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Alphabet
 
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Alphabet [Paperback]

Kathy Page
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Books in Canada

As Kathy Page in her astute novel, Alphabet, has demonstrated, one emotionally cleft young man, examined or deconstructed, yields up his pathetic yet hopeful passage through the penal system as an example of our undying belief that corrupted individuals can be not only punished but simultaneously redeemed. It is a painful but uplifting saga.
The novel starts with the murder of one innocent teenaged girl-a spiritual, intellectual vessel of limitless potential-whose misfortune it is to be present for her boyfriend’s psychotic, torqued moment during their one and only sexual encounter. Her life ends, his begins, and one gathers that for the one taken the other must be reconstituted in order to counter the grievous futility of such a loss. And, unlike the unfortunate, innocent Aksyonof in Tolstoy’s short story, “God Sees the Truth, but Waits”, our guilty protagonist, after his grinding initiation into penal servitude, begins to develop genuine mettle in facing his guilt.
The novel is, though not expressly so, a testament to the bureaucratic buoyancy given to Judeo-Christian notions of the soul as the irreducible ylem that cannot be consigned to its final form without being worked on-its good is our good. So, how does a murderer withstand the humiliation of ‘correction’? He begins by accounting for the nefarious deed, and that might be through the totemic effect of a single, willfully uttered word graven in the flesh, expressing defiance or self-loathing. What, then, if the word is transmutable into a syntax of self-revelation? A female prison administrator tells the young man he is beginning to demonstrate Courage. In response he has another inmate tattoo those very letters across his chest-indeed the flesh made word-and thus he devises an “Alphabet” of and for self-reflection.
The protagonist, through a few carefully composed essays in (monitored) inter-gender communication goes through a period of maturation, is relocated to a clinical setting within the system, where he grows, retrenches, falls from grace, and is returned to the cell block. There he is brutalised by other inmates either because of his hard-won integrity or in spite of it. His penultimate destination is the hospital-still a part of the larger British state-run system-where he and a soon-too-be transgendered man become friends. Tentative at first, the friendship continues through exchanges of letters. One is curious to know what might become of this once our protagonist is on the outside. In any event, this friendship credibly amounts to a stage in the process of redemption, driven to begin with by an overarching desire for love. The transgendered correspondent is experienced as both man and woman-not as neither, as we might expect. And he, in turn, with a gentle philosophical resignation (for he knows his release is far off in the future) seems to consent to be neither one nor the other. What binds these two people is their respect for each other’s revealed goodness and the specific incarceration that each has had to endure.
Finally, it appears, that if a society truly believes in the dignity of the individual, and in the ability of each to contribute to the collective good, the reciprocal quality of crime and punishment will, in some measure, deliver him on his due date with compassion. What is required might be attained statistically and behaviourally, but it is the distraction of our own failings and the humility of community that allow for redemption.
Kathy Page’s remarkably thorough familiarity with a penal system that strives to balance the punitive hard time with the more merciful aspect of clinical-professional intervention is well combined in this wise and moving venture into both the institution and the mind of a criminal.
R. Gray Mitchem (Books in Canada)
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

“Page throws mixed up hope into a world where only fantasies and delusions dare to grow… when I got to the end of Alphabet, I found myself longing for more.” (Globe and Mail )

“…a wonderful book, peculiar, intense, revealing, challenging, exhausting and above all riveting…I kept saying to myself, how could she know this?” (The Guardian (UK) )

“Simon is real. Simon gets under your skin. You’ll keep reading Alphabet because you’ll want to understand how Simon got to Z from A.” (Victoria Times-Colonist )

“A complex book, and splendidly written, Alphabet is an intensely compelling reading experience that speaks to the power of words and the significance of language in all its dangerous subtleties.” (The Edmonton Journal )

Alphabet is not just highly readable, but one of the strongest, most eloquent, most tightly constructed novels of the year…It is a measure of the quiet artistry of Alphabet that, out of material that would have been at home in the blackest of black comedies, Kathy Page has celebrated, with rare deftness, the resilience of the human heart.” (Sunday Telegraph )

“Sometimes novelists go too far – and sometimes they manage to demonstrate that too far is the place they needed to go.” (Time Out )

“Alphabet is a hopeful story, even though its subject, Simon Austen is a disturbed, inarticulate, illiterate murderer who is spending his life in a British Prison…. Simon has no miraculous breakthroughs; he doesn’t even get out of jail. But the baby steps he takes towards understanding himself give both him and the reader hope. Page’s writing is tight…her depiction of prison life is believable and enthralling.” (GEIST )

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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 (2)
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars The power of words, Mar 24 2006
By A Customer
This review is from: Alphabet (Paperback)
I was fascinated by the way Kathy Page used single words, that her protagonist tattooed onto his body, to show how his sense of self was derived from the perceptions of others. She gets right inside his mind and we come to see the frailties and the strengths of the people he comes into contact with, as well as the workings of the prison system from the inside. This is a challenging and intriguing read. It challenges our acceptance (or ignorance) of a brutal penal system and provides much food for thought and discussion.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Alphabet, Mar 23 2006
By A Customer
This review is from: Alphabet (Paperback)
I found this a compelling read - the author is able to get inside the skin of her characters and create an authentic, believable story. Her experience as 'writer in residence' in a men's prison has enabled her to provide the reader with the feeling of imprisonment and allows insight into the juxtaposition of good and evil in all human beings.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Gripping story with a tough message., Oct 26 2004
By 
This review is from: Alphabet (Hardcover)
This novel manages to combine an uncanny knowledge of the bizzare intricacies of the prison system within a compelling narrative. The characters are drawn with sympathy but this is no sentimental portrait of a killer. Rather it is the complexities of the protaganist's personality and the way that this is gradually, painfully slowly, changed over a long period and through bumpy encounters with inflexible authority as well as those who show a genuine concern, which carries conviction.

It is a good read as well as a telling reminder of the way in which we can fail to fully comprehend our fellow human beings.

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