Twelve
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Product Description
From The Catcher in the Rye, to The Basketball Diaries, to Less than Zero, there have been books that captured the soul of a generation. Now comes a novel for the new millennium -- Twelve, a chilling chronicle of urban adolescence that has already created an international sensation. This is not a coming-of-age novel because these kids never had a childhood; rather it is a rare look into a sealed world rendered with authority and wit. Set in Manhattan between Christmas and New Year's Eve, from the housing projects of Harlem to the penthouses of Park Avenue, it is the story of White Mike, a seventeen-year-old prep-school dropout turned drug dealer, and his privileged peers. White Mike is a loner and an anomaly: he doesn't drink, doesn't smoke, and he never uses drugs. His mother is dead and his father is depressed -- but they're hardly more absent than the other parents who are off on holiday in Bali or business in Brussels, leaving hired help to look the other way while the kids of Twelve stay home in their multimillion-dollar co-ops and town houses, partying with drugs and sex and escalating violence. Access to cash is a given here and the kids of Twelve have it all; Chris and Claude and Hunter and Laura have the best, and most, of everything, but are constantly looking for something more exotic, and more dangerous: like the new designer drug, twelve. From page one, the seventeen-year-old author, whose clarity and skill far exceed his years, sets an icy pace toward an apocalyptic climax. In the penultimate party scene, when we thought we couldn't be surprised, we are shocked. And throughout the book, where there is an excess of everything but hope, we are filled with that very emotion as White Mike struggles for nothing less than his soul. "In Twelve, Nick McDonell displays a remarkable arsenal of gifts -- wit, near poetic concision, a terrific eye and ear...." -- Richard Price "Nick McDonell is the real thing, a powerful young writer ... The ratio of age to talent is horrifying." -- Hunter S. Thompson
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #102159 in Books
- Published on: 2003-04-18
- Released on: 2003-04-18
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: .68" h x 5.58" w x 8.24" l, .64 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 256 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Amazon.com
On the surface, Nick McDonell's debut novel Twelve (written when the well-connected former prep-schooler was 17) feels like an East Coast Less Than Zero: the laconic style and episodic plot; the privileged ennui, drugs, and pop culture sensibility (with sprinklings of Prada, FUBU, North Face, and Nokia replacing Zero's Armani, English Beat T-shirts, Wayfarer sunglasses, and Betamax); the Christmas break setting; even the italicized flashbacks--it's all there. But Twelve also shares its casual, youthful arrogance with the jaded aggressiveness and jagged style of Larry Clark's Kids.
McDonell has crafted a pulsing narrative that clips along at an after-hours pace, pulling the reader along like an ominous rip tide, shifting easily from the Upper East Side to Harlem to Central Park to introduce a cast of loosely connected characters. White Mike, Twelve's clean-living, Cheerios-loving, milkshake-drinking drug dealer, drives the majority of the barely-there plot. ("Mike uses a teaspoon to eat his cereal, not a big soup spoon, because he likes to have less milk in his mouth with each bite" is about as deep as it gets.) Character development is limited to an easy shorthand ("Long legs, large breasts, blond hair, blue eyes, high cheekbones.") that results in a simple surface-skimming, leaving one too many caricatures of the very youth culture McDonell is writing about. Readers will see the blood-spattered, penultimate set piece coming down Fifth Avenue from page one, but any potential shock value or drama is immediately deflated in Twelve's head-scratching hangover of a denouement. --Brad Thomas Parsons
Books in Canada
What immediately strikes the reader upon picking up Nick McDonell’s first novel, Twelve, is that the publisher was able to wrangle a cover blurb from reclusive gonzo giant Hunter S. Thompson. That Dr. Thompson postponed his own important work—that of ingesting LSD and firing large calibre tracer bullets at the empty Jim Beam bottles lining his fence—in order to read McDonell’s book and then dictate a message to a courageous assistant is in itself impressive. What makes Thompson’s efforts all the more notable is that they’re in service of praising an author who is only eighteen years old.
McDonell, a native New Yorker, sets his tale in that city, and has us follow the misadventures and existential crisis of his young protagonist, White Mike—a straight, teetotalling drug dealer fresh out of high school who buys his product in Harlem and flips it to a rich clientele on Park Avenue. Haunted by the death of his mother from cancer, and unable to relate to the absentee father with whom he sometimes shares an apartment, he navigates the spaces between decaying ghettos and gleaming high-rises, brokering deals and making deliveries.
