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A book about boys, set in England, magic is a bad thing, maybe they're all just misunderstood, not Supernatural but kind of like it.
Yes, I read a book about boys.
rj_anderson put it in my hands fewer than five hours after meeting me, and I like that kind of trust, so I read it. There were a couple spots in the middle where I nearly STOPPED reading it, but when that happened, I'd just set it down for a couple hours and then come back later.
The thing that made me want to STOP reading the book was Nick's apathy. Sometimes it was even worse than apathy. I hate it when people are mean for no reason. Also, there was quite a bit of moaning, and I am not a fan of that.
The thing that made me want to KEEP reading what that Rees Brennan wrote in such a way that I knew she had a reason for Nick's behaviour. And once I'd figured that out, it was relatively easy to theorize about what that reason was. And once I'd figured that out, the book became quite a bit more fun.
Also, Jamie was hilarious.
I liked the connection between Alan and Nick quite a bit at the end, for all it failed to resonate with me at the beginning. The bit where we find out about Alan teaching Nick to talk, and how Nick's bond to that particular memory brought him back.
To me, "Lexicon" means book. I felt weird that there was never a book, because I was waiting for it to show up, but I got it at the end, so it's okay.
Mae had better get super powers in the sequel, is all I'm saying.
So 8 out of 10. I know. I'm as surprised as you are. ;)
Yes, I read a book about boys.
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The thing that made me want to STOP reading the book was Nick's apathy. Sometimes it was even worse than apathy. I hate it when people are mean for no reason. Also, there was quite a bit of moaning, and I am not a fan of that.
The thing that made me want to KEEP reading what that Rees Brennan wrote in such a way that I knew she had a reason for Nick's behaviour. And once I'd figured that out, it was relatively easy to theorize about what that reason was. And once I'd figured that out, the book became quite a bit more fun.
Also, Jamie was hilarious.
I liked the connection between Alan and Nick quite a bit at the end, for all it failed to resonate with me at the beginning. The bit where we find out about Alan teaching Nick to talk, and how Nick's bond to that particular memory brought him back.
To me, "Lexicon" means book. I felt weird that there was never a book, because I was waiting for it to show up, but I got it at the end, so it's okay.
Mae had better get super powers in the sequel, is all I'm saying.
So 8 out of 10. I know. I'm as surprised as you are. ;)