lot more sense. The love triangle aspect wasn't quite as played out when this book was first published, but by now I'm over the whole "Which boy will she choose?" angst thing.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I guess this would really be 2.5 stars. The story was decent and the characters were ok, I just really had a hard time getting into it and struggled to finish it. Maybe at another time I would really like it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Excellent book with one heck of a surprise at the end-at least for me! Just re-read this with my daughter and she really enjoyed it as well. We're now reading Demon's Covenant and enjoying the heck out of that too. Very well paced, engrossing characters who you really care about who are in a very difficult struggle. Interesting also to watch the contrast between the jaded and world weary Alan and Nick and the more innocent yet brave Mae and her quiet brother Jaimie --with secrets of his own. Highly recommended.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I guessed the twist pretty early on, but this is still a great book. [Oct 2010]
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    So I may not be 100% on board with the Demon's Lexicon Trilogy, but this first book did have some interesting characters, a good background on just what kind of world everybody is living in - and how they should be acting in it - and a few standout great scenes. I'm definitely going to check out the rest of the books, see where she goes from here.

    (Also, just Note To Me: Marked as disability-fic, because Alan, the brother of the main character has a physical disability - an untreated injury has caused him permanent damage to his leg, a (sometimes more pronounced) limp, and some chronic pain. It isn't addressed to any great extent, but IDK what happens in the rest of the books, and it is worth mentioning here.)
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Someone obviously forgot to hire the editor since the writing was atrocious and contradictory.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I thought this was a great read, for many reasons. The characters are well developed, the pacing was perfectly timed, and best of all, I did not see the ending. I thought I did, but then she hit me out of left field with a completely different twist than what I was expecting.

    First and foremost, I love Rees Brennan's writing style. I was originally introduced to her work through a fan-fiction community online. The first piece of her writing that I read, I didn't like. But as she continued to write and post in the fan-fiction community, her writing style matured and changed. Her later pieces of fan-fiction I adored -- in fact, by the time she stopped writing fan-fiction, she was the only writer in that particular form that I was still reading.

    Naturally, I was excited that she was being published in her own right, as I think she's a brilliant writer with a fantastic ability to convey humor, develop character and weave multiple plotlines together. The only thing I was worried about (since I'd only read her fan-fiction work) was whether or not she could pull off the same magic in an original work.

    Well, she did. This book is riveting, impossible to put down for any length of time.

    The fact that I (along with many other of her fans/followers online) was able to read about her journey towards publication, follow the links to her interviews that she so generously provided and (best of all, in my opinion) watch her grow and mature in her writing style made this work all the richer and more textured, but this is a work that will stand on its own. You do not need to be familiar with the author's journey, with her previous works or her parodies of literature and films to enjoy this book.

    Rees Brennan is an inspiration and an example to aspiring authors. Because of her online journal, interviews and helpful links, I've become more aware of what truly talented authors do to get published. All too often in authorial interviews, I've heard the answer, "The story just came to me and I wrote it down," in some variant. Reading Rees Brennan's blog and the various links she included helped me realize that while that is a part of it, there's so much more to getting published that first time than just a brilliant idea and a fevered spurt of writing.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Brilliant. I loved this book. It's Rob Thurman for teens. Although I figured out what was going on fairly early in the book, I don't know that the target audience, who haven't read the dozens of urban fantasy books I have, would figure it out as quickly. the pacing was perfect, I couldn't put it down and read it in one sitting. She showed rather than told, revealing just enough to keep me interested and not confused but not so much as to bore me or ruin any surprises. The characters are all distinctive and real to me and there's a gay boy which always pulls my heart strings. (Of course he's witty, too.) The stage is clearly set for the rest of the trilogy and I can't wait to read the next one.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    enjoyed the book, good story line
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I didn't like this book nearly as much as I hoped to. I'm not sure whether to give it two or three stars, because once I got to the last hundred pages, it did pick up, and I loved the last few pages. But it took so much to get there, and I honestly nearly put the book down for good halfway through. All that kept me going was the knowledge that people whose taste I'd tend to trust did really love it -- but, on reflection, I'm not sure I would go back in time two hours to when I made the decision to finish it and say yes, go for it, you'll regret it if you don't. I've already decided, for example, that I won't read the sequel, based on the reviews of it. It just doesn't sound that interesting to me.

    Part of the problem was that it felt like I'd read it already. The relationship between Nick and Alan reminded me of a certain other pair of brothers who get involved in deals with demons... In fact, it didn't remind me of Sam and Dean Winchester in themselves, as shown on TV, as much as it reminded me of fanfic of the series. I did believe in the bond between Nick and Alan -- I'm not saying that was badly done -- but I just felt like I'd been there before. That feeling did abate a bit in the last fifty pages or so, though.

