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Imperial Bedrooms
 
 

Imperial Bedrooms [Deckle Edge] [Hardcover]

Bret Easton Ellis
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Review

“Taut and ultimately terrifying….In six novels, the author has emerged as one of the most gifted and serious novelists working in America today.” —Hari Kunzru, Financial Times
 
“Brutally conceived, and effectively done….There is no doubt that Ellis retains the ability to startle and disquiet.” —Stephen Abell, The Times Literary Supplement
 
“Ellis remains a bold ignorer of literary boundaries.  Imperial Bedrooms is but another unexpected swerve in a wonderfully weird career.” J. Robert Lennon, London Review of Books
 
“Enough talk of [Ellis's] literary genius, let's call him what he really is: a terrific horror writer.  Imperial Bedrooms is an absolute creepfest [and] a festival of panting paranoia.”  —Thomas Conner, Chicago Sun-Times
 
“A profoundly talented—and occasionally even brilliant—writer…Ellis has a fictional territory all his own and, heaven forbid, a mastery there.” —Jeff Simon, Buffalo News
 
“A page-turning read [with] a sneaky subtlety…Holding a mirror to our desires, Ellis shows us how much scarier what we think we want can be when severed from even the possibility of innocence, [employing] noirish staples to lure his reader along while subtly circling back to the older—and more frightening—theme: the dead soul.” —Michael McGregor, The Oregonian
 
“This is the most Chandleresque of Bret’s books, and the most deeply steeped in L.A. noir…As Dante’s hell is circular, so is [Ellis’s] L.A. Everywhere in Imperial Bedrooms there is a sense of time frozen, time collapsed and time rounding back on itself in various diabolical ways…What stays with [the reader] is not so much the concluding note of betrayal and horror as the mournfulness of the book, its eerie sense of stasis: clear skies, vacuum-sealed calm, the BlackBerry flashing on the nightstand in the middle of the night, everywhere the subliminal hum of menace.” —Donna Tartt, Amazon.com
 
“A page-turner…Imperial Bedrooms is a quicker, more controlled fire than its predecessor, and, like a good showman, Ellis has learned to save the best of the novel’s many tricks for last…Devastating…Old age and treachery have served Bret Easton Ellis quite well.” —Foster Kamer, The Village Voice
 
"Arrestingly spare…Imperial Bedrooms will leave you feeling bruised, guarded and a little nervous about noises at night…What you really notice is Ellis's newfound love of noir.  He's reinvigorated and ready to get mysterious and mean…As ever, Ellis's details crystallize into elegant remoteness (and) if this is shallowness, the word needs a new definition." —Joshua Rothkopf, Time Out New York
 
“It’s worth following Ellis down this rabbit hole.” —Sam Kaplan, Philadelphia City Paper
 
“Hypnotic…A haunting vision of disillusionment, 21st-century style.” —People Magazine
 
“This sequel is very much on target…[Ellis] uses the thriller framework to infuse nerve-rending unease into this look at Tinseltown mores, a dissection that also comes nicely weighted with both bleak hilarity and firsthand authorial experience.” —Clark Collis, Entertainment Weekly
 
“Visceral and often harrowing, Ellis delivers a work that matches such career peaks as Lunar Park and the infamous American Psycho…It is remarkable how [he] has tailored the narrative in exactly the same style as the original novel, yet offering an assured and mature voice to chronicle Clay’s nightmarish return to L.A.” —Jorge Carreon, The Examiner
 
“Reading Ellis is a thrilling and strangely voyeuristic experience, [and] you can’t look away.” —Venus Zine
 
“Its dirty charms are indisputable.” —Amy Grace Lloyd, Playboy Magazine
 
“Ellis explores what disillusioned youth looks like twenty-five year later in this brutal sequel to Less Than Zero….The story takes on a creepy noirish bent as it barrels toward a conclusion that reveals the horror that lies at the center of a tortured soul….Though the novel's synchronicity with Zero is sublime, this also works as a stellar stand-alone.” —Publishers Weekly, starred 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.

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4.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Haunting, Aug 8 2010
This review is from: Imperial Bedrooms (Hardcover)
This is a good book from a great author... Will definitely need to read it again as I realized some subtle parts of the plot may have slipped from my attention. Apparently simple book (deceptively). Really different from Lunar Park -- in line with the zombie-style of characters established with Less than zero and American Psycho. Scary.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 2.8 out of 5 stars (135 customer reviews)

49 of 58 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Mesmerizing But Flawed, May 4 2010
By Mr. August "Literature lover" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Imperial Bedrooms (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
If you read Less Than Zero, Bret Easton Ellis presents the sequel in a sharp, enthralling short novel. If you didn't read Less Than Zero it's OK, you will be introduced to the same characters but they are now adults. Set in Hollywood, Easton assures us that the movie industry scene has not changed. Narrated in a present tense stream of consciousness, Clay, our wealthy screenwriter, returns to L.A. during Christmas to supposedly help cast for his movie, The Listeners (The Informers?). He meets up with his old crowd, his good friend, Julian, old lover, Blair and ex-dealer, Rip. These teen-agers have not changed; they simply turned into middle-aged insecure, wandering souls. So it's again a blurry state of what are they really doing, what are they really saying?

