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Lexicon
- Narrated by: Heather Corrigan, Zach Appelman
- Length: 12 hrs and 36 mins
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Publisher's Summary
At an exclusive school somewhere outside of Arlington, Virginia, students aren't taught history, geography, or mathematics - at least not in the usual ways. Instead, they are taught to persuade. Here the art of coercion has been raised to a science. Students harness the hidden power of language to manipulate the mind and learn to break down individuals by psychographic markers in order to take control of their thoughts. The very best will graduate as "poets": adept wielders of language who belong to a nameless organization that is as influential as it is secretive.
Whip-smart orphan Emily Ruff is making a living running a three-card Monte game on the streets of San Francisco when she attracts the attention of the organization's recruiters. She is flown across the country for the school's strange and rigorous entrance exams, where, once admitted, she will be taught the fundamentals of persuasion by Brontë, Eliot, and Lowell - who have adopted the names of famous poets to conceal their true identities. For in the organization, nothing is more dangerous than revealing who you are: Poets must never expose their feelings lest they be manipulated. Emily becomes the school's most talented prodigy until she makes a catastrophic mistake: She falls in love.
Meanwhile, a seemingly innocent man named Wil Jamieson is brutally ambushed by two strange men in an airport bathroom. Although he has no recollection of anything they claim he's done, it turns out Wil is the key to a secret war between rival factions of poets and is quickly caught in their increasingly deadly crossfire. As the two narratives converge, the shocking work of the poets is fully revealed, the body count rises, and the world crashes toward a Tower of Babel event which would leave all language meaningless.
Critic Reviews
"A dark, dystopic grabber in which words are treated as weapons, and the villainous types have literary figures’ names. Plath, Yeats, Eliot and Woolf all figure in this ambitious, linguistics-minded work of futurism." (Janet Maslin, New York Times)
"Imagine, if you will, a secret group of people called Poets who have the power to control others simply by speaking to them. Barry has, and the result is an extraordinarily fast, funny, cerebral thriller." (Time Magazine)
"An extremely slick and readable thriller." (Washington Post)
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What listeners say about Lexicon
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Brett
- 07-16-15
Are you a dog person or a cat person?
Human kind is divided into personality types and each personality type responds to certain key words. Once a person knows your personality type (e.g., by asking you questions like, "are you a dog person or a cat person") they can open your mind with the proper words. These words are ancient and have been wielded throughout history. A small secret society of "poets" know these words and seem to spend a lot of time in word-education and word-research when not trying to rule the world.
I won't go into the details because they are surprisingly complicated. Rather, I will tell you what I liked and didn't like about this novel.
First what I didn't like. To accept the story, you must buy into a premise. A few times, I felt the author changed the rules of the premise, or revealed new rules about the premise to fit the plot. Next, I felt that the story jumped around in time, while also jumping around in perspective. This style lead to many cliff hangers and kept action very lively but was a little confusing and gave the story a disjointed feel.
Now what I liked. I felt that the author did an excellent job creating a world around this word-triggered-mind-control premise. The world felt real. It had a history. It operated in and around the regular world but in a secret way. This was compelling.
Creating believable world where "magic" words can control humans was ambitious, but I feel that the author pulls it off without becoming a joke and without becoming a book about wizards. Lexicon was original and entertaining.
28 people found this helpful
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- Matthew Crofoot
- 01-11-15
Excellent narration, but the story needs some work
The synopsis looked great and I was very happy with both the male and female narrators (though the woman did an Australian accent terribly, it wasn't too distracting). But the storytelling was a letdown. Crazy, gritty chase and destruction scenes played out for far too long. Instead of going on and on about them, the author should have taken more time to develop the story surrounding what these students were learning and why. The sci-fi nerd in me wanted more details about the mechanics of mind control, and fewer high speed chase scenes. This could have been a great novel.
13 people found this helpful
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- Tango
- 06-22-13
Fasten your seat belt...
You are in for a wild ride with this near future science fiction thriller. One thing that defines this novel is movement and the pace in Lexicon is always brisk. The novel shifts quickly between time periods, locations, and points of view with many twists in the road. That almost breathless pace is a double-edged sword. It makes for a story that is exciting and there is never a dull moment. But the pace doesn't allow for the science fiction side of the tale to develop as much as I would have liked to see. The premise of using words as psychological triggers to control others has been used before, but Max Barry does have some nice new twists on the idea like the hypothesis that there might be a "machine language" for human beings - a base language that every brain uses to communicate internally and would therefore respond to if you could find those "bare words". But Barry doesn't ever quite slow the pace enough to really develop the concepts; just as one of these ideas starts to flower, we cut to an action sequence. So the sci-fi aspect of the story is relegated to mostly a plot device.
