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Glamorama

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“Impeccable . . . cold and pitiless and modern.” —The Village Voice

“Compelling and scary. A political thriller bursting with conspiracies, double agents and international terrorism. Glamorama is like a Semtex attack on our superficialities.” —The Face


The author of American Psycho continues to shock and haunt us with his incisive and brilliant dissection of the modern world. In his most ambitious and gripping book yet, Bret Easton Ellis delivers a gripping and brilliant dissection of our celebrity-obsessed culture.

Victor Ward, a twenty-something model in fashion- and celebrity-obsessed Manhattan, is gradually, imperceptibly drawn into a shadowy looking-glass of that society, there and in London and Paris, and then finds himself trapped on the other side, in a much darker place where fame and terrorism and family and politics are inextricably linked and sometimes indistinguishable. At once implicated and horror-stricken, his ways of escape blocked at every turn, he ultimately discovers—back on the other, familiar side—that there was no mirror, no escape, no world but this one in which hotels implode and planes fall from the sky.

546 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1998

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About the author

Bret Easton Ellis

33 books11.3k followers
Bret Easton Ellis is an American author. He is considered to be one of the major Generation X authors and was regarded as one of the so-called literary Brat Pack, which also included Tama Janowitz and Jay McInerney. He has called himself a moralist, although he has often been pegged as a nihilist. His characters are generally young vacuous people, who are aware of their depravity but choose to enjoy it. The novels are also linked by common, recurring characters, and dystopic locales (such as Los Angeles and New York).

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,197 reviews
Profile Image for Steven Godin.
2,649 reviews2,912 followers
September 9, 2023
One of the best novels of the 90s for me. Easy.

OK, at first I really wasn't sure about this, and it felt a little too brash and full of people that I generally took a dislike too; and was probably supposed to, and where Manhattan is presented as the greatest place on the planet, basically putting the middle finger up to the rest of the world, with its flawless skinned, Xanax dependent, loud and supercilious, label-obsessed, lying and cheating, glossy magazine characters. But of course that's the point. And if that's the point, then Bret Easton Ellis does a bloody good job of it. But then this is his forte, so it was never going to be wrong
was it. And the amount of real celeb names that get mentioned here - HUGE!

At least it was the 1990s, when a younger me generally liked celebs more. Not like now.

It took a good 100 pages or so to feel my way into the story - of a male model whose life basically spirals out of control in ways you simply couldn't imagine - but, the more I read: especially when the narrative travelled to Europe: London, Paris, Italy at the end, and took a more chilling and uncomfortable route, the more I got sucked into Victor Ward's paranoid and menacing world, and was, in the end, left gasping, gripped, feeling sick, stunned, bemused, wildly entertained, and surprisingly: for a Bret Easton Ellis novel, quite moved in places. And all throughout the narrative I was constantly thinking just what is real and what is not. What is the truth, and what is a lie.

Why are there cameras here? Hmm. . .

Whoa, who's this creepy dude?

And then later on -

Holy shit! - really?

Speechless.

And that was the beauty of it, always being kept on my toes with no time to relax, and things really did take a turn at about the half way point - and oh my god! - I wasn't prepared for what would follow. Second half of the novel felt a little like DeLillo's satire, only we go to a much darker and depraved place.

Wow. Just wow. Not many books leave me in a state like this one did.

Some scenes are just impossible to forget now.

For me, better than American Psycho - less repetitive and harder to put down.
Profile Image for Baba.
3,806 reviews1,259 followers
September 5, 2023
A top model, who is also a not as successful actor, Victor and his quasi-famous friends live decadent and highly consumptive lives, when a quarter of the way through the book you realise what's really going on, only to be thrown in a typical Ellis' dark, relentless and well written descent into a living Hell!

A book of many faces that holds a camera up to the characters, the capitalist consumptive world and us the voyeurs that spend so much time watching it on our screens. Another tour de force, also another book laden with hyper detail from anything from how to have two girlfriends, through to how to run a terrorist cell and torture people! 8 out of 12, fierce Four Star read that has to be
'Horror' shelved!

2009 and 2018 read
Profile Image for Violet wells.
433 reviews3,885 followers
December 18, 2020
Unless you're already an out and out misanthrope, Glamorama will probably challenge what you think of the human race as a species. It's not a novel for the squeamish or the sentimental or even the steadfastly humanitarian. You know how at the end of the news there's generally a feelgood story designed to make us love our species? Well, this is like ending the news with a story about some kids torturing a kitten or a story of a gang rape. Human nature is in the dock here, and in particular the viral increase of unthinking narcissism as a founding tenet of individual philosophy. I couldn't help imagining someone reading this novel far into the future when the planet has been all but destroyed and receiving an insight into why the planet had all but been destroyed.

Glamorama is narrated by Victor, a minor celebrity, who, like everyone else in this novel, is entirely dependent on his appearance for his livelihood and self-esteem. His mantra is to slide down the surface of things and at one point he tells someone reality is an illusion. He's not interested in thought; only flippant soundbites. There's never not a film crew in his vicinity. Sometimes there's talk of a script. Easton Ellis kind of creates a doppelganger universe and cleverly posits us between these two worlds where it soon becomes impossible to decipher what's scripted and what's spontaneous. Victor and everyone else's only important relationship is the one they share with their mirror image and publicity footage. Success is exclusively a matter of social climbing, here gauged by celebrity status. (I wonder if anyone has counted the number of real life celebrities namedropped into this novel.) However, there's the constant sense that Victor is in danger, that he's a kind of patsy. He's often seen in places he has no memory of visiting. The first half of this novel was flawlessly brilliant. A novel is always fabulous when a gripping mystery has been eloquently sustained and heightened page by page.

The satisfactory resolution of mystery is probably one of the hardest things of all to pull off in fiction. There's generally some sense of being let down because the solving of mystery in fiction mirrors the underlying craving we all have in life and only very few explanations ever give us the feeling of now knowing more about the nature of life on earth. Perhaps this is why Easton Ellis never explicitly explains the mystery at the heart of this novel. What the resolution of this novel signifies has probably been endlessly debated by book clubs. I'm not sure I could give a lucid explanation. And yet it works. It retains the unsolvable mystique of any complex conspiracy theory. The second half, beginning with a graphic and largely gratuitous torture scene where Easton Ellis too excitedly indulges his tendency towards overkill, introduces terrorism and political shenanigans into the mix. It draws a compelling connection between celebrity culture and terrorism - terrorists too after all seek publicity, their fifteen minutes in the media spotlight. I missed the plausibility of the first part in the second part but it remained an incredibly compelling and thought-provoking read throughout. Written in 1998, it's no less relevant now than it was then. I concurrently read a novel by William Trevor written four years later than this and Easton Ellis made that book seem like a broken antique rooted in some long since vanished culture. There's no disputing Easton Ellis has a finger on the pulse of these times, rather like Fitzgerald did in the 20s and 30s. Except Easton Ellis' world is not one you'd want to live in.