    I can't say I liked Nick as Nick. It's hard to relate to him -- throughout, I was thinking about the choice of him as the character the narration stuck to (it's third person limited). I couldn't fathom it, since surely Alan would be much easier to sympathise with, and through his love for Nick, we might understand Nick better... But having read the end, of course I understand that decision. It's just difficult to have to wait so long for payoff. In any case, I did find Nick fascinating, and I was sure that there was some plot reason for him being the way he is. A small part of me is a little disappointed it wasn't due to PTSD all along, though.

    It's worth noting that Alan is a disabled character, but he's still capable in his own ways and there isn't massive dollops of angst and manpain about what he can't do.

    Jamie and Mae... I just didn't really care about them, or the love triangle thing that was going on. Another reason why I will probably not go for the sequel.

    The author endears herself to me by saying in the (rather skimpy) interview section that she loves Dar Williams' music (though I wouldn't call it country music). You know how people talk about how whatever music they listen to was life-changing? Dar Williams was that, for me, at the tender age of fourteen, and still is now. But that's neither here nor there.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I'd always meant to read this book, but I hadn't gotten around to it. I found myself equal parts frustrated with and enjoying this book. The story is convoluted, but it's not necessarily a bad thing. It's the weird (though not unreasonable) twist at the end that messes with things. I am interested in eventually reading the second book, but not right away.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Nick has always felt different. He is a 16 year old boy with an older brother who is devoted to him and a head-case Mom who can’t even stand to look at him. Nick was raised in a family that knows magic is real. His Dad was murdered by a magician. That magician was trying to get a charm from his Mom. Nick, his brother, Alan, and their Mom have been on the run ever since. Renting cheap flats and only staying until something magical appears in the vicinity and then they are off and running again. But this time, a sister and brother from Nick’s school appear on the scene and believe Nick and Alan might be able to help with the nightmares and weird mark appearing on Jamie…but helping them gets Alan marked by a demon as well. So it’s a race against time to get the marks removed and not be caught by the Magician that killed Nick’s Dad.I had tried to read this book a while ago and just couldn’t get into it. However, I picked it up this time and couldn’t put it down. The story moves fast and from the beginning you feel like you aren’t getting the whole story. There are too many holes and convenient excuses. So the reader is looking for clues as to what is going on. The big reveal wasn’t a surprise…I knew it was coming, but what I didn’t know was the how. Lots of surprises pop up in the last third of the book…most I didn’t see coming. Now I want to know where Rees Brennan is going to take it from here. Because this is part of a trilogy, this first book is a lot of backstory/mythology and world building…and a lot of twists and turns. The world is decidedly dark and full of bad magicians and demons…which makes for wicked fun. Nick is constantly struggling with his feelings/emotions, or lack therein. Alan is a “do-gooder”, but also a very talented liar. A cautionary tale of brotherly love, that grabs and won’t let go.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is a promising beginning to what seems to be a series--there's a sequel, at least, The Demon's Covenant. It's a YA Urban Fantasy, and first of all I was grateful for what it's not--not the first person account of a teenage girl. Not remotely about vampires. And not set in the United States, for once, but in England. Which is not to say this didn't remind me of other paranormal tales. Many reviewers noted the similarity to the television series Supernatural, with two brothers combating, well, supernatural evil. It also reminded me somewhat of JK Rowling's Harry Potter, perhaps because the acknowledgements mentioned someone involved in that fandom. But I could see some Hermione in Mae, a Harry in Alan, a nicer, kinder Draco in Jamie and well...then there's Nick. It also reminded me too much of Daryl Gregory's Pandemonium, an amazing book with similar themes. Reading that book may be why I guessed what many found an amazing twist at the end before I'd read a couple of dozen pages of The Demon's Lexicon.Nick is the central character in this novel, and utterly unlikeable for most of the length. It's obviously deliberate and a gutsy move because even though this is told third person, it's told strictly through his point of view throughout. What kept me reading despite the nearly sociopathic protagonist was several things. For one, there's wit and humor throughout the narrative that does make this fun to read. Second, there are hints from the beginning that this is a family sorely tried--enough to gain my sympathies. The father is dead, the mother mad, and the two young men--Nick is sixteen years old and Alan not much older--taking care of themselves and each other. And that is Nick's saving grace--that he does care very much about his brother. Besides which, as I said, I had my suspicions early on about what was up with him, and staying with the story pays off. I also thought that for all that I found derivative in the novel, there was nevertheless a lot that felt very much its own book and some fine world-building. All in all a good, well-paced and entertaining read. I'd certainly be interested in reading the next book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Title: The Demon’s LexiconAuthor: Sarah Rees BrennanGenre: YA ParanormalPublishing Information: 336 pages; June 2nd, 2009 by Margaret K. McElderry Series: The Demon’s Lexicon #1Where I got it: Borders liquidation saleOne sentence: Brothers Nick and Alan Ryves have always been on the run from the magicians and the demons who give them their power, until a brother and sister come to the Ryves for help and drag them deeper into a game of cat and mouse and secrets that could change Nick’s life. Themes: Fantasy, demons, magicians, magic, siblings, paranormalMain character: 4/5I’ll admit I was not enamored with either Nick or Alan at the outset of the novel, however as often happens, they grew on me. Nick is literally a sociopath, which is so different from anything I’ve ever read! A foil for Nick, Alan seemed like a pushover for most of the novel; however he definitely appeared in a different light at the end. The brothers’ development created well-rounded, fascinating characters that I was emotionally invested in. Secondary characters: 4/5Brennan excelled at expert characterizations in even the most minor characters. Jamie and Mae were thoroughly written, full of twists, surprises and quirks. I found them to be slightly clingy and dependent in the first half, but again, they came into their own in the second part of the novel. Even Nick and Alan’s mom is illustrated perfectly, despite her minimal