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               | Brief Reviews. Non-Fiction by R. Gray Mitchem
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 girlùa spiritual, intellectual 
vessel of limitless potentialùwhose 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 onùits 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 chestùindeed the flesh made wordùand 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 hospitalùstill a part of the larger British 
state-run systemùwhere 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 womanùnot 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. 				 
 
                      
                    
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