Thanks to Steven and his review for giving me the nudge to read this.
Profile Image for Orsodimondo [on a hiatus].
2,327 reviews2,246 followers
September 7, 2024
TUTTO SAREBBE PIATTO E LUMINOSO E POP SE NON FOSSE COSÌ PRESTO


Fotografia di Steven Meisel

Manhattan è un grande set.
Ci sono troupe cinematografiche e televisive sparse nei vari isolati, si girano film, serie, pubblicità, comparse che gironzolano nell’attesa, luci piazzate, carrelli preparati, dolly montati, roulotte del trucco e camion per i costumi…
Si legge e vive in costante attesa della parola magica: Stop! (Cut!). Ma nessuno dice mai se è quello il ciak buono o tocca farne un'altro.
New York è un unico grande set formato da un mosaico di set diversi.

Un grande set è anche la nave da crociera, e Londra, così come Parigi…
Impossibile non concludere che il mondo intero sia un film che viene girato in tempo reale.
Piano piano, i personaggi diventano attori. E anche noi lettori. La vita è una recita a soggetto?



Helena Christensen lascia Michael Hutchence? Prince esce con Veronica Webb? Dio, che casino il mondo.

Ellis mi ha abituato a elenchi di abiti firmati, stilisti, profumi, creme, (non per niente qui, Victor, il protagonista io-narrante, legge articoli su un nuovo mascara), alcolici, locali, film, canzoni e cantanti, rock band e testi, mi ha abituato al name-dropping (Joan Didion è una dilettante in confronto): ma mai come questa volta, Glamorama supera tutti gli altri.
Elenchi che si snocciolano ripetendo la congiunzione “e” come un metronomo, intervallati a dialoghi dove esplodono il “ciao bello” e “ehi bella”, “hombre”, tipo “Bella, sei grande, ti prego – sei grandissima”, tipo come si parla tra amici, tipo nei locali, tipo per strada, ma solo strade chic, tipo Upper East Side per intenderci.
È un mondo che è bello se sei bello. Dove le risposte si cercano nei cartelli pubblicitari, e molti credono di trovarcele. Dove il miglior amico di Victor è uno specchio. Un mondo tipo:
Come se in questo mondo il cervello fosse più importante degli addominali. Ehi, chi ci crede alzi la mano.



È un mondo che si è lasciato alle spalle – anche se leggendo si fa fatica a crederlo – l’edonismo degli anni Ottanta. Che non è ancora approdato al tutti perennemente connessi e viva i social. Siamo negli anni Novanta, l’esibizionismo impera nel regno di Victor, ma ci sono ombre, minacce di ombre. Lo Xanax le tiene a bada, mischiando il tutto con dosi massicce di vodka, tequila et similia, allucinogeni, oppiacei, farmacie ambulanti, droghe a libera scelta.



Il cinema, si diceva. Anche in questo caso, mai come questa volta: eppure, nonostante un numero notevole di adattamenti cinematografici da sue opere, questa è rimasta inutilizzata, nessuno s’è arrischiato.
Vari personaggi, a cominciare da Victor, sembrano avere doppi, sosia, controfigure: li si scopre qui e là allo stesso tempo. Sarà per questo che Victor nega ostinatamente e ripetutamente di essere stato nei posti dove la gente dice di averlo visto? I personaggi sono in parte autonomi rispetto al film (o forse dovrei dire ai film? O magari è il caso di parlare di film-nel-film?) in ripresa, in parte invece sono dentro, vincolati, partecipanti. È come se fosse una doppia fiction: una letteraria - quella raccontata - l’altra cinematografica – quella recitata. Come dire, verità e finzione a braccetto, autenticità e messa-in-scena si sposano.



Ellis passa con aplomb e naturalezza, senza scomporsi, dalla descrizione minuziosa e macabra di torture e omicidi a quella di festini e party. Ovunque, in tutti gli ambienti, inclusi quelli esterni, fa molto freddo, il fiato si condensa: eppure l’aria condizionata va a palla.
E se si dovesse trovare una spiegazione alla storia di Victor, al suo percorso narrativo, quale sarebbe la risposta se non che è priva di senso – insensata – così come lo è il mondo che Ellis racconta, finto artificiale freddo, e senza senso.

Profile Image for Lisa.
1,087 reviews3,310 followers
February 9, 2017
Pure disgust for humanity, in every single sentence.

Might be true, in certain ways, might be well written, but it made me feel subhuman and aggressively angry for weeks. I do not see any point in immersing oneself in this kind of violent, sex-driven hate relationships, based on a primitive animal instinct to mate and kill.

I have read many dark accounts of humankind's degeneration, but this is just filth. And a desire to shock an audience that has heard, seen and read it all, and thus needs more brutal violence, more complicated sex positions, more vicious competition to satisfy numb senses.

If this is reality, I opt for escapism.
Profile Image for Mike Kleine.
Author 19 books158 followers
March 10, 2012
How to put this?

GLAMORAMA is many many things. GLAMORAMA is one very very long novel; GLAMORAMA is one of those books you’ll probably find on a 500-level English MA course; GLAMORAMA is not easy to read and GLAMORAMA is something of a work of genius. Now, it may not be as lengthy as say, Adam Levin’s THE INSTRUCTIONS or Don DeLillo’s UNDERWORLD but GLAMORAMA has so much going on behind the scenes and so much that is ultimately left unexplained to the reader and features so many different characters doing different things and introduces so many different themes and ideas and offers so many instances of writing genius that in the end, it all feels a bit overwhelming—a recurring theme in GLAMORAMA.

Abstractly, GLAMORAMA is to Bret Easton Ellis’ writing what FIGHT CLUB is/was to Chuck Palahniuk—and here, I am not talking plot or characters or success, rather, breadth and scope—but also, I feel that it is important to add that Palahniuk’s TELL ALL (with all its name-dropping-ness and discussion on celebrity stuff) feels like a terribly-flawed and less interesting GLAMORAMA but it’s also unfair to compare two books that are not that similar in reality. And at first, GLAMORAMA feels like it could have been two different books written by two very different authors but GLAMORAMA is one of those stories that feels absolutely (and this needs to be emphasized) confusing during the read but then, after it is all over, and in reflection, it (gradually) begins to make sense, sort of.