White Mike’s customers are private school kids whose parents are on permanent vacation elsewhere, members of a leisure class who have nose jobs and disposable incomes and great chasms of boredom in their lives that White Mike fills with chemical joy. As he himself quite astutely notes, they’re “soft kids trying to get some weed, have some fun, fill the time, talk a certain way, walk a certain way, be a certain way because the way they come from is uncertain and unclear and uncool and with no direction, because no one really has anything to do, so they all do the same thing . . . and everyone wants and wants and wants.”
One of White Mike’s customers is Jessica, a teenaged, social-climbing party girl who has graduated from pot to a new synthetic drug on the streets called Twelve. Near the beginning of the novel, White Mike makes the mistake of introducing her to his wholesaler, Lionel, a killer who dwells in a filthy, desperate New York that she has never known. Jessica’s use of Twelve takes off, and when her money runs out, she submits to a type of defilement that Lionel is only too eager to exploit. In the closing chapters, White Mike suffers a crisis of conscience over what he has wrought, and goes to find Jessica, intent on her salvation and his own.
McDonell’s prose is cool and emotionally distant. His sentences are mostly short and declarative, with a potent effect on the eye and mind as they are read in quick succession. He has a keen ear for the urban patois of his peers, and his pop culture references are up to the minute. His story is best read rapidly and in a single session; his terrific pacing sweeps the reader up and practically keelhauls him or her through a sea of angst and depravity to the story’s conclusion. But it is at this conclusion where disappointment awaits.
The end ing is a bloodbath, a tacked-on bit of ultraviolence that, I suppose, is meant to make us puzzle over the monstrousness of the act and the nihilism of its participants and come to the conclusion that adolescents do bad things when they are bored and neglected. It’s a narrative non sequitur, though, an act whose motivations fail to materialize in the characterizations he’s cultivated, and it’s not all that shocking, besides. For those of us who have seen movies like Larry Clark’s Kids or Steven Soderbergh’s Traffic, the story of dangerously amoral, self-destructive youths is a familiar one. For those of us who have seen the CNN footage of two angry, estranged boys in Columbine randomly eradicating their classmates and teachers at school before turning the guns on themselves, this seems derivative, sensational, and little else.
Hunter S. Thompson says of McDonell: “His trick is he writes the truth. I’m afraid he will do for his generation what I did for mine.” That’s a bold statement, and a largely unfounded one. While Thompson’s legacy looms large in American letters, McDonell’s future impact remains uncertain. That he writes the truth is not enough; he has to explore regions of it that aren’t so well-trod, advance a version of it that moves beyond the merely lurid into something truly, intellectually, provocative. Twelve falls short of being a masterwork in every way, but it’s competent enough to elude some status as a mere curiosity. Consider it a harbinger of great novels to come, if and when McDonell’s maturity and good judgement catch up to his talent.
Matt Sturrock (Books in Canada)
From Publishers Weekly
"White Mike" dresses in an overcoat and lives with his dad on Manhattan's Upper East Side (his mom died of breast cancer not too long ago). The 17-year-old doesn't smoke, doesn't drink and doesn't do drugs. He dropped out of high school and now sells drugs pot and an Ecstasy-like upper called "twelve" to the city's moneyed teens. In this shocker of a first novel, McDonell who was 17 when he wrote it carries readers through White Mike's frantically spinning world, one alternately peopled with obscenely wealthy teenagers who live in gated townhouses with parents rarely in town and FUBU-clad basketball players in Harlem. In terse, controlled prose, McDonell describes five days in White Mike's life during Christmas break. He introduces a host of characters, ranging from Sara Ludlow ("the hottest girl at her school by, like, a lot") to Lionel ("a creepy dude" with "brown and yellow bloodshot eyes" who also sells drugs), writing mainly in the present tense, but sometimes flashing back in italics. His prose darts from one scene and character to the next, much like a cab zipping down city streets, halting quickly at a red light and then accelerating madly as soon as the light turns green. And although it brims with New York references e.g., the MetLife Building and Lenox Hill Hospital this is really a story about excess and its effects. The final scene, at a raging New Year's Eve party, will leave readers stunned, as well as curious as to what might come next from this precocious writer.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
