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Batman: Nightwalker (DC Icons Series) Hardcover – January 2, 2018
| Marie Lu (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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AN INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
Before he was Batman, he was Bruce Wayne. A reckless boy willing to break the rules for a girl who may be his worst enemy.
The Nightwalkers are terrorizing Gotham City, and Bruce Wayne is next on their list. Bruce is turning eighteen and inheriting his family's fortune, not to mention the keys to Wayne Industries and all the tech gadgetry that he could ever desire. But on the way home from his birthday party, he makes an impulsive choice that leads to community service at Arkham Asylum, the infamous prison. There, he meets Madeleine Wallace, a brilliant killer with ties to the Nightwalkers. A girl who will only speak to Bruce. She is the mystery he must unravel, but is he convincing her to divulge her secrets, or is he feeding her the information she needs to bring Gotham City to its knees?
Bruce Wayne is proof that you don't need superpowers to be a super hero, but can he survive Madeleine's game of tense intrigue and deception?
Act fast! The first printing includes a poster of Bruce! Each first printing in the DC Icons series will have a limited-edition poster--collect them all to create the full image!
"Masterful. . . . A great story for any Dark Knight fan."
--Den of Geek
Don't miss the rest of the DC Icons series! Read them in any order you choose:
* Wonder Woman: Warbringer by Leigh Bardugo
* Catwoman: Soulstealer by Sarah J. Maas
* Superman: Dawnbreaker by Matt de la Peña
- Reading age12 - 17 years
- Print length288 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Grade level7 - 9
- Lexile measure800L
- Dimensions6.5 x 0.96 x 9.44 inches
- PublisherRandom House Books for Young Readers
- Publication dateJanuary 2, 2018
- ISBN-100399549781
- ISBN-13978-0399549786
- UNSPSC-Code
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From the Publisher
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| SUPERMAN: DAWNBREAKER | WONDER WOMAN: WARBRINGER | CATWOMAN: SOULSTEALER | BLACK CANARY: BREAKING SILENCE | DC ICONS SERIES: BOX SET | |
| Powerful reads in any order you choose: | By Matt de la Peña | By Leigh Bardugo | By Sarah J. Maas | By Alexandra Monir | Includes: WONDER WOMAN, BATMAN, CATWOMAN |
Editorial Reviews
Review
—Den of Geek, (for Batman: Nightwalker by Marie Lu)
"A fast-paced story line, action-packed fight sequences, and hi-tech gadgetry expected from any Batman story make this a fun read with wide appeal."
—SLJ, (for Batman: Nightwalker by Marie Lu)
“The trickiest aspect of any Batman narrative is getting into Bruce Wayne's head, and [Lu]doesn't miss a beat. . . . Anengagingcharacter piece with enough Batman allusionsto intrigue fans and newcomers alike.”
—KirkusReviews, (for Batman: Nightwalker by Marie Lu)
"Doesn’t merely survive the hype, it deserves it.” —The New York Times Book Review (for Legend)
"An action-packed love story full of inventive details.” —The Los Angeles Times (for Legend)
"Fine writing and excellent execution." —Entertainment Weekly (for Legend)
"Lu opts for a high simmer of intrigue." —PW, Starred Review (for Prodigy)
"By permitting her characters some grand failures, she raises the stakes in the best way possible."—The New York Times Book Review (for The Young Elites)
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Cheap, stupid, useless gloves, the girl thought in annoyance. She had even worn two layers of them tonight, but a rare errant slash from the knife had sliced through both layers, and now the blood had gotten on her hands. Stupid. On any other night, she would have stopped and—carefully, methodically—scraped the scarlet flakes out from under her nails, one line after another. But she had no time right now.
No time, no time.
Moonlight cut across the floor of the mansion, illuminating part of the man’s naked body. He bled strangely, the girl thought, compared with the others. The blood just pooled beneath him in a perfect circle, like a disk of smooth frosting on a cake.
She sighed again and stuffed her canister of red spray paint into her backpack, then grabbed a few of the rags strewn on the floor. On the wall beside her was the symbol she had just hurriedly finished drawing.
They had mistimed everything tonight, from the unexpected complications of Sir Robert Grant’s security system at the entrance of the mansion to the surprise of him seeing them first instead of being sound asleep. They were running late. She hated running late.
She hurried around the bedroom chamber, gathering their tools and stuffing them all into her backpack. The moonlight illuminated her features in regular intervals as she moved past the row of win- dows. Her mother used to tell her that she had doll-like features, had been doll-like since birth—large, liquid-dark eyes; long, long lashes; a slender nose and a rosebud of a mouth; porcelain skin. Her eyebrows cut straight and soft across her brow, giving her an expression that looked permanently vulnerable.
That was the thing about her. No one ever saw what mattered until it was too late. Until their blood stained her fingernails.
Her hair had come undone in all the rush, tumbling in a river of black over her shoulders, and she paused to whip it back up into a knot. No doubt a strand or two had come loose and were now ly- ing somewhere on the floor, leaving a clue for the police to follow. But no matter—if she could just escape from here in time. What a messy getaway, so uncharacteristic of her.
