City Threads - Shop now
Your audiobook is waiting!
Enjoy a free trial on us
$0.00
  • One credit a month to pick any title from our entire premium selection to keep (you’ll use your first credit now).
  • Unlimited listening on select audiobooks, Audible Originals, and podcasts.
  • You will get an email reminder before your trial ends.
  • $14.95 a month after 30 days. Cancel online anytime.
Sold and delivered by Audible, an Amazon company
List Price: $40.49
By completing your purchase, you agree to Audible’s Conditions Of Use, License, and Amazon's Privacy Notice. Taxes where applicable.
Sold and delivered by Audible, an Amazon company

Demon Copperhead: A Novel Audible Audiobook – Unabridged

4.6 out of 5 stars 132,630 ratings

WINNER OF THE PULITZER PRIZE WINNER OF THE WOMEN'S PRIZE FOR FICTION

New York Times Readers’ Pick: Top 100 Books of the 21st Century An Oprah’s Book Club Selection An Instant New York Times Bestseller An Instant Wall Street Journal Bestseller A #1 Washington Post Bestseller A New York Times ""Ten Best Books of the Year""

""Demon is a voice for the ages—akin to Huck Finn or Holden Caulfield—only even more resilient.” —Beth Macy, author of Dopesick

""May be the best novel of [the year]. . . . Equal parts hilarious and heartbreaking, this is the story of an irrepressible boy nobody wants, but readers will love.” Ron Charles, Washington Post

From the acclaimed author of The Poisonwood Bible and The Bean Trees and the recipient of the National Book Foundation's Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, a brilliant novel that enthralls, compels, and captures the heart as it evokes a young hero’s unforgettable journey to maturity

Set in the mountains of southern Appalachia, Demon Copperhead is the story of a boy born to a teenaged single mother in a single-wide trailer, with no assets beyond his dead father’s good looks and copper-colored hair, a caustic wit, and a fierce talent for survival. Relayed in his own unsparing voice, Demon braves the modern perils of foster care, child labor, derelict schools, athletic success, addiction, disastrous loves, and crushing losses. Through all of it, he reckons with his own invisibility in a popular culture where even the superheroes have abandoned rural people in favor of cities.

Many generations ago, Charles Dickens wrote David Copperfield from his experience as a survivor of institutional poverty and its damages to children in his society. Those problems have yet to be solved in ours. Dickens is not a prerequisite for listeners of this novel, but he provided its inspiration. In transposing a Victorian epic novel to the contemporary American South, Barbara Kingsolver enlists Dickens’ anger and compassion, and above all, his faith in the transformative powers of a good story. Demon Copperhead speaks for a new generation of lost boys, and all those born into beautiful, cursed places they can’t imagine leaving behind.

Read & Listen

Switch between reading the Kindle book & listening to the Audible audiobook with Whispersync for Voice.
Get the Audible audiobook for the reduced price of $12.99 after you buy the Kindle book.

Product details

Listening Length 21 hours and 3 minutes
Author Barbara Kingsolver
Narrator Charlie Thurston
Whispersync for Voice Ready
Audible.com Release Date October 18, 2022
Publisher HarperAudio
Program Type Audiobook
Version Unabridged
Language English
ASIN B09QH6C42C
Best Sellers Rank #171 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals)
#2 in Small Town & Rural Fiction (Audible Books & Originals)
#3 in Coming of Age Fiction (Audible Books & Originals)
#4 in Small Town & Rural Fiction (Books)

Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
132,630 global ratings

Review this product

Share your thoughts with other customers

Customers say

Customers find the book compelling and well-written, with a captivating story that provides a refreshing look at emotional dilemmas and profound insights. The characters are well-developed, with one customer noting the author's ability to get deep inside a character's soul. While some customers find the pacing fascinating and in-depth, others mention that the ending drags on. The book is thought-provoking, with superb attention to research and powerful exploration of social issues, though some find it quite depressing.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

1,222 customers mention "Readability"1,215 positive7 negative

Customers find the book engaging from the first page, describing it as amazing and interesting to read.