Again, GLAMORAMA is not an easy read, and really good books sometimes aren’t, and you have to be patient with this one, but like I said earlier, a lot of things will go unnoticed after a first read, and Ellis (purposefully) throws in a bunch of red herrings and several what the hell moments—and he does this with super explicit sex, amazingly graphic violence and several scenes featuring confetti—but when it all comes down to the nit-picking, I guess GLAMORAMA is really a story about excess and superficiality and the limits of control. And also, it’s about: sex, drugs, guns, super models, New York life, the cult of personality, extreme wealth, terrorism, Paris, celebrity, conspiracies, imposters, photo manipulation, hallucinations, ultra violence, pop culture, deception, confetti, music, the movie-making process, memories and dreams, post-modernism, expectation and eventually, regret. And while some reviews claim that GLAMORAMA is a jumbled mess of a novel—I agree, it is something of a beautiful mess; it’s not perfect, and it’s not supposed to be.

The first part of the book will read like an annoying YA book written for adults. It’s packed with: famous people names, the word “baby” in almost every line of dialogue, a severe amount of (what seems like) throw-away dialogue, a plot that doesn’t seem to be going anywhere, characters who all sound alike, a story that really isn’t a story, super-hyphenated-made-up-terms and did I mention, a nonexistent plot?

An example of the super-annoying YA-like dialogue from the fist part of the book:
“Yoki Nakamuri was approved for this floor,” Peyton says.
“Oh yeah?” I ask. “Approved by who?”
“Approved by, well, moi,” Peyton says.
“Who the fuck is Moi?” I ask. “I have no fucking idea who this Moi is, baby.”
“I’m Moi,” Peyton says, nodding. “Moi is, um, French.”

And ironically, this is the sort of setup—annoying dialogue and vague story with super-shallow people in boring situations—that is necessary for the second part of the book to truly shine. It’s a classic (and simple) case of opposites and role reversals.

In the second part: New York becomes Paris, Victor’s position of power becomes a lack, his drug of choice becomes a necessity and he switches to Xanax, the vapid tameness becomes dynamic brutality and even the way Victor thinks and speaks changes dramatically.

An (extreme) example:
“The mannequin springs grotesquely to life in the freezing room, screeching, arching its body up, again and again, lifting itself off the examination table, tendons in its neck straining, and purple foam starts pouring out of its anus, which also has a wire, larger, thicker, inserted into it...there is, I’m noticing, no camera crew around.”

And though we are never sure that everything Victor says or sees is real—and here we have the classic case of the unreliable narrator—GLAMORAMA is really a story that is less worried about the (satisfying) conclusion and more concerned with the process, meaning: the characters, the dialogue, the bizarre scenarios, the violence, the ambiguity, the—everything; that’s what matters most in a story.

A FEW SPOILERS, SORT OF
And no, I can’t tell you why everything’s always “freezing” or too cold, and I can’t tell you why there’s confetti everywhere, and I couldn’t tell you why only Victor notices that it smells like shit, and I couldn’t say if: the cameras, the PA’s, the best boys, the film crew, the whole shebang was really real or just a fabrication, and I don’t really know how they were able to impersonate Victor, Lauren, Bruce, Jamie or everyone else and I don’t know if Palakon ever really told Victor the truth and I don’t know what really happened to Marina and I couldn’t tell you why Christian Bale keeps showing up and I don’t know why there is an entire chapter that is basically an explicit sex scene between three people and I don’t know what it means when Victor keeps saying “we’ll slide down the surface of things…” and I couldn’t tell you what it means when Victor keeps telling people that “the better you look, the more you see” and I couldn’t begin to explain the quote “it’s what you don’t know that matters most”—but does it really matter?
END OF SPOILERS

Or rather, consider this. Is it better (and easier) to admit that the entire story was maybe just a movie? And that—the dialogue, the memories, the people, the bodies, the sex scenes, the bombings, all the crying and all the dying and all the inconsistencies, the plot holes—none of it was real—just part of some movie script?
Profile Image for Greg.
1,123 reviews2,019 followers
May 11, 2010
I read this book like eleven years ago, or maybe it was twelve, or inevitably even longer in the future. I don't remember much about it. I remember taking it out of the library, it was in the new release section, so I only had ten days to read the book. I then remember reading part of it sitting at the counter of a coffee shop that would be soon banning me from being their customer, but that has nothing to do with the book. I do remember that the part of the book which I remember reading at the above mentioned counter took place in a boat.

I liked this book. I remember that. I remember thinking that it was a let-down after the amazing American Psycho (which I do not care if you agree or disagree with my opinion about AP, even mentioning this book causes extreme reactions from people. I liked it, if you didn't that's ok. If you feel the need to froth at the mouth about liking or disliking the book take it too another review, I don't feel like being a part of a discussion about the book), and that the book was disjointed, with the first half and the second half being night and day, and that the links between high fashion / celebrity culture and international terrorism were a little, eh.

But I also remember that silly Bret Easton Ellis was still an enjoyable read. And that I feel like I've been a major douche bag by being a Bret Easton Ellis hater of sorts; just because every hipster that can read, or at least wants to make it look like he or she can read, has asked for his books, doesn't mean that I can't still like him becasue he was good, and maybe the books that came after this one are still good (or book, does he have anything more than Lunar Park? as of this writing? I know he has one this summer, and once again he will be reading at our store, and I will try not to think bad thoughts of him this time, even if the store fills to capacity with the turdiest of the turds from Williamsburg).

I kind of miss reading him, now that I think of it. I think I'm going to go find a copy of Less than Zero read the fuck out of it in preparation for the sequel coming out this summer to his debut novel. And maybe I'll enjoy it, that's right hipsters I'll enjoy it in spite of you!!
Profile Image for Roof Beam Reader (Adam).
578 reviews3 followers
October 22, 2017
Glamorama is a twisted, disgusting, brilliant parody of all that was the early-1990s. This book is Valley of the Dolls meets Naked Lunch meets Invasion of the Body Snatchers meets James Bond. Don't think the combination is possible? Think again. Ellis demonstrates a superb understanding of cultural critique and is creative enough to satirize with seriousness and hilarity simultaneously. If you can get through the first two hundred or so pages of idiotic dialogue (another stroke of narrative brilliance, really, but still hard to wade through), you will be rewarded. Mid-way through the novel, the story takes an unexpected and inexplicable turn. Truly, the twist is never reconciled within the novel and the reader is left feeling literally mind-fucked. No one is who they appear to be, no one works for whom they appear to work (sometimes the characters themselves don't even realize it). Everyone gets blown up, drugged out, beaten, sodomized, and the smell of feces permeates the latter portion of the story (which takes place in France - coincidence or another cultural critique?). I don't understand the confetti, I don't understand the camera crews or the many, many scripts - but am I supposed to? "The better you look, the more you see."
Profile Image for Crystal.
20 reviews10 followers
August 10, 2007
Cover Story: Fashion Models and B-class celebrities turned International Terrorists!