appearance.Writing style: 3/5The writing started out slow and awkward, but picked up speed until the second half of the novel was nearly break-neck speed, making it impossible to put down. The action was intense and suspenseful, but was balanced out well with sometimes-over-the-top description. The foreshadowing was basically nonexistent. Plot: 4/5The world building was astounding- from the demons and magicians and the rules that govern their magic to the Goblin Market. What a treat to read! The plot was interesting and kept me engrossed in the tale of Nick and Alan. And that plot twist! Wow! I never really saw that one coming, but it definitely took the novel to a higher level.Ending: 4.5/5That plot twist definitely made the ending something to remember. There were so many possibilities and ways that Brennan could have ended the novel, but the myriad of twists and turns revealed more about the characters and made everything all the more richer.Best scene: The end!Positives: Interesting and unique characters, world building, PLOT TWISTSNegatives: Slow introduction, just okay writing styleFirst Line: The pipe under the sink was leaking again.Cover: A little tacky, but definitely intriguing. Verdict: A fun demon read with world-building and twists that take it to the next level.Rating: 7.8 / 10
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    It has been over a month since I’ve read Demon’s Lexicon and I’m just now writing the review. I’ve never waited this long to write a review, but I did use tons of sticky notes, so hopefully all goes well.As I mentioned above, it’s been awhile since I’ve read Demon’s Lexicon, but the characters and story line have stuck with me. The story and ideas in the book are different from anything I’ve read prior. Many things stayed a mystery to the very end of Demon’s Lexicon, which I loved. I wasn’t able to guess the ending and I was surprised. The supernatural elements were very interesting and intriguing to me. A ritual that was performed I still think about on a regular basis(clue: this ritual is being performed on the cover of Demon’s Covenant, but in my mind it looks way more fascinating).Nick…he has to be the one of the roughest toughest male protagonists in the wild wild west…actually in England and in any other young adult book I’ve read. From the beginning Nick is a very hardcore and seems to show no emotion or feeling towards anything or anyone besides his brother, Alan. Nick is a character everyone will probably start off hating, but once you really get to know him and his reasoning, hopefully that will change. Nick would do absolutely anything for Alan, he’s the only person in the world he loves. Nick and Alan’s banter is hilarious at times, Nick can be very snarky.I know…very short review. But I really loved The Demon’s Lexicon and I was happy I ended up picking it up to read! The character’s names and personalities will continue to stick with me and so will the storyline! I highly recommend this series to lovers of anything supernatural!…in case you’re wondering what I really thought of Nick, I took a note that said if you look up bad boy in the dictionary, Nick’s pretty face would be there.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It's possible I built this book up too much before I finally got the chance to read it. I've been following Sarah Rees Brennan's work for awhile; she's done some excellent fanfic, and her Livejournal is an enduring delight. She definitely knows how to write engagingly, but I'm used to her writing about likeable characters.This book is told entirely from the point of view of a very unlikeable character. He's sociopathic, misanthropic, misogynistic. It turns out that there are important reasons for this, but that doesn't make it any more fun to be inside his head.Having read the final chapter, I want to go back and read the book again. I suspect it'll be better the second time around. (Already, there are a couple of minor points that annoyed me the first time through that turn out to make more sense in hindsight...)The good news is that book two is supposed to be from a different character's point of view. Any of the three major choices would be an improvement, and it should be much more fun to see where they go from here.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Teen fantasy, good read
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Nick and his older brother Alan don't lead a typical life after their father died. Instead of concentrating on school or sports, these boys have to slay warlocks and their demon minions coming after a powerful charm in their crazed mother's possession or die. After each attack, they have to hastily relocate only to be found again. In their current home, they thought the vicious cycle stopped and their enemies had lost them. They were wrong. After a demon attack in their kitchen, a boy from their school approaches them with 2 demon marks on him, which leads to certain death. Alan takes one of the marks so they can both be saved, but the group must kill warlocks that commanded the demons to attack them in order to remove the marks. Now, Nick and Alan must hunt one of the most powerful warlock's circle and avoid being killed in the process.Before I read this book, I had met Sarah Rees Brennan several times. She's a delightful person with a boisterous personality and hilarious sense of humor. I was afraid that I wouldn't like the way she writes or her characters because I really like her as a person. My fears were completely unfounded because The Demon's Lexicon is easily one of the most unique young adult novels I've read in the past couple years. I put in the ranks of Brenna Yovanoff's The Replacement and Holly Black's Curse Workers series. My favorite part of this novel is Nick. He is much different than any other protagonist I've ever read. Anger and detachment are his typical states of mind. He might be hard for some to relate to, but he won me over with his sarcastic tone and bad boy charm. I think Alan is meant to be the brother to relate better to, but I didn't like him at all. He was a skilled liar and incredibly manipulative of everyone around him. Even though Nick is less warm and fuzzy, at least he's honest and doesn't try to lie to make people feel better.The plot and the action in the story were amazing. The sword fights were awesome and exciting, while there was still romance and secrets. The story is full of mystery and intrigue, which I love. I figured out the big secret about midway through the book, but I had fun going through the adventure and doubting if I predicted the ending (which I had). Once I got to the middle of the book, I did not want to put it down. I was disappointed that I had to pause for sleep, but I was up again the next day aching to finish. I love that feeling and it's a rare book that makes me feel that way. I loved the ending and I can't wait to read the second and third books in the series.The Demon's Lexicon has just about everything: sword fighting, romance, demons, warlocks, and above all, secrets. I highly recommend this book to those not afraid of a good adventure. I also recommend going out to meet Sarah Rees Brennan if at all possible. She's an awesome, hilarious woman this is guaranteed to make whatever event she's at special.

