|
American Psycho | 
enlarge | Author: Bret Easton Ellis Publisher: Vintage Category: Book
List Price: CDN$ 16.95 Buy New: CDN$ 9.06 You Save: CDN$ 7.89 (47%)
New (19) Used (17) from CDN$ 9.06
Rating: 957 reviews Sales Rank: 8628
Media: Paperback Pages: 416 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.2 x 0.9
ISBN: 0679735771 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780679735779 ASIN: 0679735771
Publication Date: March 6, 1991 Availability: Usually ships within 1 - 2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Ships from USA. All items are Brand New! Delivery takes about 10-14 Working Days.
| |
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Chronique amazon.fr Patrick Bateman est un jeune homme riche, beau et intelligent. Un golden boy de Wall Street a qui tout reussit. Il est par ailleurs parfaitement au fait des techniques de nettoyage et desincrustage de la peau les plus efficaces, il s'applique les meilleures cremes pour le visage, ne porte que des vetements de grands couturiers, utilise les derniers gadgets technologiques et passe ses soirees au Tunnel, la boite branchee du moment. Bien sur, tous ses amis sont comme lui. La seule difference, c'est qu'en plus Patrick Bateman viole, torture et tue. Mais il ne ressent jamais rien. Juste une legere contrariete lorsque ses scenarii ne se deroulent pas exactement comme prevu. A sa sortie en 1991, le roman d'Ellis suscita une vive emotion, aussi bien a cause de ses scenes d'horreur decrites quasi cliniquement que de son principal personnage, Bateman, symbole de la reussite economique, enfant prodige travesti en tueur sadique et immoral. Il faut dire qu'Ellis s'attaque de front a tous les exces de superficialite de l'Occident contemporain : sexe, culte du corps, de la richesse et de la jeunesse. Une entreprise de destruction commencee tres tot avec son premier roman Moins que zero ecrit alors qu'il avait 22 ans et que l'on retrouve dans Glamorama. Bret Easton Ellis ou l'art de mettre de l'acide sur les plaies beantes de la societe. --Stellio Paris
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 952 more reviews...
Though Ellis isn't great, this book is December 13, 2007 Benjamin Anderson (Fredericton, NB CAN) 'American Psycho' is a truly great book. Extremely witty, dark and well written. Easily his best book. In fact, none of his others really compare...at all. Not an enlightening read, but very fun.
Not for the faint hearted March 23, 2007 Warren P.B. (Montreal) American Psycho is a literary masterpiece. The story goes from hilarious situation and does a 180 degree turn right into the morbidly disturbing. Nonetheless it is hard to put this down, even though some of the parts can be a tad bit tough to swallow. This book will make your skin crawl. But it will also make you stop and think. Personally I don't believe Ellis intended it to target just the yuppies of the 1980's. I believe the point is a serial killer could be anyone you know. The descriptions of Bateman and his cronies are very much the same. Bateman is exactly like everyone else. As a matter of fact throughout the entire book he is mistakenly identified as other yuppie men. Likewise, his buddies are always arguing as to who is sitting at the end of the bar. If you're not faint-of-heart and like a riveting read, try American Psycho along with McCrae's "Katzenjammer" which is not about what it sounds like, but rather a complex psychological look at corporate greed, bad art, New York, and dysfunction. It's the flip side of "Psycho."
Not for the faint-hearted March 18, 2006 Warren P.B. (Montreal) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
American Psycho is a literary masterpiece. The story goes from hilarious situation and does a 180 degree turn right into the morbidly disturbing. Nonetheless it is hard to put this down, even though some of the parts can be a tad bit tough to swallow. This book will make your skin crawl. But it will also make you stop and think. Personally I don't believe Ellis intended it to target just the yuppies of the 1980's. I believe the point is a serial killer could be anyone you know. The descriptions of Bateman and his cronies are very much the same. Bateman is exactly like everyone else. As a matter of fact throughout the entire book he is mistakenly identified as other yuppie men. Likewise, his buddies are always arguing as to who is sitting at the end of the bar. If you're not faint-of-heart and like a riveting read, try American Psycho along with McCrae's "Katzenjammer" which is not about what it sounds like, but rather a complex psychological look at corporate greed, bad art, New York, and dysfunction. It's the flip side of "Psycho."
Make Up Your OWN Mind May 27, 2005 Karl Kilian (Barre, VT) 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
I decided to read American Psycho after hearing the title whispered in social circles. It's so violent. Too graphic. What's the point? Comments only fueled my desire to read the novel Bret Easton Ellis tried to get published in 1992, without great success, for some time.No matter the genre, a novel is successful if it makes the reader think, pause and reassess the world. Ellis' novel offers a satirical look into the pampered New York elite through the eyes of an original and sociopath main character. What Works: Narration: The first-person narration captures the reader instantly, introducing Patrick's innermost thoughts and fastidious rituals, such as cleaning his body with more products than your local Rite-Aid. Patrick takes the reader along to trendy, $25-cover clubs, scouting for "hardbodies" and lamenting about cheap drugs sold on the dance floor. Ellis has made a wise choice using Patrick as the narrator. As you read, you are engaged, participating. What is interesting is how the reader is both involved, and detached simultaneously (bringing me to the next point...) Characters: Are sufficiently flat and underdeveloped, working both to keep the reader from empathizing too greatly with a victim, while also serving to support the satirical edge that in life, nobody gets too close. Patrick's monotonous lifestyle of work, working out, renting videos and spotting Les Miserables posters is all too familiar. He (as so many other characters in the book) cannot tell one acquaintance from another. Everyone in Patrick's world looks alike, corporate paper dolls with trophy wives/ lovers. Structure: Easton uses run-on sentences and fragments to simulate the breakdown of Bateman's mind. Some chapters will end with an incomplete thought, others will explode with angry stream-of-consciousness. Satire: The violence in the novel is not simply a gruesome, gratuitous tool. Granted, Bateman conceives of some of the most "innovative" murder scenes around, yet Bateman is raging against his deadened society, trying to "feel something." Bateman's actions mock everything our capitalistic society holds dear--wealth, status, the rat race, the American dream. What Doesn't Work: Real or Illusion? Readers wonder if Ellis has created a scenario where all of the events are completely fabricated in Bateman's mind. Some ambiguity in the plot leads to this conclusion--a maid cleaning his apartment after a slaughter and "not noticing anything," dry cleaners ignoring repeated bloodstains on dress shirts, a realtor selling an acquaintance's apartment after Bateman left a grisly tableau behind (which is later inexplicably cleaned & unreported to police--by whom?) This uncertainty may frustrate you. So now when I hear "It's so violent, too graphic, what's the point?" I wonder if it refers to the innovative novel, American Psycho, or perhaps life itself? You decide. Pick up a copy! Another book I need to recommend -- completely unrelated to Ellis, but very much on my mind since I purchased it off Amazon is "The Losers' Club: Complete Restored Edition" by Richard Perez, an exceptional, highly entertaining little novel I can't stop thinking about.
What Was This? November 5, 2004 Ez (Melbourne, Australia) 0 out of 6 found this review helpful
Patrick Bateman is a wealthy New Yorker with a penchant for sex and killing people. The characters were very annoying. There were chapters on the music of Genesis, Whitney Houston, and Huey Lewis and the News, and I don't know what they had to do with the story. There wasn't a conclusive ending. What the hell was this? (B)
|
|
|
|
Merlin's Cave | |