Or………… Wait! Do these plastic explosives match my Armani? Call the camera crew. We have to go back to wardrobe! Reset the timer. And….where’s my Zanex?
---
OMG. ummmm……..*yawn?

This isn’t World Weekly News, but a novel that didn’t know where or how exactly to end. And I’m shocked really, because I adore Bret Easton Ellis. I also secretly enjoy World Weekly News, which could arguably, at times, be a better read than this novel. Maybe he could have used Batboy or those giant army ants that eat giant housewives in rural Texas. Something I could connect to, something I could try to care about. Still, I think if Bret Easton Ellis were in need of a kidney and we matched – I’d be down.

I kept hoping the main character, Victor Ward/Victor Johnson (potentially two separate people) would just die already. But this hope occurred for the first time for me on, like, page…… 50? or so. I trudged on in hopes that he/they’d become less vacuous or maybe get impaled or strangled or blown up or attacked with a chain-saw á la Patrick Bateman (“American Psycho”) style. It would have been nice to read about Victor’s entrails being spun onto a wheel, the way they did in the middle ages when they’d burn trapped rats to dig into people’s stomachs. Rats and wheels, it’s torture genius. It proves that human ingenuity is linear, I think. Later on, we made light bulbs and 100 calorie packs. Rats and wheels, this is how much I disliked Victor Whatever.

Then, I’m wondering, am I supposed to hate Victor Ward/Johnson? He’s a man so obviously disconnected from reality – like in the way that Michael Jackson is disconnected from reality. Except Victor Ward/Johnson isn’t so far gone that he sleeps in Tupperware just yet. And his nose doesn’t fall off – just yet. He just thinks a camera crew is following him everywhere sprinkling confetti all about. This is maybe his way to cope with being involved in gory terrorist activities. (I think.) I can’t, however, figure out the confetti metaphor. Can someone fill me in? Lost! But I don’t care enough to be found, really. It’s all [insert random celebrity names here], Cerruiti, Huey Lewis and the News, Brooks Brothers, Cristal, blah, blah, blah. Did I floss today? I’m tired and bored. I’m down for the count. And so – the book gets put on the nightstand for another night or another week until primetime TV is bad and I’ve had a glass of wine.

The plot begins half-way through the novel, just at about the time you’re finally ready to put it down and give up. Thank God, a point to this empty madness. But is it? Really? I’m thinking……….not so much, no. The over-materialist banality was eating at my soul for the first 250 pages. I didn’t recover when things became more interesting. Victor’s father wanted him sent away because he was running for Senate (or was it a Presidential nomination?). His quasi-gay unsuccessful college drop-out son was not good for campaigning or something like that. Victor Ward/Johnson is lured by a person potentially hired by his father, a man named Palakon. Palakon is somehow associated with the French embassy, and then not. It’s not so clear as the lines between reality and “World Victor” become blurred. Palakon, et al. decide to take advantage of the situation they have with Victor in order to transport some uber-modern super-secret plastic explosives en route to Europe.

After this: lots of drugs and death disguised as movies sets- disguised as real death- disguised as film-making. Interrogations. Love triangles. A graphic ménage á trios that spans a full chapter. Confusion about the motive behind the violence because the narrator is unreliable. More death. *yawn

Not your best work Mr. Ellis, but still call me if you need a kidney.
Profile Image for Rachel (TheShadesofOrange).
2,594 reviews4,008 followers
January 17, 2024
4.0 Stars
Video Review: https://youtu.be/3hvDORi-RaE

At this point. I have read several books by this author and am realizing that all his stories have the same narrow premise. They are all about privilege people partying until something terrible happens. I adore many of the author's book but reading this one made me really notice how the author recycles ideas. That being said, I enjoy this subject matter. As always the characters are unlikeable and the horror is vulgar. I recommend this one to fans of the author's other work who don't mind reading something similar.
Profile Image for Leo Robertson.
Author 35 books483 followers
August 4, 2016
- Hi Leo.
- Hi Leo.
- Are you seriously gonna do this?
- Yeah I’ve got a friend who will likely read this whom I’m hoping will find it funny that I’ve done this ahahahah.
- What have you been reading Leo?
- Stop saying my name. It’s creepy. I actually tried another Bret Easton Ellis book thinking I’d enjoy it. Wanted to give the guy another chance.
- Hah! Not content with people taking advantage of your meekness IRL, you’re now extending the courtesy to books?
- It’s too easy for you to dislike me, man. You know too much. In this one there’s a model dude who endlessly list celebs, goes to parties, fairly plotless, affairs, drugs, he sees confetti everywhere, smells shit, is cold, may or may not be a film.
- Oh, cool. Well it’s not that bad, then. If you were gonna try BEE again, better you pick some novella—
- It’s 500 pages.
- …
- I’ve no idea.
- Oh. Well you made it to the end, right?
- Don’t— listen, don’t you start with me on this.
- Okay...
- What? You’re gonna back out now?
- There’s no need to get all riled up—
- Yeah but it’s because of your passive aggression that I felt the need to finish this one! You’re so insecure about ditching bad books.
- I’ll work on it. Just tell me what this one means so we can move on. This guy sees confetti everywhere. Why?
- One admission first: I didn’t make it to the end.
- [Cringes] Page number?
- 400.
- Not bad. If you didn’t have the point by then…
- Exactly! Yeah so he sees confetti everywhere, and it’s never falling, it’s always landed, because it’s like he’s late to the party. If I remember correctly, first he sees it on a table he’s at, and it’s on his shoulders, and later it appears on the street and in blood and stuff. So it was falling on him, then it’s already fallen everywhere he goes. He’s becoming a has-been at 27, and “the party’s over” feeling refers to the party of life. Early on a character mentions the lifecycle of the celeb: nobody, rising star, star, has-been. The only lifecycle these celebs are concerned with is the lifecycle of the celeb. It may as well mean death once the cycle comes to an end. This is cute, I guess, but it’s nothing people hadn’t figured. To say nothing of the fact that years of dedication to the writing of this to me demonstrates an unironic interest in this culture, nullifying anything vaguely satirising it would have to say. What’s that quote about satire?
- If you don’t know it, I don’t.
- Something about it being a mirror or a sphere of glass in which you see everything but yourself? But there’s BEE’s magnified face right in the centre, genuinely giving a shit. IMHO. What do I know? My American Psycho thoughts were not appreciated.
- Oh yeah? What were they?
- [Sighs] I deleted the review in the end. Couldn’t be bothered defending it. Didn’t care enough— and what internet stranger thinks they’re gonna change another internet stranger’s opinion through the magic of condescension? There are many more entertaining ways to waste your time. Like writing book reviews, forgetting about them, and then defending 5-year-old opinions even although you forgot what they were. For all the internet’s merits, the whole permanent-record thing makes people’s worldviews seem artificially static.
- Yeah make sure and write a BEE-reminiscent novel about that and make sure you can tell me when it’s done so I can go ahead and not read it— anyway, wasn’t there like a weird mannequin purple blood hallucination thing in the middle?
- It’s so convenient how much you do and don’t know about what I just read, mate.
- …
- Given BEE’s commitment to soullessness— not the voice he has created for Victor, just a genuine soullessness of his mission, a novel that is indeed pages of words but with no heart behind it— it’s some Don DeLillo steal, probably. Doesn’t mean anything.
- The smell of shit?
- A nab from Infinite Jest, which is obsessed with waste. IJ came out in 1996, this came out in 1998, and the shit-smelling starts about halfway into the text. It seems to have taken BEE about four years to write this, so he’d be right in the middle of writing it when IJ came out! Ahaha. Pffft, I doubt either was the first to wade about in waste— I just thought it was a funny coincidence. Anyway, these little symbols are supposed to make us think that Victor’s different from the rest, somehow, like we should feel sorry for him because he’s caught up in a superficial world when he was meant for better. But nothing in his actions or even his words gives evidence of this. If it ain’t true of BEE, it ain’t true of his characters. There’s also this bit where the protagonist of this novel is on an ocean liner and Jurassic Park is playing and he has dinner with “The Wallaces.” In DFW’s “A Supposedly Fun Thing…", an essay about a cruise holiday, Jurassic Park plays repeatedly. IDK what BEE’s trying to do here, but it’s a faux pas nonetheless. Wallace’s BEE insecurity manifested itself when he pretended he hadn’t read any BEE at the time of writing his BEE-adjacent stories. He pure had. Neither BEE’s nor DFW’s strategies are recommended. Just tell us you hate the guy and can’t stand that (you think) he can write well! We would love you all the more for it :)
- The main character’s cold all the time.
- The frigid nature of the text tells you that one.
- People’s breath “steams” a lot?
- BEE’s stab at joining the canon of great American writers who are careless with science. Or all the characters were really kettles.

