Friday, March 16, 2012

Fight Club: A Novel [Kindle Edition]


you're want to buy Fight Club: A Novel [Kindle Edition],yes ..! you comes at the right place. you can get special discount for Fight Club: A Novel [Kindle Edition].You can choose to buy a product and Fight Club: A Novel [Kindle Edition] at the Best Price Online with Secure Transaction Here...





other Customer Rating:



read more Details

Featuring soap produced from human fat, waiters at high-class restaurants that do unmentionable things to soup plus an underground organization dedicated to inflicting a violent anarchy upon the land, Palahniuk's apocalyptic first novel is clearly not for your faint of heart. The unnamed (and extremely unreliable) narrator, who makes his living investigating accidents for the car company in order to evaluate their liability, is combating insomnia as well as a general a sense anomie by attending a steady group of support-group meetings for the grievously ill, at considered one of which (testicular cancer) he meets a woman named Marla. She and also the narrator get in a love triangle of sorts with Tyler Durden, a mysterious and gleefully destructive kid with whom the narrator starts a fight club, a secret society that provides young professionals the opportunity to beat each other to some bloody pulp. Mayhem ensues, beginning while using narrator's condo exploding and culminating with a terrorist attack about the world's tallest building. Writing within an ironic deadpan and including something to offend everyone, Palahniuk is a risky writer who takes chances galore, especially having a particularly bizarre plot twist he throws in late in the book. Caustic, outrageous, bleakly funny, violent and try to unsettling, Palahniuk's utterly original creation can make even the most jaded reader sit up and take notice. Movie rights to Fox 2000.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

In the planet of Fight Club, healthy young adults head to meetings of cancer support groups since there can they find human warmth and compassion. It's a global where young men gather inside basements of bars to address strangers "just as long as they have to." And it's actually a world where "nobody cared if he lived or died, as well as the feeling was fucking mutual." Messianic nihilist Tyler Durden may be the inventor of Fight Club. Soon thousands of young men through the country are reporting to their work cubes with flattened noses, blackened eyes, and shattered teeth, looking to their next bare-knuckle maiming. The oracular, increasingly mysterious Durden then starts to harness the despair, alienation, and violence he sees so clearly into complete anarchy. Every generation frightens and unnerves its parents, and Palahniuk's first novel is gen X's most articulate assault yet on baby-boomer sensibilities. This can be a dark and disturbing book that dials straight into youthful angst and can likely horrify the mother and father of teens and twentysomethings. It is also a powerful, and possibly brilliant, first novel. Thomas Gaughan






0 comments:

Post a Comment