Most of the shifts between point of view were nicely done, but the plot does not unfold totally linearly and I found the shifts in time a bit confusing. In addition, there are some gaps in the plot (like a guy who can't be compromised until he is and you don't really know why) - some things don't quite jibe, but I have to admit those things didn't really hit me until after I finished the book and thought about it because while listening I was so caught up in the story.
Heather Corrigan and Zach Appelman were both good narrators on the whole. My only criticism of the performances being that neither of them did a good Australian accent. I also want to note for anyone else this may happen to - when I bought this audio book, it showed up in My Library with Part 1 and Part 2 in reverse order of the way every other book has shown up. Part 2 was first under the title and then Part 1. So, I accidentally downloaded Part 2 first and had a little bit of the middle of the book's "secrets" spoiled for me before I figured out what happened.
This is a "page turner" kind of book (a great one if you are looking for something to keep you alert on a long drive) with some good characters, action oriented plot with some cool twists, interesting settings, and competent narrators. Not classic science fiction, but a very entertaining listen.
65 people found this helpful
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- Lynne
- 08-26-14
Linguistic Impossibilities...or Not?
This book attracted me because of my linguistics background. You have to read the book to "get" the title, but it doesn't require an understanding of linguistics nor even of the word "lexicon" to understand the plot.
I wanted to see what Barry would do with the language. The answer is "nothing much." It's just background for yet another world-domination-by-elitist-group-gone-rogue story and is overall rather predictable. I don't want to spoil the ending, but let me just say that it left me yawning. That's not to say that I didn't listen avidly to the whole thing--after all, Barry has a way of keeping you plugged in with his twists and turns of the story. The problem, though, is that in this book, the twists and turns are unexpected mainly because they are improbable.
32 people found this helpful
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- Dubi
- 07-06-15
Dread Poets' Society
The power of the spoken word. Words can kill. Words hurt. The pen is mightier than the sword. Metaphors about how effective language can be in influencing people, for good or ill. I'm sure you can easily add to that list. In Lexicon, Max Barry grabs onto this idea, and as is his wont, he relentlessly pursues to its logical conclusion.
People with the power of persuasion learn how to read personalities and then use words to extend that power to the ultimate degree. These people take on the names of famous poets. Emily Ruff is a teenager recruited into this dread poets' society, mentored by Tom Eliot (T.S. Eliot), taught by Charlotte Bronte, antagonized by Yeats. She herself is given the name Virginia Woolf when she graduates.
Great idea. The story built around it, jumping back and forth in time, is well crafted, a fun and illuminating listen. There is, however, one problem, one huge problem. Barry has turned a common metaphor into a literal device, where the words used to control people are random sounds with no meaning of their own. How much more interesting would this have been had the poets used meaningful words to manipulate people based on their psychological profile? Why oh why take a metaphor so literally?
I deduct two stars from Story for this major missed opportunity. I have enjoyed all four Max Barry books that I have read, and this one really works well in audio format thanks to the two excellent narrators. I look forward to reading more of him. He consistently pits bright young people from ordinary walks of life against powerful people and institutions, demonstrating how absolute power corrupts absolutely. It's an important message he conveys imaginatively in several different ways. With my one major caveat, Lexicon fits in nicely.
7 people found this helpful
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- Brian PDX
- 06-22-13
Mind Blowing Plot-Excellent Narration
Having never really paid a lot of attention to the insidious ways information is collected on me-(I even volunteer to participate in studies for which I am rewarded with $25.00 gift cards for Target)-I at first thought this novel was a conspiracy theorists kind of thing. Plus this is my first Max Barry Novel, I wasn't prepared for all the ideas that the story brought to my attention. Even our reviews here can become part of data gathering, all our online purchases are recorded, our purchases via credit card, store "Loyal Customer" input is collected volunteered by us to get minor discounts on purchases.
Other reviewers have already detailed the story arc so I won't repeat it here...I just suggest that even readers who aren't interested in the conspiracy theorists ideas listen to this book...and I suspect it translates better in the audio form than in the paper.