[Edit: I've read at least three more violations of this kind, in other texts, since writing this review for the first time yesterday. Another common one: if a substance is water-based, I don't think it should be described it as oily/greasy, but I read all the time "oily blood" and "greasy tears" etc. In general I don't enjoy authors who are so afraid of cliches that they'll deliberately imbue their text with weird expressions they've never seen before. Sometimes there's a reason something hasn't seen before-- it's wrong. The literary world is all too kind about science violations. "Don DeLillo can think lightyears are a type of year if the mistake appears in a pretty sentence." The literary world could use more scientists. Or engineers mebs ;)]

- What about the mentions of a director, a cinematographer, learning the script, calling out “action”, all of that? Was it all a film or not? I need to know!
- Hahahaha, no you don’t. Probably a metaphor for la-la land of celeb culture/ the cliché of narcissists that they see life as their own film. It’s the pointlessness of the lives they lead: they’re just “reading scripts”, going through the motions, dead in life, late to the party. What with all the terrorist stuff introduced, it shows a real cognitive dissonance taking place in Victor’s head when it comes to heavy stuff going on on the planet at the same time as he’s thirsting after all of his silly pursuits. I do know if it’s a film or not.
- You do? Which is it?
- It may or may not be. Who would watch a film this dull anyway?
- What kind of an answer is that?
- It’s the same as American Psycho: did he kill those people or not? He may or may not have. I mean to say, that’s about as far as the author took that idea. It’s not, as I think he would pretend, that he holds a secret answer in his heart and asks the reader to formulate their own solution. Instead I just feel in my heart how soulless this text is.
- [Snarky tone] Yeah well Leo, that’s the point.
- I’m glad you got that one in before a BEE fan reading this could! I agree that you may well feel that’s the case, but I don’t. Seems like quite a convenient get-out clause. If the writer doesn’t care about the answer to a question his text raises, why the hell should you?
- I suppose you also feel that when people compare your writing to BEE’s, it’s inaccurate?
- Dude, my review of his book is a dialogue conducted with myself: I wish it was inaccurate! At least with this book he’s proven he can write passable female characters- and for that, it gets one star more than American Psycho!
Profile Image for Patrick.
501 reviews118 followers
January 22, 2008
I might actually have liked this one more than "American Psycho," now that I think about it. It's actually kind of a 90's version of what AP was to the 80's, a sort of indictment/celebration(?) of materialistic/consumer culture, at least at the begining. Featuring a main character just as vapid as Patrick Bateman, Victor Ward is a male model who spends the first 200 pages going to night clubs and hanging with tons of equally vacant celebrities. Ellis's style makes this all pretty funny, but then the book takes a total 180, and Victor gets pulled into a world of model terrorists and loses sense of who's who and what's what in a haze of sex and violence. This book is just fucking awesome. And yes, it can definitely be described as "Zoolander" meets "Fight Club."
Profile Image for Eugene.
2 reviews6 followers
August 20, 2007
if you were to ask my what my favorite work of fiction was, on most days, I would respond with Glamorama. Celebrity fashion models become terrorists. Photographs and appearances in the gossip columns of the worlds major newspapers begin to replace reality. Sex and drugs are consumed in mass quantities. Bombs go off. Celebrities die horrific deaths, told in a cold, obsessively detailed manner. There is a chapter long description of an passanger airlplane explosion that I now, unfortunately, think of every time I am strapped into one, preparing for takeoff. This book is not for the squeamish.
Profile Image for Rachel Louise Atkin.
1,191 reviews324 followers
May 31, 2017
After finishing this book I went to bed and stared at the ceiling for ages just like... "What the f**k?" Glamorama is not only a satire of the film/modelling agency and celebrity culture, but also explores the threats of terrorism and surveillance. The first third paints a bleak portrait of the 90s high life. Victor Ward is a model, unsympathetic and shallow but represents everything about 90s minimalism and desensitisation. The importance rests on celebrity names - the only important this is where you are seen and who you are seen with. Yet this also opens up the terrifying possibilities of journalism and it's power over both celebrities and the mass public. The second third starts getting interesting as Victor realises he is in something bigger than he can understand, yet it is still shadowed under the saturation of celebrity culture that he is obsessed with.

The last 100 then completely messed me up. Like American Psycho, Ellis leaves you wondering if anything you just read even happened. Yet it is perhaps even more shocking than Psycho in its metafiction and realism. The references to the "camera" and "director" make me wonder if the whole thing was just happening on the set of a movie. I couldn't stop reading, honestly I was in absolute pieces, I still can't even deal with the intensity of what I just read. Oh my godddd.

