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$23.95
81. Imperial Bedrooms [Hardcover]
82. American Psycho (German Edition)
 
83. DIE INFORMANTEN
 
$10.17
84. Imperial Bedrooms (Vintage Contemporaries)
 
85. Glamorama
 
86. Glamorama
 
87. Paradise dreamed: Die Holle der
88. Postmoderne Im Adoleszenzroman
 
89. Less than zero / Bret Easton Ellis
$132.96
90. American Psycho
91. Bret Easton Ellis
 
92. AMERICAN PSYCHO
 
93. Americke Psycho
 
94. The Informers
 
95. Junkyard Dog Dog Bites Man Volume
 
96. Glamorama
 
97. Glamorama 1ST Edition Signed
 
98. Less Than Zero 1ST Edition
 
99. American Psycho   [AMER PSYCHO]
100. Imperial Bedrooms

81. Imperial Bedrooms [Hardcover]
by BRET EASTON ELLIS
Unknown Binding: Pages (2010)
-- used & new: US$23.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B003TTL4WC
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (1)

4-0 out of 5 stars "Imperial Bedrooms",a novel by Bret Easton Ellis.
This is a notable sequel 25 years on to "Less Than Zero" ,the 1985 novel that made Bret Easton Ellis famous. The original story in "Less Than Zero" novel was about the drugged,empty lives of rich Los Angels teenagers.In "Imperial Bedrooms", the narrator Clay & his friends are engaged in a traquillised "danse macabre" around a nightmarish Los Angels,only now they are all in their 40s with even more money & an increased inclination/capacity for violence.This is a taut & ultimately terrifying novel that wants you to know/understand why people can become monsters.The plot is long-winded & shocking,deserving 3,5 stars that approximate a 4.If you enjoyed "Less Than Zero" novel,you will enjoy this sequel "Imperial Bedrooms" novel, 25 years later. ... Read more


82. American Psycho (German Edition)
by Bret Easton Ellis
Paperback: Pages (1992)

Isbn: 9024515572
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Publisher: Uitgeverij Luitingh - Sijthoff - 1992. German language edition. Vertaald door Balt Lenders. ... Read more


83. DIE INFORMANTEN
by BRET EASTON ELLIS
 Paperback: Pages (1997)

Asin: B000SIHT76
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84. Imperial Bedrooms (Vintage Contemporaries)
by Bret Easton Ellis
 Paperback: 192 Pages (2011-05-10)
list price: US$14.95 -- used & new: US$10.17
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0307278697
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Bret Easton Ellis’s debut, Less Than Zero, is one of the signal novels of the last thirty years, and he now follows those infamous teenagers into an even more desperate middle age.

Clay, a successful screenwriter, has returned from New York to Los Angeles to help cast his new movie, and he’s soon drifting through a long-familiar circle. Blair, his former girlfriend, is married to Trent, an influential manager who’s still a bisexual philanderer, and their Beverly Hills parties attract various levels of fame, fortune and power. Then there’s Clay’s childhood friend Julian, a recovering addict, and their old dealer, Rip, face-lifted beyond recognition and seemingly even more sinister than in his notorious past.

But Clay’s own demons emerge once he meets a gorgeous young actress determined to win a role in his movie. And when his life careens completely out of control, he has no choice but to plumb the darkest recesses of his character and come to terms with his proclivity for betrayal.

A genuine literary event.


From the Hardcover edition. ... Read more


85. Glamorama
by Bret Easton Ellis
 Paperback: 496 Pages (2010-03-05)
list price: US$16.50
Isbn: 0330435361
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86. Glamorama
by Bret Easton Ellis
 Poster: Pages (1999)

Isbn: 0330937685
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87. Paradise dreamed: Die Holle der 80er Jahre in Bret Easton Ellis' Roman American Psycho (Arbeiten zur Amerikanistik) (German Edition)
by Ursula Vossman
 Paperback: 173 Pages (2000)

Isbn: 3892069824
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88. Postmoderne Im Adoleszenzroman Der Gegenwart: Studien Zu Bret Easton Ellis, Douglas Coupland, Benjamin Von Stuckrad-Barre Und Alexa Hennig Von Lange (Kinder- Und Jugendkultur, -Literatur Und -Medien)
by Annette Wagner
Paperback: 459 Pages (2007-01)
list price: US$89.95
Isbn: 363156080X
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89. Less than zero / Bret Easton Ellis
by Bret Easton Ellis
 Hardcover: Pages (1985-01-01)

Isbn: 0671543296
Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (251)

1-0 out of 5 stars Boring!
This book is so boring! I cannot believe that I wasted my time reading it. The book might deal with rich kids problems in Beverly Hills and the problems may be real but gee nothing happens in the book! It is like the book just goes around in circles forever. Would never recommend this book to anyone!

