Bumping a semi-dormant thread to say that I've been rereading American Psycho on the occasion of its 25th anniversary and I've found it as hilarious and entertaining as it was the first and second times I read it (circa 1994 and 2003, respectively).
Rolling Stone recently interviewed Bret Easton Ellis and discussed the novel's legacy and Patrick Bateman's opinions of Donald Trumps evolution from 1990 through the current primary races. That interview and the one they did in 1991 are worth rereading as well if anyone else is a fan of the book (2016 interview here and 1991 interview here).
When it was first published in 1991 I was 11 years old so didn't pay any attention to the literary world even if I did read a lot. My mom turned me onto Bret Easton Ellis in 1994 and I was hooked, but still mostly unaware of any controversy surrounding American Psycho. I just thought it was a funny, violent book that was quite obviously completely satirical. Only years later did I realize people were retarded enough to protest it.
Anyway, if you've never read it - and better yet never seen the movie (which I'd be happy to debate the quality of - I hate it - but take any of that criticism over to the movie thread) - definitely pick it up and give it a shot if the above sounds intriguing. I'm about 80% through it for the third time and it is just about perfect.
Rolling Stone recently interviewed Bret Easton Ellis and discussed the novel's legacy and Patrick Bateman's opinions of Donald Trumps evolution from 1990 through the current primary races. That interview and the one they did in 1991 are worth rereading as well if anyone else is a fan of the book (2016 interview here and 1991 interview here).
When it was first published in 1991 I was 11 years old so didn't pay any attention to the literary world even if I did read a lot. My mom turned me onto Bret Easton Ellis in 1994 and I was hooked, but still mostly unaware of any controversy surrounding American Psycho. I just thought it was a funny, violent book that was quite obviously completely satirical. Only years later did I realize people were retarded enough to protest it.
Anyway, if you've never read it - and better yet never seen the movie (which I'd be happy to debate the quality of - I hate it - but take any of that criticism over to the movie thread) - definitely pick it up and give it a shot if the above sounds intriguing. I'm about 80% through it for the third time and it is just about perfect.