"...You can follow the plot, empathize with the characters and absorb the themes of Kingsolver’s book without ever having heard of Dickens...." Read more

"...The book was hard to put down and flowed well chapter into the chapter as Demon continued to be put into horrible situations by those who were..." Read more

"...It is an intense and relentless novel, at times uncomfortable...." Read more

"...be my favorite writer, however, I feel that he did a good enough job of creating a world and characters that he didn't have to beat anyone over the..." Read more

804 customers mention "Writing quality"650 positive154 negative

Customers praise the writing quality of the book, describing it as eloquent and well-told, with one customer noting its realistic portrayal of the human condition.

"...but rather their very significant agreement in terms of theme and authorial intent...." Read more

"...I would recommend it to anyone, as it features superior prose, various authentic characters, and a modern setting with hundreds of tragedies,..." Read more

"...the descriptions of nature are wonderful and meticulously detailed, especially as seen through the perception of a child...." Read more

"...Demon Copperhead but one of the main things is that it’s so breezily readable. For a 546-page epic, it goes down fast...." Read more

645 customers mention "Heartbreaking"481 positive164 negative

Customers find the book heart wrenching, with profound insights that cover many human emotions.

"...But more than anything else she attacks the opioid crisis...." Read more

"...A note about the audiobook: Charlie Thurston does an admirable job conveying the hopes, fears and snark of a down-on-his-luck boy with his..." Read more

"...she can take on any voice, any place, and any era—and do it with compassion, intelligence, and unforgettable prose." Read more

"...Kingsolver gave it both. And, while it was a painful, heartbreaking read, it illuminated an ugly chapter in corporate greed and medical negligence..." Read more

540 customers mention "Story quality"540 positive0 negative

Customers find the book's story captivating and heart-wrenching, with one customer describing it as a deeply satisfying coming-of-age narrative.

"...Demon’s voice, written by Mrs. Kingsolver, is unique and baked in with a sincerity of hard luck and oppression not often found in modern literary..." Read more

"...It is an intense and relentless novel, at times uncomfortable...." Read more

"...into the contemporary American South with a voice that is raw, hilarious, heartbreaking, and fiercely American...." Read more

"...a human face but the full force of her sense of humanity into a very moving story. Demon Copperhead is our narrator...." Read more

416 customers mention "Character development"362 positive54 negative

Customers appreciate the well-developed characters in the book, noting they quickly pull readers in and evoke sympathy for their misfortunes.

"...You can follow the plot, empathize with the characters and absorb the themes of Kingsolver’s book without ever having heard of Dickens...." Read more

"...recommend it to anyone, as it features superior prose, various authentic characters, and a modern setting with hundreds of tragedies, comedies, and..." Read more

"...the reader is experiencing things through the eyes of a very well-developed character, rather than through the words or actions of less-developed..." Read more

"...There are plenty of characters to keep track of, but Kingsolver gives them juicy nicknames (again, a la Dickens) or colorful descriptions so they..." Read more

216 customers mention "Thought provoking"168 positive48 negative

Customers find the book thought-provoking, praising its insightful characterizations and thorough research, with one customer noting how it touches on every aspect of sociology.

"...page with both confidence and world-weariness, with stoicism and self-knowledge, with everything the character is going to exhibit in the rest of..." Read more

"...The execution is a thing of beauty—and something we can all admire." Read more

"...Her ability to channel Demon’s young, smart-mouthed, sharp-witted perspective is nothing short of astonishing...." Read more

"...School is not valued. It is more important to cut tobacco when it's ready to be harvested...." Read more

337 customers mention "Pacing"211 positive126 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some finding it fascinating and eye-opening, while others note that the ending is particularly drawn out and the plot seems to wander in places.

"...For a 546-page epic, it goes down fast. It’s episodic, a la Dickens, but the character flow is organic, unforced...." Read more

"...However, after a while the book dragged on for me...." Read more

"...Her ability to channel Demon’s young, smart-mouthed, sharp-witted perspective is nothing short of astonishing...." Read more

"...The characters were memorable and well-drawn. They were connected in the Dickensian style that I have grown to expect and appreciate...." Read more

206 customers mention "Depressing story"87 positive119 negative

Customers have mixed reactions to the book's emotional tone, with many finding it thoroughly morose and unpleasant to read, while one customer describes it as tragic yet hopeful.