5-0 out of 5 stars Just like new
The book arrived on time and was just like new, so I recommend shipper.

As for the book, it's very stream of conscious and dark.I enjoyed it and would recommend it, but only for those that enjoy dark books.

5-0 out of 5 stars Like, oh, my gosh--are sociopaths real?
Nostalgic for the 80's? Want a peek into the cold, hard truth of what life was like for teenagers from Beverly Hills High School and other upper class schools in LA? Less than Zero is a shockingly realistic depiction of teenage life exactly how it was in the rich neighborhoods of Los Angeles during the 1980s. The moral structure of society is falling apart and this started happening long before reality TV or high school massacres like Columbine. If you think rich kids have it all, you are gravely mistaken. Enter a world of disillusioned sociopaths. Only brave truth seekers should read this book. If you have the guts to read it, you will discover what it was and still is like to be a child of the rich, successful movie moguls that plague the moral fabric of America through mass media brainwashing. Ever been to a ritzy, movie star flogged restaurant like Spagos with your dad? I have. It's not as glamorous as you may have dreamed. Less than Zero is more truthful and realistic than reality TV. A must read if you want the raw truth at its core or if you simply want to learn how to be a sociopath yourself. Just joking! Looking forward to reading Bret Easton Ellis's new "brutal" sequel, Imperial Bedrooms.

3-0 out of 5 stars After nihilism, not much else.
B.E.E. can write in an interesting manner. Little phrases resonate in your mind, partly through repetition, partly just because they just great little summations of ideas - "people are afraid to merge"..."disappear here". There are memorable interactions. But you go through the book, and people talk about this material thing or this trend and then it becomes obvious you are just following a bunch of empty, nihilistic people, and nothing really seems to happen. Well, I guess I can remembering one major bad revelation. But...why? Maybe you love this book if you can really relate to nihilistic feelings? Or maybe get something out of being shocked by the lifestyle? I don't know...I definitely didn't hate it, and I got through it okay (I stop reading a lot of books 1/4-1/2 way). I guess I just didn't get much out of it. (PS I am 34 and I knew all the references.)

2-0 out of 5 stars Less than Zero
After all the hype, I expected more.At this moment, it is too depressing to read. ... Read more


90. American Psycho
by Bret Easton Ellis
Paperback: 399 Pages (1997-12)
list price: US$35.30 -- used & new: US$132.96
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0330319922
Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
Patrick Bateman is Harvard-educated and intelligent. He works by day on Wall Street, earning a fortune to complement the one he was born with. His nights he spends in ways we cannot begin to fathom - doing impermissible things to women. He is living his own "American Dream". ... Read more

Customer Reviews (8)

5-0 out of 5 stars Classic Ellis
The book that made B.E. Ellis a household name--striking and brilliant, disgusting and beautiful. American Psycho opened me up to the enormous talents of Brett Easton Ellis' work and I've never looked back.

5-0 out of 5 stars Horrifically disturbing, a classic example of what real talent can produce...
When first skimming through or even reading in entirety the novel `American Psycho' one can made the assumption, wrong as it may be, that it's nothing more than a perverse catalog of sadistic events.Like I said, that assumption is wrong.Bret Easton Ellis is and will always be one of the most intriguing authors of our generation for he knows how to probe the mind with the things we often repel, satisfying our sense with his perversion while telling a story that, if stripped bare of it's disturbing gloss coating would resemble a detailed study on what makes us as a society so horrifying.`American Psycho' is no more a story of a serial killer than it is a story of a lost generation of self absorbed zombies who find more satisfaction and or horror in the detail of a co-workers business card than they do in a meaningful relationship or, yes, a sadistic murder.