Book preview

The Demon's Lexicon - Sarah Rees Brennan

1

Ravens in the Kitchen

THE PIPE UNDER THE SINK WAS LEAKING AGAIN. IT WOULDN’T have been so bad, except that Nick kept his favorite sword under the sink.

He rescued it, wiped the steel, and absently tested the edge with his thumb while water flowed out onto the kitchen floor. Once he’d laid it aside, he realized the knees of his jeans were already soaked through.

Alan brought Nick his toolbox.

Care to lend a hand? Nick inquired without much hope.

No, I’m too busy cooking, Alan said. You do the heavy lifting around here. I’m more the sensitive intellectual type.

Nick raised his eyebrows. Oh, get in the kitchen and bake me a pie, woman.

He peered into the cupboard again. The pipes made an ominous gurgling sound, and the bottom of the cupboard became the site of the world’s tiniest waterfall.

I can be a sensitive intellectual type as well, he said at length. If the other option is drowning under our sink.

Save us all from a watery grave or cook your own dinner. It’s entirely up to you.

It was a compelling point. Nick could cook his own dinner, but Alan actually worked at being a good cook. He made everything from scratch, and the sizzling sound of food hitting the pan and the sudden rich smell of frying vegetables made his argument for him.

Nick glared, which was effective when dealing with everyone but his brother. Then he took the knife out of his wrist sheath, laying it carefully alongside his sword, rolled up his sleeves, and got to work.

Aside from the sink, this house was pretty good. It was small, the color of cardboard that had been left out in the rain, and exactly like every other house standing in the military lines of the housing estate. Still, each house was separated from its neighbors by a decent distance. There was nobody complaining about strange noises in the night. That was worth any amount of leaks.

On the whole, Nick liked Exeter. There was a statue on the high street that reminded him of a knife, and he was learning to map the city out from that point. It was rare for them to stay in one place long enough for the landmarks to become familiar, but they had been here two months with no danger signs yet. They both had jobs, he was just about getting by at school, and Alan had even had time to find a new crush.

He would be sorry when they had to leave.

The pipe gave a long metallic groan, like an ancient robot about to fall to pieces, and Nick gritted his teeth and twisted the wrench hard. It was too old to be properly fixed; all he could do was try and hold it together until it could become the next tenant’s problem.

Someday we’re going to live in St. Leonard’s and get away from all this.

