While I may be one of the few people who care, Chuck Palahniuk has been popping up all over the media recently, and I just can't pass on Chuck coverage. First, Chuck has an interesting essay in the Guardian entitled Slaves and saviours about One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest:
I just didn't recognise how this is everyone's story, in a two-party democracy. Even now, especially now, in America where an almost equal number of people must follow the will of their peers. No matter how democracy holds them responsible for their government, no matter how much they protest, the minority is still the minority. Saviours or slaves.
Harper's published Ready-Made Rebellion, an essay on transgressive fiction that uses Survivor as an example:
The first-person narrator of Chuck Palahniuk’s novel Survivor, by contrast, succumbs to the trope of numbness, to the belief that an undefined existential boredom is sufficient motivation for even the most extreme behavior.
Finally, watch the New York Times critic tear Haunted to shreds in Gore Values:
In case the Times review hasn't convinced you that my taste in fiction is horrible, Yankee Pot Roast offers the satire piece Chuck Palahniuk Mows the Lawn:The curious weakness of Palahniuk's neo-brutalist aesthetic is how hermetically sealed it must remain from anything that might challenge it: the air of hard-core debauch must be wall to wall or else crumble to nothing. Palahniuk's work has a tone of snarling X-rated confrontation, but reading his stuff is uncannily like being buttonholed by your younger brother and led up to his bedroom so he can show off his book of Weegee photographs. Palahniuk's work feels raw but insular, angry but self-coddling, like a teenager's moods. The single most horrifying fact about ''Haunted,'' though, is that his publishers have called it ''a novel,'' which turns out to be a cunning euphemism for ''a collection of short stories.'' The stories all follow much the same course. Palahniuk digs up some disgusting factoid; he devises a narrator to deliver the disgusting factoid; and then sits back to watch him or her deliver it. End of story.
I swear he's just misunderstood.Imagine vacuuming. Now, imagine the vacuum weighs 350 pounds. Now, imagine this 350-pound vacuum has a rotating blade that can take off a man’s hand. Imagine that it does, only sometimes it’s not a hand. Sometimes it’s a leg. Sometimes it’s something worse.
Oh, and as a side note, The Cult, the official Chuck Palahniuk website is offering free content for the month of June. You know, in case my incessant mentioning of Chuck Palahniuk has convinced you that Chuck is a god. Because he is.