The novel succeeds in being utterly spine-tingly due to Ellis' decision to make our psycho, Patrick Bateman (just me or was Ellis going for the obvious `Psycho' throwback...Norman Bates/Patrick Bateman), a first person narrator.In this way the reader not only knows the acts of this man but knows his feelings on the subject.The murders are all horrifying, gut-wrenching and not for the squeamish, but it's really the way in which Patrick recounts the events that are truly repulsive.As has been mentioned, he states everything in a blunt, matter-of-fact type dialog that portrays an air of corrupt morality, as if none of this even matters.

As the reader gets through the bulk of the novel he's forced to question how much of this is reality and how much of this is all in Patrick's head, and that for one is what makes this novel so brilliant.The answers are there but the reader will have to find them on his or her own.Bret refuses to answer the question for us in any point-blank fashion but leaves it to our own imagination and or astute deciphering to uncover the truth in it all.What this allows the reader to do is really probe into the mind of this man and discover he's not so different than us all.It's in this discovery that I was able to truly appreciate Ellis' madness/genius for he was able to take a prose that could and should repulse us all and make it relatable and very close to home.Patrick is a man so absorbed in the media, the pop-obsessed culture we live in that his whole life and purpose can be summed up in a `People Magazine' article.He's so impressed and influenced by what is pressed upon him by television and magazine advertisements that he's become dulled to the reality of the world around him.After reading this novel one is forced to face the idea that we're all just one designer pair of underwear away from slitting someone's throat.

Ellis' use of detailed description has turned some away from this novel.The fact that an entire chapter is devoted to the products he uses to clean himself may appear as needless and redundant but in actuality it proves to be a brilliant way to unravel this mans madness before the brutality of his crimes ensues.This mans mental soundness is brought into question every time he converses with his friends about mundane things such as brands of water and or the font of a specified business card.These men are so dulled as to the real issues at stake that the brutal slaying of a child gets nothing more than a passing remark.It's because of this void of any real feeling that Patrick finds murder and torture so essential for it's the only way he can feel anything.His life would have no meaning otherwise.

Underneath the gritty exterior lies the story of a man not unlike the rest of us.What Ellis has accomplished here is not something to be taken lightly or disregarded as trash for it's far from it.It may take more than the average reader to sit through and uncover what really lies within these pages for this is far from leisure reading.This is above all else a study of human interaction and human relations with each other but more importantly with ones self, and it exposes the power that society and culture impresses on an individual, good and bad.Ellis is in my book a literary genius and has given us one of the most powerful displays of raw talent available in your local bookstore.

1-0 out of 5 stars Simply Awful!
I cannot believe how bad this book is, and I am only on page 94! It is a pointless, rambling piece of garbage. There is no point. Nothing. I am such a huge fan of the movie that I decided to read the book, and I am sorry I did.The movie moved along at a good pace and was fascinating to watch. It was funny, depraved, interesting and horrorfic.The book just rambles along.If you want something that gives ou information on name-brand clothes, restaurants, perfumes, colognes and hair gels and interesting places to visit, this is the book for you. If you are intetested in reading an interesting story, don't waste your time. This book sucks. Go see the movie. Nine out of ten times, the book is always better than the movie - not this one! The book cannot even compare to it.

4-0 out of 5 stars Simply Awful!
I don't think this book can be categorised - it is a cruel look at the yuppies of the late 1980's, with big bucks at an early age and a sense that everything is due to them. They are a disrespectful, arrogant and completely out of touch bunch. Just like everyone else they have their darker side, but some take it much further than others, as is the case with fitness/appearances-obsessed Patrick Bateman. At some point I wondered whether his violent outbursts were just a product of his imagination, a sign of his insanity. I found him a weak character despite his status and success - he fails at the most basic human relationships and has lost all sense of touch with reality - I think his violent deliriums are just a way to boost his massive ego and insanity.

5-0 out of 5 stars Don't look at it through your own eyes.
I've read various Amazon readers' American Psycho reviews over the past couple years and find that most of them either loved or hated the book.Most of them get that the author is using satire and most of them can describe for you a nice summary, including the crux of the work: are those murders real or imagined; that is, is Bateman really a psychotic killer, or is he a harmless loser who takes out his angst against those around him in fantasy?Unless the author one day announces which side Patrick Bateman really falls on, there is plenty of evidence in the book to justify anyone finding reason to believe he indeed was a murderer or a dreamer.All this can be deduced by any reader.