Oh, sure, said Alan easily. The chili was simmering and he was leaning beside the sink, arms crossed over his thin chest, watching Nick work. When I win the lottery. Or when we start selling your body to rich old ladies.

If we start selling my body to rich old ladies now, Nick said, can I quit school?

No, Alan answered with a sidelong smile, warm as a whispered secret. You’ll be glad you finished school one day. Aristotle said education is bitter, but its fruits are sweet.

Nick rolled his eyes. Aristotle can bite me.

Over their heads the floorboards creaked in a sudden, sharp sound, like boughs breaking. Nick looked up on reflex, but he knew what it was: It was Mum, pacing the floor in one of her bad spells. By the sound of it she was just getting started, and Alan would spend all his time up there with her.

Alan must have noticed Nick’s glance at the ceiling, because for some idiotic Alan reason he reached out with the obvious intention of ruffling Nick’s hair. Nick shied away.

Alan sighed, then Nick heard him reach for the radio instead, the small click as it went on, and the music that poured out and drowned the sound of Mum restlessly moving in the rooms above. Alan limped over to a cupboard and began to rummage around for something, singing softly under his breath. Nick ducked back in under the sink and let the sweet sound rush over him, let his mind relax while his hands were busy with practical work. Dinner smelled almost ready. Maybe his stupid brother would sit down and eat his own food before he saw to Mum, and maybe this would be an okay Thursday after all.

There was only an instant’s warning.

The talisman Nick wore always hurt him. It was a constant irritation, an anchor hung around his neck that hummed and stung, but now pain flooded through him like an electric shock with the talisman as its source. The bird bones built around the talisman, woven into a web of crystal and net, shifted to form a new pattern. It felt as if the new pattern were being slowly burned into his skin.

Alan, he ground out between his teeth.

Then the window exploded inward, a sharp burst of glittering shards caught in the fluorescent lights. Nick dropped the wrench and shielded his face with his arm, turning and glancing under his sodden sleeve to check that Alan had already hit the floor.

In through the window came an unkindness of ravens.

Their enormous iridescent wings were crammed against each other, the kitchen suddenly packed with feathers and the birds’ deep, hoarse cries. The air of the room seemed to be nothing but the wind caused by their wing beats, and they sounded hungry.

Nick crawled along the floor until he could grab his sword. The hilt was slick against his wet palms, and he hefted it in one hand and reached out with the other to grab Alan by the scruff of his neck and drag his brother behind him.

Alan lifted his shirt and took his gun out of its holster.

Don’t pick me up. You’re my little brother, and it’s shameful.

You’re a beanpole, and it’s too easy, Nick returned, watching the birds carefully. They were starting to settle on the kitchen surfaces, the curves of their folded wings hunched forward like shoulders, apparently watching him back. I can’t believe you’re still using that stupid gun.

I like my gun, Alan protested.

They don’t always work!

Well, Alan conceded, that’s why I’ve got three knives on me.

There were ravens between them and the door. Nick hefted his sword and swung, feeling a rush of fierce joy when the blow connected and cut deep. One raven fell to the ground with its chest bleeding, and the rest screamed and wheeled on them. Nick hit the floor again, rolling toward the wall with one arm over his head. Alan was beside him, and Nick figured that he could be more or less shielded between the wall and Nick’s body.

They stayed down, panting, and Nick tried to think through the blood pounding in his temples. These birds were obviously under the control of a demon, and there would be a magician watching to make sure the demon did its job.

Demons almost never possessed animals. They hated being trapped in bodies with such limited brains. Nick wondered how many human bodies the magicians had offered this one in return for the favor.

You get the magician, Alan whispered. I’ll take the demon.

I’ll get them both, Nick said roughly, and shoved Alan for emphasis. You stay down.

Nick rose and for a moment felt like he was out in the night and in a storm, except that the storm was made of feathers. He had to throw up his left arm to beat away two ravens that went for his eyes. The talons of one bird scored burning lines down his cheek, and Nick knocked it away, forgot all about strategy, and brought the sword around in a brutal circle through feathers and flesh.

This time none of the ravens screamed. Four more descended on Nick, their talons sinking into his sword arm, and cloth and skin came away in strips. When Nick tried to shake them off, more skin tore away, and when he lifted his face so he could see what he was swinging at, a bird hurtled down toward him. Its curved beak was aimed directly at his eyes.

He got a sharp elbow in the back from his idiot brother, pushing him to one side. He recovered his balance, then spun and cut two birds down, sending the other three in mad, croaking flight to the ceiling.

By the time Nick turned back to his brother, Alan was already advancing, and Nick saw he had the leader in his sights. He went to Alan’s side with his sword at the ready, in case the gun didn’t work. Alan’s eyes narrowed behind his glasses. He took aim and fired.