"Outstanding literature which is depressive to read much of time due to the intense subject matter...." Read more

"Depressing, haunting, eye opening, enrapturing, loving, and honest. I often talk about books and literature as windows into other people's worlds...." Read more

"...At times it was hard to read due to the continual drug abuse and poor decisions - but Demon owns that in the narrative...." Read more

"...Kept my attention and turning those pages until its bittersweet end." Read more

Absolutely amazing book that covers some real life issues!
5 out of 5 stars
Absolutely amazing book that covers some real life issues!
This book was nothing short of incredible. It clearly takes place in the 90s and left me internally screaming at how accurate some of the dynamics are and the overflow of real life issues that people struggle with. We meet Damon and follow him from a little 10 year old surrounded by family dysfunction, domestic violence, neglect, drug abuse & addiction through the system and into young adulthood. His journey isn’t easy and his childhood definitely has an impact on the ride. I thought this would be an overrated read based on all the hype, but it was amazing and deserves all the hype it gets. This book won’t be for everyone but I definitely recommend checking it out. I think this just became my favorite fiction of 2023 so far. “The moral of his story was how you never know the size of hurt that’s in people’s hearts, of what they’re liable to do about it, given the chance.” “It becomes your job, staving off the dopesickness for another day. Then it becomes your God. Nobody ever wanted to join that church. A bad day is waking up with nothing, no God, no means. Lying in your stinking sheets smelling what you hope is yourself and not your girlfriend. Someone has beat the tar out of you, it seems, and crushed some bones. Possibly a person, this comes with the lifestyle, but more likely it was the junk putting its fists through all your personal drywall on its way out of the building. Empty, you are a monster. The person you love is monstrous.“
Thank you for your feedback
Sorry, there was an error
Sorry we couldn't load the review

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2023
    When, at the age of 15, I first read David Copperfield, Charles Dickens’ classic novel of the protagonist’s struggle to rise above child poverty in a society seemingly structured to keep him poor, it was the first book that made me tear up at the end, that glorious end with the angelic Agnes ever “pointing upward.” I wasn’t sure that Barbara Kingsolver’s DemonCopperhead could possibly elicit anything like that response from my jaded, seen-it-all-before, read-it-all-before consciousness. Re-imagining the quintessentially British Dickens’ nineteenth-century story as a twenty-first century slice of American Appalachian life? How’s that likely to work?

    Well, of course, it was likely to bomb spectacularly. But instead, what I found from the book’s very first paragraph was a voice that explodes off the page with both confidence and world-weariness, with stoicism and self-knowledge, with everything the character is going to exhibit in the rest of this blockbuster of a novel.

    Dickens’ David famously opens with, “Whether I shall turn out to be the hero of my own life, or whether that station will be held by anybody else, these pages must show.” By contrast, Kingsolver’s Copperhead (whose real name is Damon Fields, but he has red hair, so…) opens with, “First, I got myself born. A decent crowd was on hand to watch and they’ve always given me that much: the worst of the job was up to me, my mother being let’s just say out of it.”

    In this life, you make your own choices, and if you’re going to get anywhere, and your mother is in and out of rehab constantly, you have to do it yourself, Damon tells you at the beginning. You think there’s going to be a hero in your life? Think again. There’s just you, trying to make your way in a world that’s stacked against you. Here’s a voice that, in its tone of genuine down-home rural Americanism sounds a lot more like Huck Finn than anybody in Dickens. Like Huck, he has a memorable way of putting things in his colorful American vernacular: He’s “the Eagle Scout of trailer trash,” he tells us at one point.

