Friday, March 6, 2026

Crow: Thief of Magic by Fiona Dixon




Crow is a street kid. He works for an underground gang called The Reavers. Their leader is a cruel man named Yarrick. As this story opens Crow has been ordered to take an object to a manor house on the edge of the city. When Crow holds the object - an orb - it feels different:

"It flared again as it dropped into Crow's outstretched palm, brighter this time. It was smooth and warm against his skin, but the strangest thing was the way it felt comfortable in his hand."

Crow has no idea that he has magical abilities. At the manor house he meets Victor - he is a Dreamcatcher. Previously Crow had wandered around the rooms in the house and he found this:

"The entire room was filled with row after row of tall wooden stacks ... but ... these shelves didn't hold books. Instead each was filled with glass bottles of varying shapes and sizes. ... There had to be thousands of bottles here. The bottles were filled with coloured liquid in every hue imaginable."

These bottles contain dreams. Over the coming weeks Crow learns that some are simple and harmless others are powerful. Dreams are good but there needs to be a counterbalance - nightmares. Crow is so sensitive to magic that he can hardly bare to enter the room with the nightmares and then Victor tells him about the most powerful and dangerous magic of all. It is called a mara. If you are book talking this story with your students (aged 11+) you could use the scene at end of Chapter 17 which describes what happens when Crow enters the cellar and sees the cabinet that contains the mara. 

Victor offers Crow an apprenticeship but his loyalty is to his friends back in the city. Then Yarrick sends the three kids on a dangerous mission and Crow watches as his friends run into a fire - he is sure they have both been killed.

With nowhere else to turn Crow goes back to Victor and his apprenticeship begins.  Crow learns how to make dreams using the grimoire in Victor's laboratory.. You are sure to love all exotic sounding ingredients. 

"cardamon, four-leaved clover, yarrow, mugwort, willow bark, extract of milk thistle, crystallised raindrops and an eagle's feather." "valerian, quarrix feather, ... venom of a burnished snake, a wishbone stone, birchbark, mountain skullcap, charcoal and moonflower root."

As well as combining ingredients, Crow also learns how to collect dream essence out in the city at night - the essence come from actual dreams. Crow is able to follow a dream trail and then collect the magical energy of the dream. 

Meanwhile time is ticking.   Each chapter is a countdown to the arrival of the comet named Oros the Changebringer. Crow and his friends Sal and Jonas have a plan to leave the city and escape from The Reavers and Yarrick on All Soul's Eve. In the scheme of things, though, this plan seems impossible and also a huge amount of magical power will come from this comet - power that others plan to exploit. 

One of the best features of the writing in this book is the way you will keep trying to guess the motivations of Victor. He is so kind and patient with Crow. He feeds him really delicious food. Cares for him when he is unwell. Provides him with a comfortable bed and brand-new clothes. Is all of this just because he is happy to train Crow as his apprentice or is there a more sinister motive? There are some tiny clues which you need to stay alert to recognise and of course there is that ghost girl who tries to warn Crow. The other mysterious character is Nekima, the cat. She seems to be so wise and protective of Crow, but I kept wondering where her true loyalties lay. Crow is also very tuned into his own senses. He hears music in room filled with Dream bottles; some objects respond to his touch; and there are vivid descriptions of the smells he encounters. The writing in this book is so atmospheric - you will feel you are standing, albeit watching from the outside, of so many scenes. This reminded me of how I felt when I read A Very Unusual Pursuit by Catherine Jinks Book One City of Orphans.

There is also very strong theme or undercurrent in this story relating to the misuse of power.

Crow: Thief of Magic is the first book in a planned series but fortunately nearly everything is resolved by the end of the first book.

Huge thanks to Gleebooks for allowing me to read the Advance Reader Copy of Crow: Thief of Magic. This book will fly off their bookshop shelves and off your library shelves. A perfect magical story with just the right amount of tension and the ever-present possibility of betrayal.  This book is due for released on 12th May 2026. Crow Thief of Magic is a debut novel for UK author Fiona Dixon.

With an incredible story, a stunning, richly detailed world, and a wonderful cast of characters, Crow: Thief of Magic is an unputdownable, exciting and hugely ambitious fantasy adventure. Love Reading4Kids

Publisher blurb: Twelve-year-old Crow is a thief. Scraping a living on the winding streets of Starsgard, Crow works for the leader of the criminal underworld, stealing from the city’s wealthy ruling class. But when a routine job takes Crow to the home of a mysterious sorcerer, his whole life is turned upside down – and after a planned heist goes wrong, leaving Crow alone and with nowhere to turn, he finds himself a new position as the sorcerer’s apprentice. Before long, Crow is introduced to the ancient art of dream magic – catching dream essence and using it to create dreams for the rich citizens from whom he once stole. But when Crow learns of an ancient strain of nightmare magic that threatens to unleash devastation on Starsgard, he must make a terrible choice… and decide who he can really trust.

Companion books:











This is a picture book - The Mirrorstone





Content warning this book contains disturbing domestic violence


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