Lunar Park

Lunar Park

Softcover
3.427

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Description

Imagine becoming a best-selling novelist, and almost immediately famous and wealthy, while still in college, and before long seeing your insufferable father reduced to a bag of ashes in a safety-deposit box, while after American Psycho your celebrity drowns in a sea of vilification, booze, and drugs.Then imagine having a second chance ten years later, as the Bret Easton Ellis of this remarkable novel is given, with a wife, children, and suburban sobriety—only to watch this new life shatter beyond recognition in a matter of days. At a fateful Halloween party he glimpses a disturbing (fictional) character driving a car identical to his late father’s, his stepdaughter’s doll violently “malfunctions,” and their house undergoes bizarre transformations both within and without. Connecting these aberrations to graver events—a series of grotesque murders that no longer seem random and the epidemic disappearance of boys his son’s age—Ellis struggles to defend his family against this escalating menace even as his wife, their therapists, and the police insist that his apprehensions are rooted instead in substance abuse and egomania.Lunar Park confounds one expectation after another, passing through comedy and mounting horror, both psychological and supernatural, toward an astonishing resolution—about love and loss, fathers and sons—in what is surely the most powerfully original and deeply moving novel of an extraordinary career.

Book Information

Main Genre
N/A
Sub Genre
N/A
Format
Softcover
Pages
400
Price
2.71 €

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was this a satire of suburban family life, a horroresque exploration of the aftermath of the artist's work, or a comedic faux-autobiographical self-reflection of his trauma? In the end, the many paths the book explored didn't line up to come to a point where it felt necessary to have taken those paths. It just didn't add up. That said, the last pages are probably the most beautiful pages I have ever seen Ellis write. I can't remember if I ever cried that much because of a book. You can really get the sense that he truly loved his father. It just left me with the question: Were the 400 pages of drug-infused paranoia really that necessary to come to this point? The answer for me is: Unfortunately no.

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Lunar Park