What sets apart, I think, those readers who enjoy the read versus they who loathe it (aside, of course, from they who are simply offended by the graphic violence) is the (lack of) appreciation of point of view.I've heard and read many times that people find the book too distracted by or devoted to abstract and meaningless descriptions of periphery items or situations and by way of monotony.I argue that is the essential element that makes this book work, makes it real.If the objective of any author writing this book were to be simply submit a biographical piece, then he would do what many critics say and supplied just enough arbitrarily descriptive monotony to make the point clear that Bateman is void of real human emotion and moved on with the plot from there.That's not the objective though.The entire point of this book is that you are reading the thoughts, you are inside the mind of a psychotic individual.It is written as a psycopath would write it.

Personally, I am not that bothered by the graphic violence, but I don't care for it either.I think that is all noise.The cream of this book is in the trueness of the point of view (Bateman's narrative, that of a psychopath) Ellis maintains through this endless and seemingly meaningless monotonous descriptions of people, music, products, and paisley ties coupled with Bateman's equal parts insecurity --masked by vanity-- and disgust for his peers, superiors, and inferiors. ... Read more


91. Bret Easton Ellis
Paperback: 96 Pages (2010-08-10)
list price: US$45.00
Isbn: 613081416X
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Editorial Review

Product Description
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Bret Easton Ellis (born March 7, 1964 on Staten Island, New York) is an American novelist and short story writer. He was regarded as one of the so-called literary Brat Pack, which also included Tama Janowitz and Jay McInerney. He is a self-proclaimed "moralist." Ellis employs a technique of linking novels with common, recurring characters. ... Read more


92. AMERICAN PSYCHO
by Bret Easton Ellis
 Hardcover: Pages (2000)

Asin: B004461TRY
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

93. Americke Psycho
by Bret Easton Ellis
 Hardcover: Pages (1995)

Isbn: 8085885425
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

94. The Informers
by Bret Easton ELLIS
 Paperback: 226 Pages (1994)

Asin: B001VOL12U
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

95. Junkyard Dog Dog Bites Man Volume One Number One Winter 1987
by Bill (editor); Ellis, Bret Easton Langenheim
 Paperback: Pages (1987)

Asin: B000S9VGGK
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

96. Glamorama
by Bret Easton Ellis
 Mass Market Paperback: Pages (1999)

Asin: B000GR5OXA
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

97. Glamorama 1ST Edition Signed
by Bret Easton Ellis
 Hardcover: Pages (1999-01-01)

Asin: B001OLKZMC
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

98. Less Than Zero 1ST Edition
by Bret Easton Ellis
 Hardcover: Pages

Asin: B0014E9TOY
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

99. American Psycho   [AMER PSYCHO] [Paperback]
by Bret Easton(Author) Ellis
 Unknown Binding: Pages (1991-03-31)

Asin: B002VK205K
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

100. Imperial Bedrooms
by Bret Easton Ellis
Paperback: 192 Pages (2011-04-01)

Isbn: 0330452614
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
Clay is a successful screenwriter, middle-aged and disaffected; he's in LA to cast his new movie. However, this trip is anything other than professional, and he's soon drifting through a louche and long-familiar circle - a world largely populated by the band of infamous teenagers first introduced in "Less Than Zero". But his debauched reverie is about to be interrupted by a violent plot for revenge and Clay's seemingly endless proclivity for betrayal and exploitation looks set to land him somewhere darker and more ominous than ever before. Reviews: "His tautest, most compulsively readable work since "American Psycho". A sequel to "Less Than Zero", it imagines what became of that book's group of over-privileged, dead-eyed kids as forty-year-olds". (Hari Kunzru). "A murder mystery - a woozy, paranoid, hallucinatory version of LA noir". ("Sunday Times). "Brilliantly written and coolly self-aware...Here, as in "Less Than Zero", Ellis is plumbing the depths of human nature, exposing it at its worst". ("Observer"). "The novel is a kind of modern noir and, as in Chandler, the form's accepted master, atmosphere is king. Paranoia prevails". ("Independent on Sunday"). ... Read more


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