I’m going to kill them, she thought bitterly. Leaving me to clean this up—
Somewhere in the night came the wail of sirens.
She froze, listening intently. Her hand flew instinctively to rest on one of the knives strapped around her thigh. Then she started to run. Her boots made no sound—she moved like a shadow, the only noise being the faint bump of her bag against her back. As she went, she pulled her black scarf up across the bottom half of her face, hiding her nose and mouth from view, and fitted her pair of dark visors over her eyes. Through the visors, the mansion trans- formed into a grid of heat signals and green lines.
The sirens were closing in rapidly.
She paused again for a breath, listening. They came from differ- ent directions—they were going to surround her. No time, no time. She darted down the mansion’s staircase, her figure lost entirely in the shadows, then made a sharp turn at the bottom to head not for the front door but for the cellar. The security system had been rewired to seal the front door’s lock from the inside, but the cellar was their getaway route, all alarms cleared and window locks ready for her command.
As she reached the cellar, the sirens outside turned deafening. The police had arrived.
“Window A open,” she muttered into her mouthpiece. At the other end of the room, the rewired window unlocked with a soft, obedient click. The police would gather at the front and back doors, but they wouldn’t think to look on the side of such a huge house yet, not without knowing there was a tiny window at ground level. She ran faster.
She reached the window and started pulling herself up and through it, snaking her way out in the span of a second. On the front lawn, she could hear a police officer shouting into a mega- phone, could see the heat signals of at least a dozen guards in heavy body armor crouched around the mansion’s perimeter, their faces hidden behind helmets and their assault rifles all pointed toward the door.
She leaped to her feet in the darkness, pulled her visor up, and prepared to dart away.
A blinding light flooded over her.
“Hands in the air!” Several voices were shouting at her at the same time. She heard the clicks of loaded weapons, then the furi- ous barking of police dogs barely restrained by their partners. “On your knees! Now!”
They had found her. She wanted to spit out a curse. No time, no time. And now it was too late. At least the others on the mission had already fled. For a fraction of a second, she thought about pull- ing out her knives and throwing herself at the closest officer, using him as a hostage. But there were far too many here, and the light had blinded her enough to make her vision inaccurate. She didn’t have the time to make such a move without the police unleashing the dogs, and she had no desire to be mauled to death.
So instead, she put her hands up.
Officers shoved her hard to the ground; her face scraped against dirt and grass. She saw a glimpse of herself reflected in the police’s opaque helmets, and the barrels of guns pointed directly in her face.
“We got her!” one shouted into his radio, his voice hoarse with excitement and fear. “She’s in custody! Stand by—”
You got me, she echoed to herself as she felt cold cuffs snap onto her wrists. But with her cheek pressed against the ground, she still allowed herself a small, mocking smile behind her scarf.
You got me . . . for now.
Product details
- Publisher : Random House Books for Young Readers (January 2, 2018)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 288 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0399549781
- ISBN-13 : 978-0399549786
- Reading age : 12 - 17 years
- Lexile measure : 800L
- Grade level : 7 - 9
- Item Weight : 1 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.5 x 0.96 x 9.44 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #403,244 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #272 in Teen & Young Adult Superhero Fiction
- #1,374 in Teen & Young Adult Friendship Fiction
- #1,898 in Teen & Young Adult Social Issues
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Marie Lu (www.marielu.org) is the author of the New York Times bestselling novels Legend, Prodigy, and Champion, as well as The Young Elites. She graduated from the University of Southern California and jumped into the video game industry, working for Disney Interactive Studios as a Flash artist. Now a full-time writer, she spends her spare time reading, drawing, playing Assassin’s Creed, and getting stuck in traffic. She lives in Los Angeles, California (see above: traffic), with one husband, one Chihuahua mix, and two Pembroke Welsh corgis.
Customer reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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I love Batman. He is my favorite DC hero and possibly my favorite superhero of all time. So you could imagine my excitement when I discovered one of my favorite YA authors was going to write an origin story for The Batman. Was I satisfied with what I got? Heck yes I was.
The characters are the strength of this story, particularly young Bruce Wayne himself. I have to admit that I usually find Bruce Wayne to be kind of boring, not as the Caped Crusader, but as Bruce Wayne the billionaire playboy. However, Marie Lu manages to improve on his character by making young Bruce Wayne a compassionate and intelligent character with complex emotions and a vibrant personality, ultimately making him a much more interesting and relatable character.
The original source material is drawn upon for certain key facts (i.e. Bruce’s parents are killed by a thug, Alfred Pennyworth is his Guardian, Lucius Fox runs Wayne Tech, etc.) but this story is a complete alternate version. Marie Lu uses these pivotal elements to anchor her readers and to provide us with a new and familiar narrative that feels like a Batman story.
