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| Glamorama (Vintage Contemporaries) | 
enlarge | Author: Bret Easton Ellis Publisher: Vintage Books USA Category: Book
List Price: £10.44 Buy Used: £3.31 You Save: £7.13 (68%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 52 reviews Sales Rank: 1310837
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 560 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.2 x 1.1
ISBN: 0375703845 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780375703843 ASIN: 0375703845
Publication Date: March 2000 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: **SHIPPED FROM UK** We believe you will be completely satisfied with our quick and reliable service. All orders are dispatched as swiftly as possible! Buy with confidence!
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Amazon.co.uk Review Glamorama is a satirical mass-murder opus more ambitious than Ellis's 1990 American Psycho. It starts as a spritz-of-consciousness romp about kid-club entrepreneur Victor Ward, "the It boy of the moment," an actor/model up for Flatliners II. Ellis has perfect pitch for glam-speak, and he gives nightlife the fizz, pace, and shimmer it lacks in drab reality. Anyone could cite the right celeb names and tunes; but like a rock-polishing machine, his prose gives literary sheen to fame-chasing air-kissers. He's coldly funny: when Victor's girl tries to argue him out of a break up, she angrily snorts six bumps of coke, stops, mutters, "Wrong vial," snorts four corrective doses from whatever she has in her other fist, then objects to a rival at the party wearing the same dress she's wearing. You had to be there; Ellis makes you feel you are. But such satire is a very smart bomb targeting a very large barn. Models' status anxiety doesn't merit Ellis's Tom Wolfe-esque expertise. Glamorama gets better when Victor gets drafted into a mysterious group of model/terrorists who bomb 747s and the Ritz in Paris, wearing Kevlar-lined Armani suits. Oh, they still behave like shallow snobs, pronouncing "cool" as if it had 12 "o"s, but now when somebody swills Cristal, it's apt to be poisoned, to horrific effect, which Ellis expertly describes. His enfant-terrible debut Less Than Zero aped Joan Didion. Now Ellis has grown into a lesser Don DeLillo--and that's high praise. --Tim Appelo
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| Customer Reviews: Read 47 more reviews...
an original idea August 26, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Whereas I found `American Psycho' an easy and absorbing read, I found this much harder work. Although rewarding in the end it took a while to get into. The part on the cruise ship became confusing for me and I was uncertain at times when we were focusing on a real plot or not. I enjoyed the concept of the camera crew, always having your life in the spot life etc but then I felt it lost something. If you don't reflect too much and try to analyse as you are reading it then this is a great read. I found myself trying to link characters together and once all the pieces of the jigsaw started to fall into place it was as if one of them wasn't quite right and you had to start all over again. However, it is a clever thriller and you never know which character to trust. Your ideas are continually blown to pieces as another piece of the puzzle is unravelled.
I loved the chapters going down in number, like a countdown. But a countdown to what exactly? A new script, a new scene, a new conspiracy? Both clever and intriguing to read this novel rather surprisingly sucked me in and even though at times I didn't have the foggiest idea what was going on, I was in the full long journey. It's difficult to work out Victor with his change of surnames - can we change our identity so easily and become someone different? Or is it something new to hide behind, to prevent us from having to reveal what lurks underneath the skin? Bret Easton Ellis takes celebrity culture and slowly picks away at it to let us see what exactly goes on behind the images we see on screen and in print.
I've had this book lounging on my shelves for quite a few years now, (6 to be exact) and I finally decided it needed to be read. I wish I'd read it sooner! Although not quite five stars for me, I'd happily recommend this novel and I certainly look forward to reading the other Ellis novel I own - The Rules of Attraction. It's a clever book and it's one that needs time devoting to it. You can't pick this up and then put it one side whilst you read another. It'll keep reminding you that it needs to be read! Devote some time to it and you will be rewarded with an intelligent and interesting masterpiece.