    And I don’t mean to say that you must be familiar with David Copperfield to enjoy Demon Copperhead. You can follow the plot, empathize with the characters and absorb the themes of Kingsolver’s book without ever having heard of Dickens. But it does add something to the overall experience of the book if you know the Copperfield story. In particular, there’s a bit of fun for readers when they can recognize by name a Kingsolvian character intended to parallel a Dickensian one. Thus, when Damon’s abusive stepfather bears the name of “Stoner,” it’s easy to see the connection with David’s equally cruel stepfather, whose name happens to be “Murdstone.” Damon’s kind neighbors, the Peggots, clearly recall David’s friends the Peggottys and Clara Peggoty, David’s early nurse and lifelong friend. Dickens’ charming and narcissistic James Steerforth, who for a while promises to be that “hero of my own life” David looks forward to in his opening sentence, finds his counterpoint in Kingsolver’s Sterling Ford, nicknamed Fast Forward, star quarterback on the high school football team and, for awhile, Damon’s idol. Copperfield’s “child wife” Dora Spenlowe is echoed in Kingsolver’s Dori, and when Damon falls for his needy, childish Dori you don’t have to remember David Copperfield to know that relationship is going to be a disaster, but it helps.

    Occasionally Kingsolver’s parallel characters are direct mirror images of Dickens’, as in the case of Damon’s grandmother Betsy and her eccentric friend Mr. Dick, who liked flying kites, mirroring David’s great-aunt Betsy and her eccentric friend Mr. Dick who also liked flying kites. Sometimes there’s more of a difference: Damon’s short-term foster father Mr. McCobb has a few things in common with David’s Mr. Micawber, lack of steady employment and perpetual new schemes to get rich among them, but Micawber is a well-meaning screwup, while McCobb is just trying to take advantage of the system. And Dickens’ Uriah Heep is a far more insidious villain than Kingsolver’s assistant coach U-Haul Pyles, whose downfall is far less precipitous than Heep’s in Dickens. And then there is “Angus” Winfield, daughter of the high school football coach and Damon’s foster-sister during the best and worst years of his life, who clearly parallels David’s guardian angel, Agnes Wickfield, and who you know from the first is going to be a major influence in Damon’s life.
    Of course, knowing Dickens gives you an idea of the role these characters are going to play in the story. But the plot of Demon Copperhead is not therefore predictable, as Kingsolver translates these characters’ motivations and effects on the protagonist into a completely different milieu of time and place. Ultimately, what’s important about the influence of Dickens on Kingsolver’s book is not the superficial correspondences of plot or character, but rather their very significant agreement in terms of theme and authorial intent. In an afterword to her novel, Kingsolver writes, “I’m grateful to Charles Dickens for writing David Copperfield, his impassioned critique of institutional poverty and its damaging effects on children in his society. Those problems are still with us. In adapting his novel to my own place and time, working for years with his outrage, inventiveness, and empathy at my elbow, I’ve come to think of him as my genius friend.”

    It is precisely those social evils that Kingsolver has directly in her sites in this novel: The institutional poverty of former coal-mining areas of her native Appalachia; the effects of that poverty on children, especially children whose parents have been victims of that poverty and are dead or imprisoned. She attacks the ineptitude and bureaucracy of child welfare services, the abuse of the system of foster care that allows people like Damon’s foster parents to take children solely for the sake of taking the monthly support money, or for gaining slave labor like the tobacco farmer who first fosters Damon. She attacks a justice system that will accept the testimony of an abusive stepfather rather than the word of the abused child.

    But more than anything else she attacks the opioid crisis. Damon, who has a brief period when it seems he may escape the cesspool of his luckless life through success on the gridiron as a high school football star, has a terrible knee injury for which he is prescribed opioid pain relievers to which he becomes hopelessly addicted, and Kingsolver’s indictment of the doctors, salesmen, druggists, and especially the Sackler-owned Purdue Pharma are is merciless in the novel. It truly seems like there is no way out for Damon—but as David Copperfield had a talent in writing that finally helped pull him out of poverty, the fact that Damon has a talent for drawing—all he has left after football—does give him a ray of hope. I won’t spoil the end by telling you whether he’s able to use it.

    Thus Kingsolver is not simply the heir of Dickens in recasting his most personal novel; she is more importantly the spiritual heir of Dickens’ novel of social criticism, something you don’t see much of any more. Where is Dickens today? Where are the Zolas? The Sinclair Lewises? The John Steinbecks? Gone. But we’ve still got Barbara Kingsolver.
    342 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 15, 2024
    The coal-filled mountains of Appalachia cast darkness on the small towns dotted throughout the eastern us. The book begins as the main character, Demon, starts to tell his story, which is a twisting path at the bottom of the mountain that begins interjectory not up the mountain but down into the darkness where spiderwebs of misfortune are found deep in the coal mines. Demon’s childhood is a spiral of terrible circumstances and an environment accompanied by adults who make poor decisions in a community that thrives on coal and drugs (both legal and illegal.) Demon, throughout his childhood, is raised by his young mother, a drug addict, and his neighbors, the Peggots, who assist in trying to keep Demon on a straight path as they deal with the same institutional issues living in the mountaintop small-town Appalachia, drug addiction, crime, poverty, and a poor economy.