I found the audiobook enlightening, sort of scary, relevant and entertaining. Heather Corrigan and Zach Appelman are excellent narrators and the story is one that responds well to having 2 different narrators....Basically Corrigan is Emily and Appelman is most of the male voices. He brings off Harrys Aussie accent ok and it's pretty easy to figure out who is talking in 1st person from the sound of Appelmans voice. Corrigan is a popular narrator for a reason---she brings so much to the person she's being in any audiobook I've heard her narrate.
As a primary protagonist, Emily isn't always someone you'd identify with-even as a homeless 16 year old hustler. She grew on me.
The story has an unexpected ending - I wasn't at all prepared for it. It's tempting to go into more detail, but I just can't do it without spoiling so I'll just leave my review here.
Worth a credit? You bet. One of the best I've heard on Audible by far.
34 people found this helpful
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- mindusq
- 07-06-13
Super, creepy fun
I stopped listening only long enough to run to the Ace hardware store where they wouldn't let me have a discount unless I gave them my phone number. Gave my work phone number and voilà, all my personal details showed up on the screen. This story hits so close to home that I want to pull down the shades, throw my cell phone away, get off of the Facebooks, store up enough water and vittles, grab a shovel and get off the grid. Today.
Highly recommend this intriguing, modern story about how They control us. Also curious what "type" I am (both a cat *and* a dog person).....
40 people found this helpful
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- Freeman
- 04-19-14
this book really hooks you and then ...
... and then it seems the editor took a break halfway through. i really liked the ideas in this book and it had some very creative ideas, but then it becomes hard to follow because it jumps around a bit too much. this made the book lose some of its steam. still, it's definitely worth a listen despite this.
15 people found this helpful
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- Mike
- 09-08-14
Innovative, clever, exciting, violent, SF
Max Barry is now one of my "I think I'll read everything he's written" authors.
I've been reading science fiction for decades, so I know how rare it is to come across a book like "Lexicon" which has not just a new ideas, but a clever, well-thought through plot, written by someone who is skilled at dialogue, characterisation and action scenes and who can unfold the story in a way that engages the reader's intellect and emotions.
The basic premise of "Lexicon" is that words have the power to control how we think and behave and that this power can be shaped into a weapon by those with the right skills.
The characters constantly explain how influence and manipulation work: get someone to pay attention to the wrong thing, play on their emotions to shape their perception of good and evil, understand their personality and then pry their psyche apart. Despite this, it took me several chapters to realize that Max Barry had been manipulating me from the first page onwards.He did it by controlling the order in which I received information, who I received it from and the emotional terms used to convey it. At least twice in the novel I had to reset what I thought I knew to be true. Barry didn't cheat. All the information correctly to understand what is going on is there but my own assumptions make me see one thing and read another.
A book that is about weaponising words is likely to appeal to those of us with a recreational addiction to fiction. We KNOW words have power, so we are ripe for the ideas in this novel. If, like me, you've been trained in NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming), public speaking, influencing skills, psychometric assessment and you read tarot cards and palms as a party trick, then the early parts of this book are frighteningly familiar. The book takes what I know I can do and then asks me to imagine what a motivated person, with REAL talent, no social ties, no inhibitions and the support of an organization with generations of research at their disposal, could achieve.
"Lexicon" is filled with coercion, violence and killing from the first page. Max Barry doesn't pull his punches but he doesn't turn the violence into pornography either. He makes it too real and too repulsive for that.
His main evil-incarnate character is suitably chilling but I could write that off as stereo-type. Elliot and Emily I got to know and like and care about, so what they did, to others, to each other and to themselves had much more impact.
My only niggle with the book is the last chapter. It's not where I would have gone with this. It felt like the kind of thing Hollywood might have changed in the movie version to ensure they stayed firmly in the summer blockbuster segment. But then, I'd never have thought up something as clever and powerful as "Lexicon" in the first place, so I'll go with Barry's judgement.
I listened to "Lexicon" as an audiobook, which, I think, made the book even more exciting. Zach Appleman did a splendid job as the rugged, world-weary, Elliot. His American accents are perfect and he at least managed to sound like he'd been to Australia. Heather Corrigan was marvellous at evoking Emily's vulnerability and her strength but her attempts at Australian accents ranged from unconvincing to inappropriately hilarious. Nevertheless, both narrators kept me listening, often on the edge of my seat.
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- PhilR
- 07-22-13
Captivating and enchanting!
A very timely book that I rather wish had been a read than a listen. Narrators are quite good, but this is a book I think would be more enjoyable (and easier to track) if page-flipping and back-tracking were possible. Is this what Edward Snowden is reading in Moscow?
12 people found this helpful