If you aren't liking this novel then PLEASE stick it out for the last 100 pages. They are so addictive and Ellis is so clever.
Profile Image for Mimi.
733 reviews215 followers
March 15, 2019
What? Did we end up hating each other? Did we end up the way we thought we always knew would? Did I end up wearing khakis because of that fucking ad?

This quote sums up what thIS book is about, I think... but don't take my word for it because I have no idea what this book is about. The brief summary is it's about beautiful people with some celebrity status being careless with their lives and then are surprised when nothing turns out the way they'd hoped. There's also something about a convoluted international terrorist plot, which I won't even begin to dissect. The rest of the book is about these beautiful people lamenting missed chances and lost opportunities. So basically a lot of whining, name dropping, and brand-name dropping. But what is it really about? I assume there's more to it than what I just summed up, but I have no idea what that is.

Review moved to https://covers2covers.wordpress.com/2...
Profile Image for Kuszma.
2,524 reviews219 followers
December 11, 2022
Merítés-díjátadótól felspannolva, három pohár bor után értékelésírással próbálkozni, nos, ez bátran tekinthető kísérleti recenziónak. Mondjuk azon gondolkodom, hogy ez Bret Easton Ellis világával éppenséggel kompatibilis, igaz, az ő szereplői ezt kokainnal szimulálnák. De hát magyarságtudat is van a világon.

Démoni húzása van ennek a könyvnek. Kicsinál - de meg kell dolgozni azért, hogy ezt a(z amúgy marha kellemetlen) hatást váltsa ki belőlünk. Van ugyanis egy óriási érzelmi szakadék a kötet két fele között. Az elsőben Victort követjük jobbra-balra, aki klubot nyit, modelleket kefél, kockás a hasa, és annyira fancy, annyira menő, hogy hujjuj. Ez a vonal (nevezzük Menőség Vonalának) körülbelül a kettőszázötvenedik oldalig tart, amely kettőszázötven oldal alatt bennem többször felmerült a kérdés, hogy miért is olvasom ezt a kötetet valójában, amikor nem történik benne semmi lényeges. Nos, egyfelől a híresember-fétisem miatt, valóban. Aligha akad még egy könyv a világirodalomban, aminek a híresember/oldal együtthatója ilyen magas lenne: tömegével jönnek szembe a Johnny Deppek meg a Kate Mossok, meg a többiek, akiket ki kellett gugliznom, mert a '90-es évek bizony nem most volt. A másik, amiért a könyvben marad az ember, maga a szöveg. Például a párbeszédek, ezek a kristályfényű konstrukciók, amelyek felszínességükkel, lenyűgöző hajlékonyságukkal tökéletesen leképezik Victor világának totális értéknélküliségét és gondolattalanságát. Ezeket a párbeszédeket (meg egyáltalán: ezeket a kopogó, karcos mondatokat) Ellis valami bitang jól teszi oda, felépítve belőlük az Üresség Űrhideg Üvegpalotáját.

Aztán Victor, úgy fest, a kettőszázötvenedik oldal táján eltaknyol, Tuti Srácból totális vesztes lesz. Kénytelen hát elvállalni egy zavaros megbízást, és behajózni Európa felé. Innentől kezdve ez szemre egy másik regény: riasztó és félelmetes. Rémálom-labirintus, egy kalandregény perverz paródiája, amiből lehetetlen felébredni. Közben meg persze a két regény ugyanaz. És visszanézve világosabban látjuk, hogy ami az első etapban történt, az csak egy ravasz, nagyon ravasz felvezetés volt ahhoz a világhoz, ami az általános morális nihil törvényszerű végkifutása. A semmiből előszállingózó konfettik, a hideg, amire Victor folyton panaszkodik, a különös emlékezetkihagyások - minden egy irányba mutatott, de mi, olvasók, nem hallgattunk a jelekre, és balgán besétáltunk a csapdába. Most pedig vergődünk a brutális (mert értelmetlen - igen, pont attól brutális, hogy értelmetlen) erőszak örvényében, és nosztalgiával gondolunk vissza arra az időre, amikor Victor egyszerűen csak egy szánalmas kis csíra volt, számunkra értelmezhetetlen célokkal. Bárcsak megint abban a regényben lennénk, gondoljuk, ami az első kettőszáz-ötven oldal volt, abban az üres, de többé-kevésbé biztonságos létezésben, ahol csak a reputációnkat veszíthettük el... de nincs visszaút.

Ellis érzéssel, okosan és ráérősen rétegzi egymásra a nyomasztás fojtogató szintjeit, olyan világot teremt, ahol gyakran csak utólag ébredünk rá, hogy bizonyos dolgok nem pusztán dolgok voltak, hanem figyelmeztetések. Lehet belekötni, lehet mondani, hogy az alapozás (az ominózus kettőszáz-ötven oldal az elején) hosszú, kilöki magából az olvasót. Lehet panaszkodni továbbá arra, hogy az erőszakot túl stilizáltan ábrázolja, ami elidegenítően hat. És mindez alighanem igaz. De akárhogy is, ez a regény olyan diszkomfort zónába taszított az utolsó harmadával, hogy aludni se tudtam tőle. Komolyan, nem mertem letenni, mert arra gondoltam, ha nem olvasom végig azonnal, egészen bizonyosan kísérteni fog. Túl akartam lenni rajta, hogy eresszen el végre. És ezt most egy marha nagy bóknak szánom.
Profile Image for Read By RodKelly.
206 reviews770 followers
January 13, 2020
The young, rich, white elite of the American glitterati skizz through drug binges and forgotten jaunts of bored promiscuity; party after party and the camera’s rolling and the paparazzi’s glut divines the tenor of aqueous evenings sloshing in the zeitgeist of vapid, shallow voids; then somewhere along the jitzy route the stutter of the camera is now the vicious patter of bullets and bombs and the empty American glamorama careens butter-smooth into terrorism and torture, a blitz of haywire fluxion toward total chaos, all safely contained within pages, upon a screen, in the glassy stillness of an image, so it can’t touch you, and you’re so safe and someone else suffers while you guzzle privilege and wilt from your American excess, just waiting for the terror to materialize, and really all you have to do is look in the mirror.


Five stars earned for:

⭐️The zippy, rude dialogue
⭐️The brilliant character development and disintegration
⭐️The blunt critique of distinctly American narcissicm and the numb blindness to any tragedy or crisis that isn’t our own
⭐️The hyper-saturated descriptions of violence and sex and decadence
⭐️The almost unwieldy scale of the narrative; Ellis is a ballsy, muscular writer who deftly blurs and fuses several genres in this long, verbose novel. There are scenes of almost unbearably intense violence balanced with those of dark, humorous satire.
Profile Image for Patrick.
122 reviews15 followers
January 25, 2016
Rereading this for the fourth or fifth time, and it gets better and better. This is my bible.