Dullarama July 18, 2008 First things first - i have never been totally convinced by Ellis's minimalist literary style. It can work brilliantly, such as in his scabrous 80s satire American Psycho, but it can be irritatingly banal, peripheral and boring such as in career nadir, The Rules of Attraction. There can be no doubting either that Ellis is capable of insightful, superb passages of prose, of which there are many in Glamorama. No, the real problem with this novel is that there is no real plot, development, story or indeed characterisation whatsoever. Just a seemingly unconnected series of dots and anecdotes thrown together on a whim. It is a book unsure of what it's saying and how to say it.
Perhaps that's the point, the fact that it's all style and no substance ? Well, maybe, but Glamorama is long-winded, boring, mostly nonsensical gibberish and like it's major characters - lazy, self-obsessed, and one-dimensional. Yes, I know the characters are supposed to be shallow morons, but surely an author as skilled as Ellis can offer us more than who's sleeping with who, who's listening to whose albums, who's wearing what and where ad nauseum for 500 pages ? Ellis dissects this dull and superficial morass of models, would-be stars, hangers-on and beautiful people with easy laughs, preferring to mock and embarrass, instead of providing any sort of social insight or comment on our fixation with celebrity. So these people are vain, moneygrabbing, insecure, boring, careerist, starf@@ckers who'd shop their own mothers to get ahead ??? Really ? Who'd have thought.
Save the odd brilliant set-piece, witty one liner and typical Ellis propensity for sadism and/or violence, this is a confused, contrived, and unedifying mess. He's written worse, but is capable of far, far better.
Career Low Point July 9, 2006 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
Most of the negative reviews have nailed this book on the head: it's a rambling and pointless trawl through the fashion industry with brief interludes of international terrorism. Sounds confused? It is. And it leaves you with nothing except disappointment and mild confusion.
I won't give it one-star because there are a couple of incredibly powerful, and very violent, scenes in the book, which are described in wonderfully stark prose, reminding me of DeLillo's colder, more sinister moments. One of these is a description of a 747 exploding mid-flight and the subsequent damage to the people on board. However, it is difficult to stomach and - unlike American Psycho, The Informers, etc. - you're not entirely sure that Ellis is justified in being so graphic. Also, Victor - the protagonist - is irritating, and the humour derived from his various shortcomings (low intelligence, vacuity, etc.) does not compensate for this.
I feel that Ellis wrote the book not because he wanted to but because he was contractually obliged to do so. Forget about this career low point and buy Lunar Park instead.
Are you guys reading the same book? May 26, 2006 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
I think possibly some of the other reviewers here are confused about what this book is about and, possibly, what Bret Easton Ellis is about. To say the book is 'confused' is entirely missing the point.
Ellis' work is a little like pointillist art; no one dot means anything but the overall effect is astounding and the power behind the barrage of discontinuous threads that hold this work together is undeniable. Style is the utmost principle throughout because that's the world he's trying to convey.
Even if there was no plot at all this would be worth reading just for some of the dialogue and portraits of a slice of society at its flimsiest.
Nothing to get hung about August 1, 2005 4 out of 7 found this review helpful
Or, nothing is real, as John Lennnon sang. Which is what this book is about, and the use of pop lyrics to tell the story as well as interminable lists of fashionable clothes, magazines, furniture, fashion shows, drinks, drugs and above all people, celebrities, minor celebs, would be celebs... well you get the idea. These lists create a curiously potent sense of realism. Whether this will work in twenty years time, but, hey, who cares. Anything can be changed and manipulated, faces, photographs, events, relationships and above all identities, and what would be the best cover for that most secretive of occupations, namely terrorism, but celebrity itself? The writing is powerful and enthralling, the social observation merciless, the plot bewildering yet fiercely logical, the characters grotesque yet human, the off-hand comments trite yet profound. You could try listing the lists, but the point would be? Gripping to read, impossible to explain or review. When is the next one out? You'll need to be seen with it.
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