TheChilly
01-14-2011, 09:30 PM
Even though "Glamorama" is my all-time favorite work from this author, I still cannot argue that his 1991 work, "American Psycho" is his undisputed magnum opus for many reasons. Here, Ellis is at his finest and most accomplished, using a culmination of many of his techniques from his earlier two novels ("Less Than Zero" and "The Rules of Attraction"), be it run-on sentences, passages that don't have a beginning and an ending, nihilistic characters, and disturbing sequences of violence, as well as black, black humor, to provide a scathing social commentary on the impact of capitalism on society, as well as an attack on the yuppie culture phenomenon of the 80's.
The novel is basically a character study of Manhattan executive Patrick Bateman, as he goes about his day scheduling lunches and meetings with his social circle of colleagues that are just as shallow as he is, returning videotapes, working out, giving fashion advice, and hitting up nightclubs under a cocaine-fueled haze. His nights are "spent in ways we cannot begin to fathom" (courtesy of back cover of Vintage paperback). By that, it means that he spends his nights committing horrific and nightmarish acts of violence, be it cannibalism, sexual assault, murder, and other acts of violence that pushes the envelope on how violence is portrayed in a literary medium, and, in a depressing way, symbolizes the only way Patrick can even express himself, as he hates everyone around him, including his brother Sean Bateman (one of three protagonists of "The Rules of Attraction. Makes an appearance in the chapter, "Birthday, Brothers"), his social circle, his fiance Evelyn, and the many, many victims and businessmen that plague his life. The only main character he cannot bring himself to murder is his secretary Jean, because, as revealed in the novel, she shows a sense of humanity and is not corrupted by the extensively yuppie and capitalist environment that he is surrounded by.
The murders and sexual acts also reflect and represent Bateman's state of mind. The murders begin realistically, such as stabbing a depressed bum in the eye, and proceed to evolve into even crazier acts that completely transcend the mind, be it violent rape, cannibalism, murder with weaponry like nail-guns, jumper cables, and... other interesting tools (Don't forget an axe!). As the murders become increasingly more graphic, Bateman becomes increasingly more faceless, until his sanity collapses entirely in the chapter "Chase, Manhattan", where he goes on a massive killing spree across Manhattan in the midst of vertigo.
I feel the highlights of "American Psycho" are many, ranging from chapters that are devoted to Patrick providing personal thoughts and critiques on Genesis, Huey Lewis & The News, and Whitney Houston, the aforementioned "Chase, Manhattan", that switches from first-person to third-person perspective to represent Patrick's collapsing sanity and thought process, and "A Glimpse of a Thursday Afternoon", which describes a full-league anxiety attack that Patrick suffers in graphic detail, the paragraphs clumped together to portray the incident. The prose is also at its finest, ranging from vivid and exhaustingly detailed descriptions of everything in general to graphic and frighteningly realistic descriptions of the murders that he commits throughout the novel. Did I also mention that "American Psycho" REEKS of jet-black humor?
All in all, this novel is definitely not for the faint of heart. You, the reader, will be outraged. You will be sickened. You will be disgusted and disturbed, but if you can look past the graphic carnage, you will find an honest truth about our society, that money rules everything and the superficial call the shots and dictate the times that we are heading towards.
I highly recommend this novel to any serious literary (and splatterpunk) fiction freak. Be advised... "American Psycho" is a disturbing and scathing black comedy that will not only make you chuckle, but will make you never forget.
The novel is basically a character study of Manhattan executive Patrick Bateman, as he goes about his day scheduling lunches and meetings with his social circle of colleagues that are just as shallow as he is, returning videotapes, working out, giving fashion advice, and hitting up nightclubs under a cocaine-fueled haze. His nights are "spent in ways we cannot begin to fathom" (courtesy of back cover of Vintage paperback). By that, it means that he spends his nights committing horrific and nightmarish acts of violence, be it cannibalism, sexual assault, murder, and other acts of violence that pushes the envelope on how violence is portrayed in a literary medium, and, in a depressing way, symbolizes the only way Patrick can even express himself, as he hates everyone around him, including his brother Sean Bateman (one of three protagonists of "The Rules of Attraction. Makes an appearance in the chapter, "Birthday, Brothers"), his social circle, his fiance Evelyn, and the many, many victims and businessmen that plague his life. The only main character he cannot bring himself to murder is his secretary Jean, because, as revealed in the novel, she shows a sense of humanity and is not corrupted by the extensively yuppie and capitalist environment that he is surrounded by.
The murders and sexual acts also reflect and represent Bateman's state of mind. The murders begin realistically, such as stabbing a depressed bum in the eye, and proceed to evolve into even crazier acts that completely transcend the mind, be it violent rape, cannibalism, murder with weaponry like nail-guns, jumper cables, and... other interesting tools (Don't forget an axe!). As the murders become increasingly more graphic, Bateman becomes increasingly more faceless, until his sanity collapses entirely in the chapter "Chase, Manhattan", where he goes on a massive killing spree across Manhattan in the midst of vertigo.
I feel the highlights of "American Psycho" are many, ranging from chapters that are devoted to Patrick providing personal thoughts and critiques on Genesis, Huey Lewis & The News, and Whitney Houston, the aforementioned "Chase, Manhattan", that switches from first-person to third-person perspective to represent Patrick's collapsing sanity and thought process, and "A Glimpse of a Thursday Afternoon", which describes a full-league anxiety attack that Patrick suffers in graphic detail, the paragraphs clumped together to portray the incident. The prose is also at its finest, ranging from vivid and exhaustingly detailed descriptions of everything in general to graphic and frighteningly realistic descriptions of the murders that he commits throughout the novel. Did I also mention that "American Psycho" REEKS of jet-black humor?
All in all, this novel is definitely not for the faint of heart. You, the reader, will be outraged. You will be sickened. You will be disgusted and disturbed, but if you can look past the graphic carnage, you will find an honest truth about our society, that money rules everything and the superficial call the shots and dictate the times that we are heading towards.
I highly recommend this novel to any serious literary (and splatterpunk) fiction freak. Be advised... "American Psycho" is a disturbing and scathing black comedy that will not only make you chuckle, but will make you never forget.