Books : American Psycho
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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780679735779
ISBN: 0679735771
Label: Vintage
Manufacturer: Vintage
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 416
Publication Date: March 01, 1991
Publisher: Vintage
Release Date: March 06, 1991
Sales Rank: 3318
Studio: Vintage
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: Now a major motion picture from Lion's Gate Films starring Christian Bale (Metroland), Chloe Sevigny (The Last Days of Disco), Jared Leto (My So Called Life), and Reese Witherspoon (Cruel Intentions), and directed by Mary Harron (I Shot Andy Warhol).
In American Psycho, Bret Easton Ellis imaginatively explores the incomprehensible depths of madness and captures the insanity of violence in our time or any other. Patrick Bateman moves among the young and trendy in 1980s Manhattan. Young, handsome, and well educated, bateman earns his fortune on Wall Street by day while spending his nights in ways we cannot begin to fathom. Expressing his true self through torture and murder, Bateman prefigures an apocalyptic horror that no society could bear to confront.
Average Rating: 
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A good book. An important book, but be warned. It contains unmatched scenes of graphic violence.
This book will haunt you afterwards for a long time. Sometimes that's bad, but, more often it's good
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The only response that an intelligent person can have to this piece of crap is revulsion and dismay. I read a little of it near the end and found it entirely disgusting and worthless. It is despicable, and the author of such trash can only be looked upon as depraved. It is of no value whatsoever, and I can barely contain my rage in writing this review, that some readers found it 'hilarious'. The author is sick and needs to be put away.
Apparently some people have no idea what 'helpful' means.
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I had been meaning to read this book for a long time, and I must say that I am glad to have finally read it. There is horror and gore in this book, but the only purpose is not to make you sick. Pat Bateman exists in a society that most of us will never understand. His ability to keep up appearances in a world filled with designer clothes and daily facials in the face of such a psychopathic, blood-crazy mental state really makes you think. People are so caught up in their own worlds that Pat Bateman can get away with murder. If you can understand the book for what it is...I encourage you to take it on.
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For the first time in my reading career (and I have done a lot of reading) I not only didn't finish the book but deposited it in the wastebasket. I am not a prude but the sex really turned me off. Having been in the Marine Corps, I have seen my share of mayhem and carnage but enough was enough. I know we live in a violent era but when haven't we. I also became bored with the countless description of clothes and their manufacturers. I might just as well as have read a Sears catalog, men's section.
However, I did admire the author's writing style and his depiction of the Yuppie way of life even though it did seem over blown at times.
Can I recommend this book? I don't really know because I did not complete the book. But if you want to see the inside of cultural depravity give it a try. I'll even send you my copy free of charge. (U.S. only< please).
I do have one question. What was the symbolism of Les Miserables?
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By now it should not startle me that readers and critics in America, if not worldwide, are bad. I mean, really, really bad- to the point of wretchedness. Just yesternight I saw a major network newscast decrying the fact that over 20% of college graduates in this country are functionally illiterate. Add in those people who are deliterate- i.e.- can read and understand grammar, but are clueless as to the deeper things inside a narrative, or even a sentence- and it's no wonder that Bret Easton Ellis's 1991 novel American Psycho is so abysmally misunderstood. No, it's not a great book, nor a bad one. It's a book that has moments and good points, and could have been a classic had someone with editing skills done their job. Those who condemn it for being violent miss the point- it's a fantasy. Those who praise it for being a satire miss the point- it's a fantasy. Its best predecessor is not Fyodor Dostoevsky's Notes From The Underground, but Franz Kafka's The Metamorphosis, another symbolic work that explores what a protagonist who feels the world shuns him will act like. I should be angrier about this book's missing the boat editorially, but I guess the fact that so many people simply do not or cannot read is more fascinating to me than why the book ultimately fails. Ellis is not like his POMo brethren- David Foster Wallace, Dave Eggers, T.C. Boyle, nor Rick Moody, to name the most infamous of that band- because he actually has a bit of an idea about what goes into plot structure, ... Read More
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