Chuck Palahniuk is the author of the best-selling novels Fight Club, Survivor, Lullaby, Diary, Rant, Damned, and many other works of fiction. He lives in the Pacific Northwest.
Readers of Chuck Palahniuk's novels must gird themselves for the bizarre, the violent, the macabre, and the just plain disturbing. Having done that, they can then just enjoy the ride.
The story goes that Palahniuk wrote Fight Club out of frustration. Believing that his first submission to publishers (an early version of Invisible Monsters) was being rejected as too risky, he decided to take the gloves off, so to speak, and wrote something he never expected to see the light of day. Ironically, Fight Club was accepted for publication, and its subsequent filming by directory David Fincher earned the author an obsessive cult following.
The apocalyptic, blackly humorous story of a loner's entanglement with a charismatic but dangerous underground leader, Fight Club was the first in a series of controversial fiction that would keep Palahniuk in the spotlight. Since then, he has crafted strange, disturbing tales around unlikely subjects: a disfigured model bent on revenge (the revised Invisible Monsters) ... the last surviving member of a death cult (Survivor) ... a sex addict who resorts to a bizarre restaurant scam to pay the bills (Choke) ... a lethal African nursery rhyme (Lullaby) ... and so the list continues.
Although Palahniuk makes occasional forays into nonfiction, (e.g., Fugitives and Refugees and Stranger than Fiction), it is his novels that generate the most buzz. His outré plots and jump-cut storytelling are definitely not for everyone—some have likened them to the horrible accident you can't tear your eyes away from—but even critics can't help but be impressed by his flair for language, his talent for satire, and his sheer originality. Newsday wrote, "Palahniuk is one of the freshest, most intriguing voices to appear in a long time. He rearranges Vonnegut's sly humor, DeLillo's mordant social analysis, and Pynchon's antic surrealism (or is it R. Crumb's?) into a gleaming puzzle palace all his own."
Palahniuk has said that he has heard a lot from readers who were never readers before they saw his books, from boys in schools where his books are banned. This might be the best evidence that Palahniuk is a writer for a new age, introducing a (mostly male) audience to worlds on the page that usually only exist in technicolor nightmares.
Good To Know
Palahniuk (pronounced paul-a-nik) worked as a diesel mechanic for a trucking company before he became an author, jotting story notes for The Fight Club under trucks he was supposed to be working on.
Palahniuk's family has had a sad history of violence: His grandfather killed his grandmother and then committed suicide; later in life, his divorced father was murdered in 1999 by a girlfriend's ex-husband. The killer was convicted and sentenced to death in October, 2001. Palahniuk's book, Choke, was driven by an attempt to look at how sexual compulsion can destroy (see essay below for more).
When not working on his novels, Palahniuk has written features for Gear magazine, through which he befriended shock rocker Marilyn Manson; and is reportedly working on a script of the Katie Arnoldi novel Chemical Pink for Fight Club director David Fincher.
While writing, Palahniuk has said he listens to Nine Inch Nails, Marilyn Manson, and Radiohead.
To a reader who asked in a Barnes & Noble.com chat why the novel Invisible Monsters was not released in hardcover, Palahniuk responded: "My original request was not to have any of my books released as hardcovers b/c I felt guilty asking for over $20 for anything I had done. With Invisible Monsters I finally got my way."
Invisible Monsters was inspired by fashion magazines Palahniuk was reading at his laundromat, according to an interview with The Village Voice. "I love the language of fashion magazines. Eighteen adjectives and you find the word sweater at the end. 'Ethereal. Sacred.' I thought, Wouldn't it be fun to write a novel in this fashion magazine language, so packed with hyperbole?"
如果說《瞭不起的蓋茨比》是美國爵士時代的挽歌,那麼《搏擊俱樂部》就是現今後工業時代的怒吼。如果說《在路上》是“垮掉的一代”年輕人的《聖經》,那麼《搏擊俱樂部》就是針對現今消費時代年輕人的絕望而發的宣言。不過這麼說就不酷瞭。
Everything has fallen apart and is still falling apart. But do you know Who is Tyler Durden? Why there is Tyler Durden. He is smart, funny and charming and forceful and independent. And man look up to him and expect him to change his world. Tyler is cap...
評分看到这个作家在内地出版第二本书,想到自己以前也给《搏击俱乐部》写过文章,于是把旧文翻出来,瞧瞧。 搏击俱乐部的首要规则是你不能谈起搏击俱乐部。 搏击俱乐部的规则之二是你不能谈起搏击俱乐部。 作家查克•帕拉纽克在《搏击俱乐部》再版时不无得意地列举了这本书...
評分人怎么界定自己乐观还是悲观?通过认识你的人?通过自己? 人又怎么分析自己的意识?因为前一秒笑,就是开心?通过后一秒哭,就是悲伤? 生活在物质中你一定有太多厌恶和羞耻。因为唾弃钢筋水泥、光缆电器的,往往是离不开它们的人。 要知道你得到这些便利之前,你每天为之奋...
評分少了许多阅读乐趣. 很难说谁更好看,电影还是小说. ,都是很棒的作品.不过,先看的电影还是部分的剥夺了阅读小说的快乐. 爱德华诺顿在电影里当着老板的面自己打自己那段太酷了.比小说里描写得还要精彩
評分如果你的日子过得很滋润,如果你在房价高企的北京住着套间甚至还有几套房子,如果你还有满屋子的宜家家具,如果你开着好车在路上焦虑着,如果你有能力和心情去找有机蔬菜天天吃,如果你家孩子在不错的学校上学,如果你穿着白领在写字楼里勾心斗角,如果你是政府的公务员或者是...
"I know this because Tyler knows this."
评分這樣寫還是很閤適的,很適閤主角錯亂的性格。
评分大一時讀的第一本英文小說, 薄薄的, 看起來壓力不大~
评分炫爆瞭!讀原文更過癮啊!
评分聽的有聲書。。不是正常的那種書。。還用第二人稱。。我也沒聽懂太多。。感覺是咆哮體+YY神作吧。
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