***
And again.
Profile Image for Matthew Vaughn.
Author 77 books147 followers
August 29, 2020
This could be my new favorite BEE novel, I may have to give Lunar Park another read before I can say for sure though. Yeah, it took a little bit to really get going, but once it did I was sucked in.
Profile Image for paper0r0ss0.
648 reviews51 followers
June 18, 2022
Meno di zero. Se si dovesse dare d'impulso un voto a questo libro, sarebbe questo il massimo attribuibile. Sebbene ci venga detto che il suddetto sia stato pensato, scritto, rieditato, tenuto in un cassetto a ribollire per lunghi anni di ripensamenti, il sospetto di una scrittura di maniera, fatta apposta per accontentare gli "ellisiani" e' troppo forte. Nessuna originalita' narrativa, nessun tentativo di superamento del del proprio passato stilistico. Solo la consueta, grande tecnica nei dialoghi, questo e' innegabile. Ma e' troppo poco, soprattutto perche la trama, esile trama, e' totalmente inverosimile e l'inverosimiglianza e' un peccato capitale per un libro del genere. Persino l'ultra violenza di Patrick Bateman di "American psyco" era piu' credibile di questi viziosi, ricchi modelli dinamitardi. Molto piu' interessante sarebbe stato percorrere fino in fondo il tema allucinante e inquietante dell'esistenza "in doppio", del Doppelgänger che forse ognuno di noi si tira dietro. Un Ellis piu' ispirato ne avrebbe fatto una chicca invece di lasciarlo solo intendere, tristemente abbozzato.
Profile Image for Joe.
51 reviews11 followers
May 26, 2007
I remember that I had to quit in the middle of this book because it felt like the world was collapsing in on itself. And literally, Glamorama does. It is so dense, that just like a black hole, it sucks everything in, even gravity.
It is the story of Victor post-Camden, now a high profile model/celebutante!?! This is the reason why I picked it up. I love how B.E.E. makes for creating a whole new world for his characters. The novel is half espionage and half drug-induced. If you want to escape into another world, jump on in.
Profile Image for Andy.
Author 16 books144 followers
August 23, 2008
Oh my god, somebody help me. I'm a prisoner in a book that's a cross between "Party Monster", "Project Runway" and every annoying E! Network program that pretends it's not gay but is so gay even Logo won't touch it. Smarmy and irritating to the point where the satire has to be justified in your mind just to get through this mind rot. I've read comic books with more culture than this trash! Spamorama.
Profile Image for Jose.
161 reviews61 followers
July 8, 2022
Qué barbaridad.

Esta inmensidad tiene 3 partes bien diferenciadas:

1 - su primer tramo es una sátira del mundo de las celebridades y lo que les sirve de sustento estatutario, los medios. Es más: una sátira sublime, además de divertidísima. Los días del protagonista no se rigen por el tiempo (de hecho que se mire la muñeca sin tener un reloj que le dé la hora no es sólo una simple coña a lo Zoolander, que menudo plagio y qué ganas de que trascienda el acuerdo extrajudicial por el que Easton Ellis guarda silencio al respecto sin haber ido a mayores la demanda), sino por actos sociales, ya sean inauguraciones de garitos o cenas de presentación de colecciones. La noción de tiempo en pasado y futuro sólo existe para algún comentario hiriente sobre algo pasado de moda, y siendo asi que Victor Ward vive en un eterno presente sólo articulado por la validación ajena (la gente para él son meros espejos ensanchadores de ego) los actos del pasado y las consecuencias a futuro le son cuestiones del todo ajena. Hay un momento cumbre en el que llama "bro" a su padre que parece insinuar que es retrasado mental o un eterno adolescente, pero Victor ni es falto ni un Peter Pan. Ni siquiera es un sociópata: simplemente encaja por sus circunstancias (es guapo nivel modelo y su familia gente de panoja) en un tipo de persona que no necesita saber más allá de la primera persona del singular y ahí se queda. Cuando hace daño no hay una intención o plan por detrás, simplemente ocurre por tener una cosmovisión ocupada de pleno por el YO.

2 - la cosa se pone oscura. Pero oscura a la Dennis Potter, a nivel paranoia metafísica. Hay equipos de rodaje que siguen a Victor y le dan el cue, y la gente con la que interacciona aprenden un guión. Cuando aparece el segundo equipo de rodaje y la trama de espionaje ya la cosa trasciende los momentos más extremos de paranoia pirandelliana de Potter para recabar en terrenos más próximos a Philip K Dick o Baudrillard: se altera la realidad trucando las imágenes y con ello la simulación en la que de primeras parecía consensuado el ser todos los implicados partícipes de ella. De hecho, se enarbola una teoría muy interesante: que la vida en la sociedad de la imagen es una sucesión de set pieces.

3 -Victor por fin retoma el control sobre su identidad, si no de pleno al menos el suficiente para decidir dejar de usar seudónimo. Con ello y con todo lo que le ocurre en la trama de terrorismo surge en él la noción de que los actos tienen consecuencias, así como la extensión del ámbito de sus preocupaciones a personas que no son él. Todo, obviamente, no así mascadito ni explicado tan mal como yo lo estoy haciendo, sino dejándose entrever en algún diálogo de los muchos (y geniales) que nutren toda la trama de terrorismo de alta costura.

Y el confeti.

Es que lo pienso y de los 90 no hay ningún otro libro que haya aguantado tan bien el paso del tiempo. Menuda obra maestra.

EDITO para añadir que llevo pensando varios días de qué me sonaba lo de las piezas dentales atrapadas en una estructura (pared, en este caso) y ya por fin caigo: eso también salía en El Quimérico Inquilino, de Roland Topor. Que, dicho sea de paso, tiene una atmósfera de paranoia muy del palo. Es que realmente Glamorama bien pudiera ser una actualización de esa novela.
Profile Image for Laura ☾.
904 reviews327 followers
November 3, 2020
I usually love Brett Easton Ellis, so it pains me to write this review.

The characters just lacked any depth whatsoever - I know that it's supposed to be commentary and satire of modern celebrity culture but this was actually just not pleasant to read, as the characters just didn't feel developed at all in any way or form.

Dialogue felt very very stilted, and so full of references to real celebrities that it just seems overkill *sigh* Honestly, long stretches of this felt just dull, and I really hate to say this!
Profile Image for Benson Lott.
14 reviews5 followers
October 28, 2010
I have read this book many times and of course the first time through, much like with Imperial Bedrooms, I felt overwhelmed. Mr. Ellis is the most gifted writer I have read. His attention to detail borderlines on obsessive compulsive and yet he spins it all in such a way that I felt mesmerized. I cannot recommend his work enough. However, there are many who probably won't be able to handle his brutal honesty. Sadly, they will miss out. The deeper the cut, the more it bleeds. I appreciate anyone who isn't afraid to cut all the way through.
Profile Image for pauline.
117 reviews40 followers
August 29, 2024
4.5 stars

Hollywood reeks of shit, and the stench just keeps getting worse: Glamorama is Bret Easton Ellis holding a mirror to the face of 90s high society.

