Glamorama
Bret Easton Ellis. Alfred A. Knopf, $25 (482pp) ISBN 978-0-375-40412-2
The evil twin of fellow brat-packer Jay McInerney's Model Behavior, Ellis's (The Informers) bad trip through glitterary New York has everything his fans (and critics) have come to expect: graphic sex, designer drugs, rock 'n' roll allusions, splatterpunk violence and characters as deep as 8""x10"" glossies. Protagonist Victor Ward, a ""model-slash-loser,"" is opening his own trendy Manhattan club while cheating on his supermodel girlfriend and back-stabbing his partner. After some adventures in clubland, the plot takes a turn for the paranoid. Victor is recruited by a mysterious figure, F. Fred Palakon, to track down a former girlfriend gone missing in London. There he becomes unwillingly drawn into a terrorist group--run, like so much else in the novel, by a supermodel--that bombs fashionable hangouts, hotels and jetliners. Throughout, Ellis clutters his hallmark proper-noun realism with excessive name-dropping and strung-out plotting. The satirist in Ellis seems to want to indict celebrity-obsessed, materialistic and superficial contemporary culture. With this novel he, perhaps unwittingly but certainly ironically, provides Exhibit A. 100,000 first printing. (Jan.)
Details
Reviewed on: 11/30/1998
Genre: Fiction
Compact Disc - 978-1-4418-0634-5
MP3 CD - 978-1-5012-7870-9
MP3 CD - 978-1-4418-0636-9
Open Ebook - 428 pages - 978-0-307-75642-8
Other - 978-0-307-74273-5
Paperback - 560 pages - 978-0-375-70384-3
Paperback - 482 pages - 978-0-330-53631-8
Pre-Recorded Audio Player - 978-1-61587-553-5