He didn’t miss. At this range, the demon didn’t have a chance.

The body of the raven went down, and the demon that had been possessing it went up through the ceiling, its body an insubstantial black plume, rising like glittering smoke.

Now that birds were not trying to claw Nick’s eyes out, it was easy enough to spot the illusion. He was good at spotting magic. He’d tried to explain to Alan once that illusions were sharper, more real than the real world, more real than they had to be, but Alan had never been able to see it.

There was one bird now that was not milling about frantically like the others, but making directly for the broken window.

Nick pointed. There!

Alan fired again, and where a bird had been was a man falling.

As the body fell to the ground, the door leading to the hall opened and Mum stood in the doorway, her magicians’ charms shining with power, her hair falling like shadows over her face.

Alan was checking the man’s pulse, so Nick was the one who looked over at her and said, It’s dealt with. We don’t need you.

Mum stood in the darkened hallway, watching him with pale eyes, and said at last, I didn’t come for you.

She closed the door, and Nick heard her slowly climbing back up the stairs.

They both looked around, panting a little, in case there were any more surprises to follow. But after five minutes nothing else happened. Nick let his sword point drop and touch the floor.

It was over. They were left with about fifteen confused ravens, a dead magician on their kitchen floor, and the sound of their mother’s footsteps fading away.

While Alan salvaged dinner, Nick leaned against the kitchen counter and tried to keep out of the birds’ way. They might no longer be under the sway of a demon, but they were still animals with great big go-to-hell beaks and claws, and Nick had never really been much of an animal person. Animals could tell, too. Alan’d had a cat once, and he’d had to give it away after it bit Nick a few times.

They didn’t have to discuss it: This meant moving. Great. Nick had only just got Alan’s bookshelves up the way he liked them.

The cuts along his cheek and arm stung. Nick fingered the gash on his cheek and tried to judge how deep it might be.

Don’t touch that, Alan said, slapping his hand away without looking at him. It’ll get infected. Dinner’s done, I think—let me patch you up and then we can eat. We’ll clean up afterward.

Nick saw Alan shiver. The night air was blowing in cold. At least some of the birds were noticing the enormous space where the window used to be. A few had already left.

His cheek hurt, and he was starving. Nick fingered his talisman and scowled.

Jump up, Alan said, sweeping broken glass out of the way with his sleeve pulled down over his hand. Thank God the saucepan lid had been on their dinner.

Nick rolled his eyes and slid into a sitting position on the counter. Alan got down the first-aid kit, tilted Nick’s chin up, and started to pour the disinfectant carefully into the wounds. Alan always tried too hard to be gentle, which made everything worse. Nick set his teeth.

Am I hurting you?

No, Nick said. That was the stupid birds.

They’re very intelligent, actually, Alan told him as if he was under the impression Nick cared at all. He squinted and pinched the lips of the wound, taping them together. Then he set to work on Nick’s arm. If you catch them young, you can teach them to talk.

I don’t see what the big deal about that is, Nick said. I can talk.

Alan pushed him gently; he still apparently hadn’t absorbed the fact that Nick was twice as broad across the shoulders as he was, and that Alan would really have to try to hurt him. Well, I caught you young too. Anyway, I think a raven might’ve been easier—

There was a noise outside.

Nick placed his hand over Alan’s mouth, cutting off all that fond reminiscing nonsense, and slid off the kitchen counter. He pushed Alan aside, put a finger to his lips, and bent to scoop up his sword in one swift motion.

Then he walked quietly to the back door. Alan could not follow him. Alan was not very good at stealth, because of his leg, but Nick glanced behind him before he nudged the door open with his sword point. Alan had drawn his gun.

The door swung all the way open, and there was a sharp movement in the darkness. Nick lunged.

Don’t hurt her! yelped a boy’s voice, and Nick caught himself just as Alan flipped a switch and light flooded the little garden.

Nick stopped with his sword poised against a girl’s throat.

She and her friend had obviously been hiding under the kitchen window. Chances were good they’d seen everything.

To her credit, the girl did not draw back from the blade. She did not even flinch. She just looked at Nick, her dark eyes large and calm in the sudden light, and Nick realized how all this must seem to her: the window frame with only jagged edges of glass left in it, the ravens winging through the air around them, the dead body on the floor. The boy with the sword to her throat.

All she did was swallow very gently against the blade and say, I heard this was the place to come if you had a problem that was…out of the ordinary.

She looked familiar.

Obviously that wasn’t true, said the boy standing at her shoulder, taking a nervous step away and then back to her. Obviously this is the place to come if you want to get murdered by lunatics. Um—we’re sorry to have bothered you! Is there any chance we could just leave?