Victor Ward, the book's main character, is an empty shell, and there's not a single profound thought in this (supposedly) very pretty head of his. He is the victim of a time and society where his abs matter more than his mind. His perspective, and consequently the narration, is superficial, hollow, and detached from reality. This, however, is Glamorama's charm and makes this book's narration very powerful. Ellis once again demonstrates his literary genius by weaving in a production crew and script, blurring the lines between this novel's reality and the makings of a film.

Victor wants to be a star, so he mimics the behaviors he observes in those he admires. Stars, however, reveal only what they choose to show. You can watch Shalom Harlow walk the runway for as long as you like, but you'll never truly know her inner self. You can admire her from afar (as she is truly admirable), but the glimpses you get will always fall short of the reality. Victor misjudged this when he first aspired to be part of this glamorous world: he saw the seemingly detached models, actors, and musicians floating above reality and believed their polished exteriors were all there was to them. Consequently, he becomes exactly what he sees, as it's the only path to success he has ever known.

This admiration proves to be misguided, because throughout this book he learns, harshly, what lies behind the facade. Because not all that glitters is gold, sometimes it's a huge pile of shit and all the sparks floating around are actually flies. Still, Victor Ward is relentless in his need for validation, preoccupied with petty problems, and he attaches meaning to all the wrong aspects of life. His relationships are so surface-level, his loved ones probably wouldn't even realize if an impostor took Victor's place;
Ultimately, this leads to Victor becoming the target of people far more powerful than himself, plunging him into a series of increasingly disturbing events that expose a sprawling criminal network with every closer look. This dream factory churns out nightmares, particularly for those entangled in its machinations.

Glamorama is a captivating read, as every chapter is brimming with scandal, drama, and the opulence of the 90s elite. Frequent readers of Ellis will know to expect his trademark excess of name-dropping, sex, and violence; Glamorama is no exception. His eye for detail makes his novels so perfectly unique, and they become truly authentic records of their era.
Profile Image for Aurora Dimitre.
Author 33 books131 followers
July 10, 2024
Okay, sure, this is the best novel ever written. Okay, sure. Okay, this is better than every other book I’ve read in my entire life, not just The Shards, which was my main question with this re-read. This was my favorite book of 2022, The Shards was my favorite book of 2023, which one do I like more? It’s this one. I like this book more than Lord of the Flies, and Beartown, and The Long Walk. It’s ALL Glamorama.

The first time I read this book I loved it. This time I understood it. To a point, I think. I took it slow, man, because I wanted to understand it. And I think I got it, for the most part. Ellis is saying so much in this book, though, and when I say ‘understood’ it, I’m not just talking about the plot, which is already a trip and a half. I’m talking about everything.

Victor Ward as a character is one that I care so deeply about. So desperately about. Beyond the fact that he cracks me up before everything goes sideways for him, in the beginning when he was asking for definitions of every word over three syllables and, as a not-quite-straight male model in the 90s, had to be explained what AIDs was, and all that, I love him. And I do think that empathy we see in Victor is why his story ends the way it does.

I’m going to get a little into it, a little into the overarching message and theme of the book. Not much, but a little. Victor’s empathy, which we see ramp up when the Sam Ho stuff gets underway, is so alien to everyone else in this novel. There’s a lot that can be said about the “film crew” stuff, but I do think that’s more of a metaphor than anything; a metaphor of celebrity culture being acting, to put it simply. In very simple terms. We do also sometimes see hints of intelligence within Victor; clearly, there is the expectation from people who have known him his whole life that he could handle law school, and it is implied that much of his idiocy (which I love desperately) is an act that became reality. He sure has so much music knowledge in his head.

I dunno, man, I just love it. I could write a thesis on this book. Paragraph four kind of dipped its toes in, but—yeah. Yeah, this is better than The Shards. This is better than everything. God. I can’t wait to wait two years and read it again and understand it even more.


|original review 7.22|
Victor is the dumbest motherfucker alive, and goddamn was he fun to read about. Honestly, first fifty pages, could take them or leave them, and then I got into Victor's perspective, and then all the crazy shit really started, and man, this might be my favorite book of the year.
Profile Image for Mathew.
44 reviews3 followers
December 30, 2012
[March 29 - You know it's a bad sign when you continue reading a book purely to figure out how best to describe what's wrong with it.]

Someone once said that writing a bad review of a novel is like destroying an ice cream cone with a sledgehammer. And generally I agree with that. But books that are glaringly dedicated to nothing but the machinery of commerce are begging to be smashed. Such a book is Glamorama. I don't mind the content which - a relentlessly dull litany of petty pretty people and their petty concerns - still could be an enjoyable confection if mixed right. But the narrative is so devoid of (for lack of a better term) 'heart' that the process of reading it feels like biting into what should be a truffle to find just baker's chocolate inside.

And yet something keeps me reading... for the time being... and that something is... well, the occasional distant reminder of Less Than Zero which did everything right that this book does wrong, including, possibly most importantly, a respect for brevity.

But Less Than Zero, excuse me, had aspirations to explore the human condition rather than giggle and simper and gossip about it. Maybe it was luck. Maybe it was vision, talent, a stroke of inspiration. In any case, in my opinion, since then, BEE has been content to (or condemned to) serve up ever larger, ever duller reminders of the original.

PS - confession - I haven't actually read LTZ in 25 years, but I think I'll go back and see if it holds up. I'll keep you posted.
Profile Image for Marissa Barbieri.
60 reviews3 followers
August 19, 2007
I'm a big fan of Ellis, and at first was fairly nonplussed by this one. Soon enough, though, I was entirely sucked in... and not just because of the chapter-long threesome scene, upon which my friend had recommended this to me. That I actually found rather unnecessary, if well done. But I digress.

After I finished, I found myself for days afterwards thinking in the frenetic staccato tone of the narrator, which is as good an indicator as any that this book is pretty kickass.
Profile Image for Maximiliano.
Author 1 book1,236 followers
January 30, 2024
De los mejores libros que leí en mi vida. Top 3 favoritos of all time. No tengo palabras. Es fantástico, no importa cuantas veces intente describirlo, no podría. Los plot twist, los diálogos, las escenas, el descontrol, la acción, el sexooo, las fotos, NEW YORK, PARÍS, Victor Ward!!, los personajes de American Psycho y Rules of Attraction!!!ajsdkdsadksanAAAA
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