    “The wonder is that you could start life with nothing, end with nothing, and lose so much in between.”

    Demon’s mother soon marries a man called Stoner, who is abusive to both Demon and his mother; during their marriage, Demon’s mother relapses, and Demon and Stoner struggle as Demon attempts to call for help and Stoner attempts to stop him, and Demon loses his mother and his unborn sibling. After his mother’s death, he’s given to a foster home where he is worked like hired help on a tobacco farm, echoing the horribleness of how the American foster system can harm a child. Demon learns the ins and outs of the family on this farm through his peers getting into trouble, lusting for a good meal, and starting to take drugs for fun. Eventually, Demon, as he ages and moves to another foster family who struggles in the poverty of Appalachia, Demon runs away to his grandmother’s house in Murder Valley, Tennessee. On his trip, he meets a preacher, gets his money stolen by a prostitute, and sleeps in a barn. Eventually, he meets Betsy Woodall and her disabled brother Dick who get Demon back in shape and, using her connections, gets him a foster home with a football coach. Demon’s problems for a short while disappear, as he starts school again, taking special classes in art and getting by in other courses, but eventually, the freedom of youth escapes him, and he spirals back down, even as he’s the star player a football team the pinnacle of any small town.  Demon eventually gets injured and addicted to oxicotten on a legal script that doctors at the time were pushing to everyone to deal with pain, knowing the drug was addictive; in doing so, Demon falls for a girl, Dori, who had her own addiction issues and Demon’s life course even when going well for just a few short years spirals again.

    “I said probably they were just scared he was going to put ideas in our heads.” She smiled. “Imagine that. A teacher, putting ideas in kids’ heads.”

    The ending is not a tragic blunder about addiction and poverty but a tour of struggle and pain as Demon grows and fails and picks himself up, eventually using his artistic skills to slowly build a world around him that may give him enough structure to break a cycle that many fail to do. Eventually, Demon realizes the few people close to him who constantly annoyed him were the very few people that only wanted Demon Copperhead to stand tall and be the better person he deserved to be.

    “I can still feel in my bones how being mad was the one thing holding me together.”

    The book’s plot is based on a request given to Demon during his struggles and is only released at the end. Mrs. Kingsolver’s writing style has a tone and character not seen in writing, often using appropriate slang and terms in the Appalachian area. Demon’s voice, written by Mrs. Kingsolver, is unique and baked in with a sincerity of hard luck and oppression not often found in modern literary writing. The book was hard to put down and flowed well chapter into the chapter as Demon continued to be put into horrible situations by those who were supposed to take care of him. At times, during the parts of the story about addiction and drugs, I would step away from the book because the trauma, pain, and hopelessness portrayed in the words and mood can become very real. These are all complex topics to read and, at times, to enjoy, but Mrs. Kingsolver provides the proper framing in Demon’s voice and the appropriate amount of darkness and light to keep the pages turning, never letting the pace or tone become too much for the reader. I would consider adding this book to every high school-required reading list.
    Demon Copperhead was the Women’s Prize for Fiction in 2023, was named “10 best books of 2022” by the NYT and Washington Post, and shared the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction with Hernan Diaz’s book Trust. This was the first time the prize was split.
    The novel has lingered on the fringes of books I wanted to read. I picked it up as part of my book club reads for 2024, and I’m glad I did. I would recommend it to anyone, as it features superior prose, various authentic characters, and a modern setting with hundreds of tragedies, comedies, and dramas that must be told. Word of note, this book can get dark and deals with modern-day problems that may trigger emotions and people impacted in such situations.
    47 people found this helpful
    Report