There was something a whole lot more familiar about his voice, which was light but wavered at crucial points where it was meant to be lightest and airiest. He was standing in the girl’s shadow, but the light caught his earring.

Nick recognized that before he recognized the boy’s worried face, the spiky blond hair that the darkness had turned into a pale crown.

Wait, Nick said.

O-okay. Is there any chance we could get off with a flesh wound?

Nick shifted his stance so he could look back at Alan, and saw the girl brace herself and the boy grasp her shoulder, fingers going white. Alan was standing in the doorway with his gun drawn.

I know this guy, Nick said. He’s harmless.

Sure? Alan asked, squinting behind his glasses.

Sure, Nick said. James Crawford. Trust me, if he was a magician, he’d be able to defend himself at school. He’s harmless. He’s useless.

He’s not— the girl began furiously.

Let’s not argue with the crazy person holding the enormous sword! James Crawford said. And—did you say school? He stepped away from the girl to look at Nick properly. Oh my God, Nick Ryves.

Nick still hadn’t lowered his sword. He was a little bit intrigued by the fact that the girl hadn’t moved away either. She was still looking up at him, still determinedly calm.

He knew her now. She was the weird girl in the class above him, who dyed her hair pink and always wore a lot of pentagrams and crystals. Right now she was also wearing giant chandelier earrings and a violently pink T-shirt that bore the words ROMEO AND JULIET WOULDN’T HAVE LASTED.

He avoided people like her. He avoided anyone who tried to be noticed. That had been one of Dad’s first lessons: Try to act just like everyone else. If you failed to blend in, the magicians would find you.

You know him? she asked James.

Well, yes, said James. He hangs around with a pretty rough crowd at school, Seb McFarlane and that lot, but they’re smoking-behind-the-bike-shed rough. This is different, there were gunshots. My life was going to flash before my eyes, but it decided to hide behind my eyes and quake with terror instead. I think we should just go.

I’m not going anywhere, the girl said. I saw that bird turn into a man! You saw it too, Jamie. You must have.

I don’t know what I saw. It could’ve been a hallucination. You get those from sniffing glue.

You’ve never sniffed glue!

I’ve smelled glue, Jamie said after a pause. In art class.

Nick was about to tell them exactly what he thought of their babbling and exactly what he would do to them if they didn’t go away at once and never breathe a word of what they’d seen, when Alan moved from the doorway into the light.

Mae? he said, his voice incredulous, and then quickly, "Nick, put that sword down!"

Mae said, Bookshop Guy?

Nick looked at her, tilting his head and recalling Alan’s wistful speeches on the subject of the pink-haired girl who liked the Beat generation. He put two and two together and came up with the fact that this entire situation was ridiculous.

This was Alan’s latest crush, then.

Nick drew the sword slowly away from the girl’s throat and lowered it until the tip almost but not quite touched the ground, holding himself ready just in case. He let his gaze follow the blade, toward the ground and away from Mae.

Whatever you want, he said softly.

Jamie was staring at Alan. "You helped me find Catcher in the Rye today and now you shoot people?"

He only shot one person, Nick remarked. But the night is young.

Alan glanced at him reproachfully, then turned back to Jamie and smiled his slow smile. He’d tucked the gun away under his buttoned-up shirt, along with his talisman, and all trace of the boy who fired to kill and never missed was gone.

The smile spread just a little bit at a time, coaxing and sweet, persuading Jamie to smile with him. Jamie was wearing a shy, crooked grin before Alan was done.

Forgive him, he has no manners.

I get by on good looks, Nick said.

I know all of this is pretty strange, Alan continued, but you came here for a reason, didn’t you?

We came here because—something really strange has been happening to Jamie, said Mae, her voice hard. I was expecting someone who could give us real occult help, though, not a guy who works in my bookshop and a school thug younger than I am. I wasn’t expecting birds that turned into men and weapons and weird necklaces. I don’t know what the hell is going on!

If you’re so disappointed, Nick said, get lost. We’re busy.

The evening was getting colder and colder, as was Nick’s dinner, and he had to board up the window and call the garage to tell them he was quitting. He did not care what these people wanted, or what was going on with them, or why anyone would use the word occult when they didn’t have to.

He just wanted them to go away.

No, no, Alan said at once. I know all this must look strange, but we can help you. We want to help you.

Nick felt himself bound to correct this misapprehension. I don’t. And we’ve talked about this, Alan. Don’t you think we have enough going on without opening up a charity shop for people who think they need occult—he let his lip curl—help?

Dad would have wanted us to help people, Alan told him, and then addressed the others. Look, please come in. I can explain everything.

