by W. W. Norton
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 848 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $6.00 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Label: | W. W. Norton |
| Pages: | 224 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Publication Date: | 2005-10-03 |
| Published By: | W. W. Norton |
| ASIN: | 0393327345 |
| Category: | Book |
Authors
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Product Description
The first rule about fight club is you don't talk about fight club.
Chuck Palahniuk's outrageous and startling debut novel that exploded American literature and spawned a movement. Every weekend, in the basements and parking lots of bars across the country, young men with white-collar 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.
Customer Reviews
Every teenager needs to read this novel! - Reviewed on 2008-11-03
Fight Club: Self-Improvement, Self-Realization, and Self-Destruction
Growing up, no matter if I succeeded or failed, I received a big hug from my mom and a little-league trophy from my dad. I grew up in a school district that continued to bash the bell curve and inflate grades until we were all winners. We learned through reward and we liked it; we were raised to win and we strove for perfection.
Unfortunately, we were raised wrong. I realized this when I read Fight Club for the first time at age sixteen. I am writing this review because of this experience; I am writing this review because I believe every teenager in the country should read this book.
Keep reading and I'll tell you why.
I reviewed Fight Club by asking two distinct questions: How did the novel change me? And, why did it change me? While I am reviewing this novel for teenagers and their parents, many of my claims are built off other Amazon.com reviews not always written for the same audience. This might sound corny, but just as Fight Club`s protagonist is attempting to crack society's shell; I am attempting to crack to the novel's core.
You see, Fight Club is not just the bloody mess its title indicates, but the story of a man finding his place in a society that does not suit him. The author, Chuck Palahniuk, uses this character to critique the hypocrisy of a culture in which ordinary people are tormented by the drudgery of their modern, daily routines. Tortured by monotony, men are driven to violence in order to escape.
Palahniuk uses this violence to get his readers to question their own lives--to question how they were raised. As the narrator struggles to find a balance between himself, a "rag doll of society", and Tyler Durden, his schizophrenic alter ego, he concludes that if "self-improvement isn't the answer... Maybe self-destruction is" (Palahniuk 49). This kind of teen self-reflection is "extremely important" to development explains Dr. Bernard Golden in his book Healthy Anger. At the same time the narrator becomes involved with an underground fight club, leaving the reader to question the legitimacy their own role in society.
As the fight club quickly becomes a method of therapy for the protagonist, it also becomes an addiction for the reader. As reviewer Kevin Joseph points out, Palahniuk's characters fight for that second of self-realization, a psychological balance that day-to-day life cannot supply. Do we not do the same thing when we are teenagers? Are we not the "all-singing, all-dancing crap of this world" searching for our own place to fit in (169)? You see Palahniuk's characters go to these fight clubs not to impose pain upon others, but to have it imposed upon them. They need to find out what is really real, to temporarily get away from reality--something we all do as we grow up.
This is exactly why every teenager in our country should read Fight Club. It changes a young reader by getting him or her to explore what we as often take for granted. It gets teenagers to question ideals that their parents, their society and sometimes even their common sense enforce. It turns a sixteen year old learner into a sixteen year old thinking.
While there are critics like reviewer Justine1212, who claim that Palahniuk's themes of nihilism and his harsh criticism of consumerism damage the minds of young readers, they ignore the value of self-exploration. In fact, Palahniuk's bitterness towards materialism provides the reader with the dark humor that reviewer CapLeoGem and reviewer Czombie find to be the "bitterly sarcastic" essence of the book:
I think this excerpt from Fight Club kind of sums up my feelings about the book: "[Before,] it used to be enough that when I came home angry and knowing that my life wasn't toeing my five-year plan, I could clean my condominium or detail my car" (49). What does one do when having a nice condominium and car is not enough? Personally, I would not think to start a fight club, but it is these absurdities and incongruities that flood the book, allowing Palahniuk to reveal the dark side of American culture that reviewer Theodore Burke finds "essential."
After all, "`It's only after you've lost everything,'" Tyler says, "`that you're free to do anything.'" While I cannot say I've read Fight Club five times in two months like reviewer Dan Seitz "cinnatusc," I can say that reading Fight Club has, indeed, changed me.
Everyday for one hundred and eighty days of the past fifteen years of my life I have woken up, gone to school and come home only to do it again the next day. Before I read Fight Club, I never really questioned this schedule--my life.
Overall, Fight Club is a book definitely worth reading and has a very accurate customer-rating of four and half stars (even though I gave it five stars). So be a good parent, buy your children a copy this holiday season and break their materialistic obsession or be a good teenager, beg your parents for a copy this holiday season and question authority.
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