The beginning of the story moves slowly and then it hits. As Ellis builds the plot through Clay's haze of alcohol and seduction, the story works itself into a mystery with no boundaries. Easton works his magic through a wannabe starlet, Rain Turner, a beautiful, no-talent actress. Well, she wants to be an actress and will do anything, and I mean anything, to get a callback. Clay who will do anything to get what he wants plays the game and strings her along with promises of a reading. It's not joyful. The sex, the extreme violence and the Hollywood scene are real; any talent or courtesy is strictly bogus. Ellis teaches us that Hollywood equals conspicuous consumption. The behavior of Clay and his crowd demands overindulgence in alcohol and ambition. Clay's drinking is evident in almost every scene, whether it is fantasy, reality or the devil. But the meaning is hard to capture and at some point toward the last 50 pages, I stopped trying. If I have to work too hard to decipher the meaning, maybe the timing of a character's epiphany is not meaningful.

I read the book in two sittings - I wanted to see where Ellis was going and the end of the book is shocking in its violence and denouement. He is a genuine writer with original ideas, and I have not read anyone who can match his style. His run-on sentences were often annoying and over the top, but his ability to set a tone is unmatched.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars When Indifference Has Turned To Cruelty--Older, But No Wiser, May 10 2010
By K. Harris "Film aficionado" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Imperial Bedrooms (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
I was a bit surprised to hear Bret Easton Ellis had chosen to revisit the characters first introduced 25 years ago in "Less Than Zero." It is, after all, one of the more quintessential novels about disaffected teens to have come out of the eighties. So specific to time, place, and subculture--"Less than Zero" presented a mind numbing odyssey through the soulless wasteland of LA's over-privileged youth populated by indifference, unrepentant drug use, and meaningless sexual encounters. Capturing the ennui of kids with too much money and too much freedom, "Zero" was more of an experience than anything else, and I think it's fair to say that it polarized its audience with Ellis's stark depiction of moral bankruptcy.

So, to say the least, I was intrigued to see where Ellis might pick up his narrative in "Imperial Bedrooms." The introduction is an absolute delight--a playful riff on the prior novel, its true author, and the movie made from the account. It's a wicked send-up blurring the line between fact and fiction for those who read the initial novel and saw the subsequent, and much maligned, film version. But after the zippy intro, there is a shift in tone more in keeping with expectations. We're reintroduced to the principles of "Less Than Zero" led by Clay (now a successful film writer) returning to his Hollywood home. And while I didn't expect the characters to be unrecognizable, it would have been nice to see some sign of humanity in anyone two decades later. If anything, their indifference has turned to cruelty.

"Imperial Bedrooms" does a nice job of recapturing some of the flavor of "Zero"--however, its sense of story is a lot stronger. This might be welcome to some readers put off by "Zero's" meanderings or loathed by others for its far-fetched contrivance. Much more plot-driven, "Bedrooms" is "Zero" refashioned into a neo-noir piece--replete with mystery, murder, blackmail, and manipulation. My problem with "Imperial Bedrooms" is its complete lack of anyone to root for. While "Less Than Zero" was content to set a mood, "Imperial Bedrooms" story elements beg for a protagonist with at least a few redeeming features. Ultimately, it seems like unpleasantness for the sake of unpleasantness. The kids you may remember are certainly older, but absolutely no wiser. Not a one. And it's a disappointment. A small amount of redemption, or hope even, might have balanced the unsavory aspects of "Imperial Bedrooms." The lack of any depth or character development makes me wonder what the point of Ellis's new enterprise is. KGHarris, 5/10.

14 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars What a disappointment., Jun 28 2010
By Theodore Anderson "Santiago3" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Imperial Bedrooms (Hardcover)
I am a huge fan of Bret Easton-Ellis's works, but this book was such a drag. After the first ten pages I was already rolling my eyes at the confusing prose. Not because it was hard to follow, but because it seemed like less of a plot device and more of the author still being bitter about the film treatment of his first novel. Then suddenly the writing style changes back to something more familiar and I'm once again hoping that maybe this book will find its stride.

It never did. From that point until the last page it meanders aimlessly from one forced plot point to another and finally culminates with an ending that was telegraphed clumsily and obviously from well within the beginnings of the book. Top that with some dumb, forced violence that lacks the poetic detachment of "Less Than Zero" or the visceral need for identity in "American Psycho" and you have a book so dull and desperate that it feels literally like the pawing advances of an aging 40 year old. Their hair full of dye, face trying to remain neutral so that crow's feet and lines don't show, and a palpable sense of a drowning man's desperation roiling just underneath the surface.

Ellis wants his characters to be understood in this piece but does them little justice. No one's changed or even given a chance to change. They move within the pages of this slim volume like cut out paper puppets with all the emotional depth of a Dixie cup. Why do I care that Julian is dead? Who the hell is this other female character, Flew? Why do I care about her? Oh she's dead now? Why did that happen? Who is Kelly Montrose and why do I care? Oh he's dead and this effects the characters somehow? The plot stumbles over itself to try and get somewhere and ends up reading like an overly violent fluff piece in the society column.

In short: It's a jumbled mess and is best to be avoided. I'm going to read "Less Than Zero" once again and forget that "Imperial Bedrooms" ever existed.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 135 reviews  2.8 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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