Top reviews from other countries

Translate all reviews to English
  • Heiko
    5.0 out of 5 stars Erfüllend
    Reviewed in Germany on February 23, 2025
    Ich habe selten ein Buch gelesen, dass mir so viel neue Einsichten über die amerikanische Gesellschaft gebracht hat wie dieses.
    Tolle Geschichte, aufschlussreiche Sprache, trotz allem Leid des Protagonisten optimistisch, rührend, traurig, und doch ein frohmachendes Buch.
    Report
  • little bookworm
    5.0 out of 5 stars Raw and moving
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 17, 2023
    A reimagining of Dickens' David Copperfield, this is the story of Damon Fields, aka, Demon Copperhead, a young boy growing up in the mountains of Southern Appalachia, and charting his journey into adulthood. Born to a teen-aged single mother battling a drug habit, Demon is orphaned at a young age, forced to face the hardships of a broken foster care system. Later, he finally finds a home with Coach Winfield and his daughter Angus, briefly enjoying stardom on the football pitch, only to suffer a devastating injury. From there, Demon finds himself on a downward spiral, battling addiction issues himself, however, through all the adversities, Demon never loses the fighting spirit and resilience he was born with.

    My first read from Barbara Kingsolver, and easily my favourite read of the year so far, though not always an easy read, given the oftentimes depressing subject matter. Yet, no matter how bleak and harrowing the story got, ultimately the message was one of triumph and hope, and I think that always shone through.

    Demon, as the central character, is a joy. I simply loved his voice, and thought Kingsolver did a remarkable job of so wonderfully capturing the inner thoughts and feelings of a young boy/teenager. He narrates his story with a darkly sardonic sense of humour, that also helps keep the tone of the story entertaining no matter what he is enduring. Demon has a zest for life that simply cannot be stamped out, even at his lowest ebb, and whilst at times the choices he makes are questionable, I was rooting for him all the way. His heart was always in the right place, such that it was impossible not to like him.

    I've never actually read David Copperfield, but am familiar with the story though various television and movie adaptations over the years. I don't think you necessarily have to be familiar with the story, in order to enjoy this, but if you are, then I think you'll likely appreciate all the nods, and how cleverly Kingsolver takes Dickens' story and characters and translates them in this modern day setting. I did also find it rather thought-provoking, how so many of the social issues that Dickens was writing about, such as poverty, child labour and the bleak life of an orphan, are still so relevant today. Here, the orphanages are replaced instead by a broken foster care system that is no less harrowing.

    Another important issue covered in the story is drug abuse, Kingsolver going into a fair amount of detail on the heroin epidemic that affected these parts and destroyed so many lives and communities, and the role the pharmaceutical industry played in this. Kinsgsolver's love for her native Appalachia was clear to see and infused throughout the story, be it in Demon's love for the nature around him, or in the interesting history of the area that she weaves into the story. Its there in the commentary on how rural folk are so often misrepresented, and in Demon's comic strips and later graphic novel that try to hit back and give his people a voice. Yes, perhaps at times her social commentary could seem a little forced, however, I appreciated the passion behind it nevertheless.

    The novel is certainly lengthy, however, I never found myself losing attention. Whilst Demon owned my heart from very early on, there were a whole host of characters here to love, and some to love to hate. Some of my favorites included Angus, Tommy, and Aunt June, though the Peggotts as a whole family were a lovable bunch.

    Overall, this was a masterful reworking of a classic, and yet also entirely Kingsolver's own. A story that is as likely to have you laughing as it is crying; I found this an incredibly raw and moving read, with a big-hearted hero who will stay with me for a long time.
  • Stephany andrews
    1.0 out of 5 stars Only received four chapters
    Reviewed in Mexico on May 10, 2023
    I want to finish reading but I only received four chapters on this device.
  • VAN PETEGHEM TREARD
    5.0 out of 5 stars wonderful rewriting !!!
    Reviewed in France on November 12, 2024
    Kinsolver at her best with this rewriting of David Copperfield. Heartbreaking at Times and full of energy. The descent into hell of Demon is very moving.
  • Larissa Rangel Sant'Anna
    5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliantly written
    Reviewed in Brazil on March 21, 2025
    One of the best books I've ever read, it's clear why it won a Pulitzer, don't think I'll ever be able to forget demon.