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The Headmaster Ritual [Paperback]

Taylor Antrim (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 9, 2007
Taylor Antrim’s debut novel is a darkly comic, clear-eyed look at hidden worlds whose complexities and rules can be understood only from inside: the insular hothouse of boarding school, the thorny dynamics between father and son, and the self-delusion of blind ideological commitment.

Dyer Martin, a new history teacher at the prestigious Britton School, arrives in the fall ready to close the door on the failures and disappointments of his past: a disastrous first job, a broken relationship, and acute uncertainty about his future. James, a lonely senior, just wants to make it through his last year unscathed, avoiding both the brutal hazing of dorm life and the stern and unforgiving eye of his father, the school’s politically radical headmaster, Edward Wolfe.

Soon, however, both Dyer and James are inescapably drawn into Wolfe’s hidden agenda for Britton, as the headmaster orders Dyer to set up and run a Model UN Club for students. As the United States moves steadily toward a conflict with an increasingly hostile North Korea -- whose pursuit of nuclear technology is pushing the world to the brink of nuclear Armageddon -- Wolfe’s political fervor begins to consume him, and he sets in motion a plan that will jeopardize his job, his school, and even the life of his own son.

With precisely controlled, deceptively subtle storytelling, The Headmaster Ritual is an insightful and captivating examination of the halting, complicated course young men must chart to shake off the influence of fathers -- and father figures -- while refining their convictions about the world and their place in it.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Political radicalism, boarding school cruelty and the specter of a showdown with a nuclear North Korea fuel Antrim's debut novel with mostly winning results. Fleeing job and girlfriend disasters, Dyer Martin takes a job as a history teacher at the tony Britton School, an Andover-like boarding school run by Headmaster Wolfe, a 1960s radical–turned– preppy–fundraiser whose paranoia is displayed early and often. Wolfe's son, James, meanwhile, has been quietly attending Britton, but after his father forces him to move into the student dorm for his senior year, his fellow students haze the brainy and socially awkward young man. While James negotiates the stormy waters of adolescence (the centerpiece is his crush on a girl who may be romantically involved with a bully), an increasingly erratic Wolfe orders Dyer to take a team of students to the Model U.N. conference as representatives of North Korea. Dyer, however, is suspicious of Wolfe's motives, especially after he sees Wolfe covertly meet in the middle of the night with a mysterious Asian man. All is revealed at the conference, though the climax is marred by a chain of events that defies reason. Well-drawn characters and tight dialogue add appeal to Antrim's keenly observed satire. (July)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From The New Yorker

Set at an exclusive Massachusetts private school, this début novel addresses the angst—both teen-age and adult—that percolates on a prep-school campus. Dyer Martin, in crisis after a disastrous foray into real estate, has taken a position in the history department; one of his pupils, James, is the timid son of the formidable headmaster, once tenured at Harvard and now determined to shake up the conservative and complacent privilege of his new domain. James and Dyer, beset by the outrages of bullies and the bewildering behavior of women, triumph, inevitably, over both. Like Curtis Sittenfeld in her novel "Prep," Antrim dwells on the rituals of boarding-school life—the rigid hierarchies, the code of silence that allows hazing to flourish—but he does not entirely succeed in illuminating the resonance of all this for his characters’ interior lives
Copyright © 2007 Click here to subscribe to The New Yorker

Product Details

  • Paperback: 309 pages
  • Publisher: Mariner Books; None edition (June 9, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0618756825
  • ISBN-13: 978-0618756827
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 6.6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,665,846 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not a classic, the publisher blurb tells you what it wishes it were, August 31, 2007
This review is from: The Headmaster Ritual (Paperback)
Its supposedly grand themes: absent fathers, making your way for yourself, gritty conflict (at personal and international levels), political ideology gone mad. True the book has these elements. I'm not sure I'd really call them themes since they pop in and out here and there as is convenient. They don't particularly parallel or reinforce each other into any particularly profound or coherent whole. They're just scattered about and the publisher's description wants us to think they're more meaningful than they are.

On the plus side the writing is often lively and with interesting details. The reading is detailed and somewhat addictive. The author succeeds in defining a mood for the boarding school, creating tension and making us want to find out what is going on.

I agree with other reviewers that the author is trying to portray a dark, supposedly "realistic" side to things that is supposed to be more profound than it actually is. This isn't Catcher in the Rye or Lord of the Flies, though. The power struggles, the bungled sexual desires and conquests make me think it should've been headier than it actually turns out to be.

It's very detail-rich, which is good at times, but less good at other times. Details to give realism are nice, but the author sometimes gives names and large paragraphs to characters that are relatively to completely unimportant (and are never seen again in any meaningful ways). There are too many characters introduced within the first 100 pages with few cues about which will later turn out to be important and which unimportant.

The book is a nice effort. I wanted to find out what happened and continued reading. The book was enjoyable, though perhaps needed some tightening and finesse.

Oh, by the way, if you go in expecting a dark comedy you'll be disappointed. It's not so much comedic as dark.
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10 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Puerile Pulp, July 11, 2007
This review is from: The Headmaster Ritual (Paperback)
Quick plot summary: Fired from his sales job in LA, Dyer Martin heads east and lands a teaching position at a toney Philips Andover-like prep school where the story picks up. His universe becomes one of jocks & nerds. This age old precept carries the story with the bookish son of Headmaster Wolfe enduring teenage angst throughout the 300 pages. Professor Martin falls for a fellow faculty member, but she has some cloudy romantic past; the bookish son falls for pretty Jane, but Jane loves jocks. Angry Headmaster Wolfe, whose wife left him to go build nukes for the coming war on the Korean peninsula, is bent on his own secret mission of partnering with shady operatives from the Democratic People's Republic. Of Korea? Of Cambridge, MA? We can't be sure. The novel climaxes with the students participating in a model United Nations Conference in NYC. Sort of Jocks & Jills meet Guns & Butter.

Antrim is a good writer, and strings together very good descriptions of the prep school setting, homes in Boston & Knoxville, and especially New York City street scenes. But, A SEPARATE PEACE this is not. Similarly, anyone looking for a humorous read, (because it is promoted heavily by Christopher Buckley,) will be as disappointed as I.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Headmaster Problem, May 13, 2010
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BIB "BIB" (Oxford,, MD USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Headmaster Ritual (Paperback)
I don't understand the negativity here. This book has so much to offer, not only about boarding school life and styles, but the subject matter about North Korea - to me, and probably most readers, was most illuminating. A little sex and scandal thrown in made the pages turn that much faster. If there is a sequel in the offing, I'll be ready for it.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
range house, south quad
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Taylor Antrim, The Headmaster Ritual, North Korea, Sam Rafton, New York, Chris Nolan, Smithson Way, George Choe, Jane Hirsch, Randy Holiday, Greg Smile, Henry Fieldspar, Chip Lee, Dean Lambert, Headmaster Wolfe, James Wolfe, Bailey House, Louise Hampton, Ramm Hall, Jim Simon, Cary Street, Reservoir Road, East Sea, Roberta O'Brien, Tipton Pal
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