It was a testament to Alan’s powers of persuasion that they did not laugh in his face. It was a testament to Alan’s powers of looking nonthreatening that he could manage it with the door open on their destroyed kitchen, with a corpse on the floor. He rumpled his red hair and adjusted his glasses in an anxious sort of way, and he took a couple of steps back to the kitchen. He let them see the limp: He used that, the same way he used everything.

Mae and Jamie visibly relaxed.

Nick gave up, shaking his head and following his brother inside. Mae squared her shoulders resolutely and crossed the threshold into their home. Nick was standing in the doorway and stepped back about an inch, so she had to brush by him. She looked irritated and uncomfortable doing it, and he smirked at her. He saw her hesitate, as if she was about to turn and run, but Alan stood before her looking honest and inviting.

She stopped, reached up, and tapped the talisman lying against Nick’s chest.

What’s this? she asked, her voice a little softer.

It’s a talisman, Alan answered gently. It warns him when magic is being used nearby, and it protects him from smaller spells.

Protects him, Mae repeated. So you’re talking about black magic, then? The kind that hurts people—that causes trouble.

Nick laughed, looking at the broken glass and black feathers around them.

There isn’t any other kind.

I have a feeling this is going to be one hell of an explanation, Mae said, and walked into the kitchen and toward Alan.

Jamie still looked wide-eyed and extremely doubtful about what he was doing, but he dashed in after her.

Nick closed the door and found himself wondering what had brought this pair to their house. You had to be desperate to come to them.

2

Demon’s Mark

OF COURSE NICK WAS EXPECTED TO GET RID OF THE BODY.

He always did it, since Alan couldn’t be expected to haul corpses about the place with his leg, but he seldom found it this irritating. He could’ve had his dinner first, if Alan hadn’t been worried about what the guests would think.

He twisted the steering wheel more viciously than he should have, since making sharp turns in the narrow roads around Exeter was not exactly advisable.

His foul mood might have something to do with the fact that these two freaks were from his school. People from his school had seen the way he lived, with the sword and the gun and with ravens and demons. It didn’t seem to bother Alan, but it should have. There were a lot of things about their life that should have bothered Alan.

He drove along the river Exe for a while, the low-lying city lost behind the car, the faint shapes of buildings in the distance looking like no more than the shadows of a larger city he could not see. He waited until there had been nobody else on the road for ten minutes, then pulled the car over to the side of the road and climbed out.

Nick bundled the body out of the boot. The man had been tall, he noticed idly, and he wondered if he should check his sigil to see what Circle he belonged to.

He decided not to. Anyone could come by while he was doing it, and besides, it didn’t matter which Circle had found them this time. All the Circles were after them. It would be a different one next time.

The presence of sigils on the bodies was good for only one thing. It meant that the Circle would check for the tattoos and take back their own, and the police would not come to Alan and Nick’s asking questions about discovered bodies and shots fired.

All the same, it was usually a good idea to remove the corpse from their actual property.

Nick looked into the man’s slack face. It was also a good idea to get the body into running water as soon as possible. Otherwise the Circle might give their fallen comrade to the demons. A demon could use a dead body for a few days.

The body was easy enough to haul up onto the parapet, and Nick balanced it there for a moment, looking down at the river. The waters were black and quiet before he dropped the man into them, hoisting the flopping legs over the side as he went. The body hit the water with a splash, sinking almost entirely under, dragged down by the weight of a heavy leather coat and innumerable charms and talismans. Nick watched a pale hand bob at the surface, buffeted by the current so it looked alive.

He turned and climbed back into the car. He hoped that their uninvited guests would be gone by the time he reached home. It shouldn’t take long for Alan to tell them that there were magicians in the world who could call up demons and set them on people. That there were quite a lot of other things happening side by side with the normal world those idiots pretended they didn’t fit into. They had probably just heard the warnings Alan had spread and convinced themselves they needed occult help.

Chances were, after all, that whatever problem the pair had was imaginary. He turned the engine on. It roared to life, and he pulled away fast from the side of the river where the body was sinking.

Imaginary problems. Must be nice.

By the time Nick had turned the curve past St. David’s station, he was sure Alan was already finishing the usual spiel. He told everyone who came all they needed to know to protect themselves. If Alan had been less eager to help people and more concerned about protecting himself, Nick would’ve felt better.

Nick could almost hear Alan’s voice now.

There are demons living in another world, he would say, a world side by side with ours, and they are hungry.

They are hungry for the sounds and sights and sensations of our world. None of them can get in, though. None of them can touch you, unless a magicians’ circle builds a bridge for the demons. Stay safe. Stay away from the magicians. Stay away

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