From beginning to end, the entire story is extremely fast-paced and rarely boring. This is mostly because the story is packed into 250 pages, which is also a drawback. The story could have been expanded on in some places. More time could have been devoted to the unraveling of the Nightwalker scheme as well as the individual character development of Bruce’s closest friends Dianne Garcia and Harvey (Dent). They were each great characters without much background story, which is a shame because both have so much potential.
Madeleine was an amazing villainess. The author really managed to capture her eerie yet charming personality in the description of her movements as well as her speech. I also love how Marie Lu continued with Bruce’s tendency to be attracted to femme fetales (i.e. Selina Kyle and Talia al Ghul)!
There were so many things to like about this book. I do feel as if Bruce’s darker musings about his parents’ death and his sense of justice could have been amplified a bit more, but that’s just a personal preference. And although really short and slightly lacking in secondary character development, this book was thrilling, suspenseful, appropriately dark, and so much fun to read.
The Plot: The Nightwalkers are terrorizing the rich elites of Gotham. Bruce Wayne has just turned 18 and inherited all of Thomas and Martha Wayne's assets. Bruce throws a huge party for his 18th party, filled with a lot of people he doesn't even know his only friend's are Dianne, and Harvey Dent. He has a run in with a former friend the Mayor's son, who only comes around when he seems to want something, and he wants Bruce to lie for him. Bruce refuses and just wants to leave. He ends up driving around in a supped up WayneTech Aston Marten car. He witnesses a police chase that the suspect is getting away, Bruce snaps and goes into action chasing the criminal down and crashes his car into his. Bruce then finds out the driver was one of the Nightwalkers. Bruce is not rewarded for his action but is give community service at Arkham Asylum for interfering with a police investigation. He has to sweep and mop the female wing and solitary confinement area, Bruce witnesses detective questioning one female prisoner that is a member of the Nightcrawlers, she stares off and doesn't say anything to them. The next day when they are alone she talks to him, he soon learns he is the only person she's talked to and she's murdered three people. The police involve Bruce to try to get information while he's talking to her a riot breaks out and he has to protect her. Bruce is starting to feel attached she gives him information on a weapons stash but doesn't tell him about the next victim where the mayor is murdered. Bruce feels as he's getting closer but his friends and Alfred are starting to worry. She reveals that he's on the list of targets but is vague about details, notices a code in her words and actions, but will he figure it out in time? Is she a killer or a victim?
What I liked: The descriptions of Arkham Asylum are really detailed and you feel the dirt and grime of the place. I did like Bruce getting catcalled by the female inmates. The action is written really well, when it is there. I like the question it makes Bruce Wayne ask about what is justice? Madeline is a great femme fatale. The Nightwalkers are kind of throwaway bad guys, But Lu adds a lot to them and giving them reason. The little twist towards the end was well done. There are a lot of women in powerful roles and women henchwomen. something that Gotham is is not know for, so that was refreshing. Alfred called Bruce, his ward, was a great moment.
What I disliked: Bruce is moody but not really dark, his parents passed away only 5 years ago and he seems to well adjusted. The friendship with Harvey Dent was wasted, they did dig a little bit into Harvey's abusive relationship with his dad, but there could've been a lot more, since he later turns into Two Face. There's not a lot of action, when it is there it's good but there's only three scenes of action, I wanted the prison riot to last longer, and bigger stakes. The Mayor's son story line falls flat, it could have been more interesting.
Recommendations: If your a casual Batman fan I would recommend skipping this, it doesn't add anything to the mythos. I would recommend this for a good introduction to Batman, which seems to be the audience the book is aiming at. Warcross by Marie Lu has been a book that keeps getting recommended to me, reading this actually makes me want to read an original story, because when she creates something new it's good like the bad guys, but where this book struggles is when she has to fit the story into the Batman legacy she doesn't add much and you can feel the push back. For this book review I give it 2.5 out of 5.
There are currently 4 books in the young adult DC icons series, featuring Wonder Woman, Batman, Catwoman, and Superman I have heard that Wonder Woman: Warbreaker is great and I will like that one a bit more. The comic book nerd in me wants to eventually read them all
In the series, there are this group of Vigilantes that go darker called Nightwalkers. They are ‘attacking’ the rich but only give to themselves not necessarily the poor. Bruce finds himself right in the middle of the attack when a. he works with one of them at Arkham and b. he is a millionaire who they would attack.
We see a lot of familiar faces from the world and sometimes you will laugh because you know what happens in the future. I did that when I saw Harvey Dent. The story has a lot of twists and turns and can be dark at times. It makes me feel like I am deep in the world and Lu did an amazing job at keeping true to the nature of the characters and that world.
Top reviews from other countries
Overall enjoyment but some ebbs and flows stopped it being 4 stars. I liked Madeline’s character, I wanted to believe in her. Bruce was much younger than I expected both in age and character, that took a bit of getting used to. That ending, I wanted and needed so much more.
Good narration.
I was hoping for a stronger character harder edges potentially if it was a series of could redeem itself it was a good detective novel and I enjoyed it as such.
The only reason for three stars is no Batman







