Half Mast by Christopher Null

Half Mast, the first novel from FilmCritic.com founder Christopher Null, is a stunning accomplishment, achieving several difficult tasks simultaneously: gripping caper yarn, perceptive coming of age story, keen observation and commentary on drastic Darwinian social stratification in school (with echoes of Columbine, et al), and a devastating look at the inexorable manifestation of the internal into the external which some call fate.

The main character and narrator is Alex, whom we meet through his journal written at the urging of his therapist. Alex is in his late-twenties, deeply troubled, virtually autistic in his lack of human affect, and desperately seeking some kind of relief from his internal prison.

Through his journal entries we learn the source of his pain and self-repression: murder in the coldest, most protracted of bloods.

Alex is a glib, gifted and geeky 8th grader who leaves the success of middle school behind for the jungle of one of the nation's largest high schools, where the size of the student body - 5,000 strong - creates a dangerous anonymity that fosters fierce stratification without the leavening agent of adult engagement with that social structure: it's just too big for the adults to know what the hell is going on.

My junior high in SoCal had about 3,000 kids in three grades, massive, socially stratified, scary, somewhat dangerous. Null beautifully captures the Lord of the Flies cruelty of insecure adolescents grasping for their place on the ladder, mashing the faces of those below them under heel. If anything, junior high may be more cruel than high school but at least the capacity for damage is less with smaller physical size and relatively little personal mobility.

My personal story is the inverse of Alex's: I moved from a huge, diverse, semi-urban junior high near the LA Harbor, to a small (800 for four grades), remarkably homogeneous upper-middle class high school in suburban Cleveland. Other than the weather, it was like waking up in heaven.

In a huge school there is so much talent to draw from due to sheer numbers, that only the very best in any given activity or interest can take part in them - you have severe specialization. In a small school you can take part in most anything that interests you: sports, arts, activities, and there is more social fluidity as well. I was a member of various groups: jocks, partiers, music, theater, intellectuals, and able to move pretty freely between them, which had not been the case in the huge junior high.

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  • Half Mast Half Mast

    Alex lives the life of a typical suburban kid, until his first day of high school brings the wrath of the school bully and star football player, Steve. After years of abuse, Alex turns the tables on ...

Article comments

  • 1 - Ryan

    Feb 13, 2003 at 8:53 pm

    I own this. Now I just need to read it!

  • 2 - tom

    Mar 31, 2003 at 7:12 am

    anyone know a url to download this book online?

  • 3 - Eric Olsen

    Mar 31, 2003 at 8:21 am

    Click on the ad for the book on the left - that should take you to the home site.

  • 4 - Eric Olsen

    Mar 31, 2003 at 8:55 am

    Sorrym, the ad is gone - go here http://www.sutropress.com/

  • 5 - Jeff Lee

    May 10, 2003 at 2:19 pm

    Anyone know what kind of car alex(the narrator) drives in this book?

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