THE FIRST RULE about fight club is you don't talk about fight club. Every weekend, in the basements and parking lots of bars across the country, young men with whitecollar jobs and failed lives take off their shoes and shirts and fight each other barehanded just as long as they have to. Then they go back to those jobs with blackened eyes and loosened teeth and the sense that they can handle anything. Fight club is the invention of Tyler Durden, projectionist, waiter, and dark, anarchic genius, and it's only the beginning of his plans for violent revenge on an empty consumer-culture world.
Chuck Palahniuk
With a disturbing but mordantly funny body of work that began with 1996's Fight Club, Chuck Palahniuk has become a cult author who regularly attracts both the interest of Hollywood and the bewilderment of readers who have never seen writing so fearless, modern, and smart.
Biography
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?"
老文~:) 你有理想吗? 你的理想是什么? 你是否正在努力实现自己的理想? 你还有多久才能实现自己的理想? 你的理想实现以后你会做什么? Fight Club doesn't give a fuck because the world doesn't give a fuck 爱是否能挽救所有的东西? :D 是否觉得书中的那些太空猴子...
评分罗豫/文 每代人都有每代人的青春,每一代的青春大都有相对应的青春文学。一代人年华老去之时,那些没有随之褪色的青春文学,成为时间轴上一个个醒目的坐标,甚至成为后人解读这个时代的关键材料。文学的时代性和永恒性在这里得到了某种统一:真正时代的就会成为永恒。有过《...
哇,这本书,我真的不知道从何说起。它不是那种读完之后能轻易放下的类型。那种沉浸感,那种让你在字里行间迷失又找回自己的感觉,实在太奇妙了。我记得最开始翻开它的时候,只是被封面的设计吸引,觉得有点酷。但一旦开始阅读,那种吸引力就变成了某种近乎强迫性的拉扯。情节的设计巧妙得就像是一个精心构建的迷宫,你以为你看到了出口,结果却走进了一个更深的角落。人物的刻画更是让我印象深刻,他们身上有着太多我似乎在哪里见过,又说不清的影子。那种复杂的情感纠葛,那种内心的挣扎,读起来就像是你自己也在经历一样。我甚至会因为某个角色的选择而感到愤怒,或者因为他们的困境而心生怜悯。这种代入感,不是随便哪本书都能做到的。而且,这本书的语言风格也很有意思,有时候犀利得像手术刀,有时候又带着一种难以言喻的诗意。它能让你在一瞬间感受到强烈的冲击,又能在下一秒让你陷入沉思。我读完之后,感觉自己的思维方式好像被某种东西悄悄地触动了一下,虽然具体是哪里,我一时半会儿也说不清楚。但我知道,它在我心里留下了很深的印记,像是一种烙印,挥之不去。
评分拿到这本书的时候,我只是随手翻了翻,并没有抱太大的期望。毕竟,市面上好书太多了,也很难让人眼前一亮。但事实证明,我低估了它。它所营造的氛围,简直就像是在我身边搭建了一个完全独立的维度。我完全能够想象到那个场景,那种声音,那种气味。作者在细节上的处理非常到位,每一个看似不经意的描写,都可能在后面起到至关重要的作用。我常常会在阅读的时候,被某一个细节戳中,然后反复琢磨它,试图从中找出更多的信息。这种探究的过程,就像是在玩一场侦探游戏,虽然没有直接的线索,但却充满了各种暗示和伏笔。而且,这本书的人物关系也特别有意思,他们之间那种微妙的互动,那种无法言说的默契,或者说是暗流涌动,都写得淋漓尽致。我感觉自己就像是一个旁观者,静静地看着他们在这个世界里沉浮,体验着他们的喜怒哀乐。这本书让我体会到了一种很特别的阅读体验,它不仅仅是文字的堆砌,更是一种情绪的传递,一种情感的共鸣。
评分我必须说,这本书真的很有力量。它不是那种提供慰藉,或者给你答案的书,而是一本让你直面问题,甚至让你去创造问题的书。我读它的过程,就像是在攀登一座险峻的山峰,每一步都充满了挑战,但每一次的登顶,都会让你看到更广阔的风景。作者在语言上的运用,非常精炼,每一个词语都仿佛经过了千锤百炼,充满了张力和感染力。他能够用最简单的句子,表达最复杂的情感,这让我感到非常震撼。而且,这本书所探讨的主题,也非常深刻,它触及了社会、人性、存在等很多宏大的议题,但却用一种非常个人化、非常具体的方式来呈现。我常常会在阅读的时候,停下来,思考作者想要表达的意思,他的用意是什么?他希望通过这本书,让读者产生怎样的共鸣?我感觉这本书就像是一面镜子,它照出了我身上那些我从未留意过的角落,也让我对自己的内心有了更深的认识。它不是一本让你感到舒服的书,但它绝对是一本能让你成长的书。
评分这本书简直就是一股洪流,裹挟着你往前冲,让你根本来不及喘息。从第一页开始,它就用一种近乎粗暴的方式,直接把你拽进了那个世界。那个世界充满了混乱,充满了不确定,但也有一种令人着迷的原始的生命力。我读它的过程,就像是在参加一场喧嚣的派对,你会被各种声音、各种情绪包围,有时候会觉得有点眩晕,但又忍不住想继续探索下去。作者的叙事手法非常大胆,他似乎并不在意读者能不能完全理解,而是直接把最赤裸的东西摆在你面前。那种未经修饰的真实感,有时候会让人很不舒服,但恰恰是这种不舒服,才让你意识到,这才是生活本来的样子,至少是它被隐藏起来的一面。我常常在想,那些角色是如何一步步走到今天的?他们的选择,他们的挣扎,背后到底有着怎样的驱动力?这本书给了我很多思考的空间,它挑战了我一些既有的观念,也让我重新审视了一些我曾经习以为常的东西。它不是一本让你感到轻松愉悦的书,但它绝对是一本让你读完之后,会感觉自己发生了一些改变的书。那种改变,可能很微小,但却是真实存在的。
评分这本书,让我彻底打破了对“正常”的定义。它完全颠覆了我之前对很多事情的认知,那种冲击力,简直就像是把我之前构建起来的一切都推翻了一遍。作者的笔触带着一种非常锋利的攻击性,他毫不留情地揭露了人性中那些阴暗、扭曲的部分,而且这种揭露,不是那种故作深沉的,而是带着一种近乎疯狂的坦诚。我读的时候,有好几次都忍不住放下书,然后深呼吸几下,试图消化那些内容。那种感觉,就像是在直面一个巨大的黑洞,你会被它巨大的引力所吸引,但同时又会感到深深的恐惧。这本书的叙事结构也非常独特,它不遵循传统的线性叙事,而是充满了跳跃和重复,但这种跳跃和重复,却恰恰构成了它独特的魅力。它让你在迷失和寻找之间反复切换,每一次的“找到”,都伴随着新的疑问。我读完之后,感觉自己像是在一个陌生的城市里醒来,周围的一切都似曾相识,但又完全陌生。它让我开始思考,我们所处的这个世界,究竟是什么样的?那些我们认为理所当然的东西,是否真的如此?
评分第一本英语长篇小说
评分第一本英语长篇小说
评分第一本英语长篇小说
评分让人耳目一新,虽然没看太明白,不过很好看
评分让人耳目一新,虽然没看太明白,不过很好看
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